Network Attendant Calling; Node Route Selection (Nrs) - Panasonic DBS Section 540 Reference Manual

T1 networking reference manual
Table of Contents

Advertisement

System Planning

Network Attendant Calling

DBS networking allows for calling a network attendant. This attendant may
be any DBS attendant in the network. If a user dials 0, the call is routed to this
system attendant.
Note: Calls that revert to the attendant will revert to the local attendant, not
the network attendant.
Table 2-33. Network Attendant Calling
Dial "0" Calls Originat-
Example
In our example, a network attendant is located at DBS 1. If a user dials 0 at
any DBS, the call is routed to the attendant on DBS 1
Table 2-34. Example Network Attendant Calling
Dial "0" Calls Originat-

Node Route Selection (NRS)

Outside calls made on a DBS may be routed through another DBS before
outdialing to the public network. This is called Node Route Selection.
Typically, this is used to reduce long distance charges by routing calls based
on the area code(s) where the remote DBS is located.
Each DBS NRS table contains up to 50 NRS entries. Each entry contains the
dialed number to match (up to 6 digits), the minimum number of digits to be
dialed, and which network DBS (1-4) should receive the call. List any dialed
numbers to be included in NRS in Table 2-35 through Table 2-38.
If more than one NRS match is possible, then NRS will process the call using
the NRS entry with the most complete match possible. For instance if one
DBS-2.3/9.2-540
ing From User on
Same DBS
DBS 1
DBS 2
DBS 3
DBS 4
ing From User on
Same DBS
DBS 1
DBS 2
DBS 3
DBS 4
T1 Networking - Revised April 2000
System Planning Forms and Guidelines
Calls Attendant at
DBS 1
DBS 2
Calls Attendant at
DBS 1
DBS 2
X
X
X
X
DBS 3
DBS 4
DBS 3
DBS 4
Page 29

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents