Information In The Cdr - Polycom VSX 7000 Administrator's Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for VSX 7000:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Information in the CDR

Data
Row ID
Start Date
Start Time
End Date
End Time
Call Duration
Account Number
System Name
Call Field Number 1
Call Field Number 2
(If applicable for call)
Transport Type
Call Rate
System Manufacturer
Call Direction
Conference ID
Call ID
Total H.320 Channels Used
Endpoint Alias
Endpoint Additional Alias
Endpoint Type
Endpoint Transport Address
Audio Protocol (Tx)
© Polycom, Inc.
The following table describes the data fields in the CDR.
Description
Each call is logged on the first available row. A call is a connection to a single site,
so there may be more than one call in a conference.
The call start date, in the format dd-mmm-yyyy.
The call start time, in the 24-hour format hh:mm:ss.
The call end date.
The call end time.
The length of the call.
If Require Account Number to Dial is enabled on the system, the value entered by
the user is displayed in this field.
The far site's system name.
The number dialed from the first call field, not necessarily the transport address.
For incoming calls —The caller ID information from the first number received from a
far site.
For outgoing calls—The number dialed from the second call field, not necessarily the
transport address.
For incoming calls—The caller ID information from the second number received from
a far site.
The type of call — either H.320 (ISDN) or H.323 (IP).
The bandwidth negotiated with the far site.
The name of the system manufacturer, model, and software version, if they can be
determined.
In—for calls received.
Out—for calls placed from the system.
A number given to each conference. A conference can include more than one far
site, so there may be more than one row with the same conference ID.
Identifies individual calls within the same conference.
The total number of ISDN B channels used in the call. For example, a 384K call
would use six B channels.
The alias of the far site.
An additional alias of the far site.
Terminal, gateway, or MCU.
The actual address of the far site (not necessarily the address dialed).
The audio protocol transmitted to the far site, such as G.728 or Siren14.
Chapter 5 - System Usage and Statistics
83

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents