Cisco OL-4015-08 User Manual page 54

Cisco router and security device manager user's guide
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Switch Type and SPIDs
ISDN Switch Type
I Have SPIDs
Cisco Router and Security Device Manager Version 2.2 User's Guide
3-10
Select the ISDN switch type. Contact your ISDN service provider for the switch
type for your connection.
SDM supports these BRI switch types:
For North America:
basic-5ess—Lucent (AT&T) basic rate 5ESS switch
basic-dms100—Northern Telecom DMS-100 basic rate switch
basic-ni—National ISDN switches
For Australia, Europe, and the UK:
basic-1tr6—German 1TR6 ISDN switch
basic-net3—NET3 ISDN BRI for Norway NET3, Australia NET3, and
New Zealand NET3switch types; ETSI-compliant switch types for
Euro-ISDN E-DSS1 signaling system
vn3—French ISDN BRI switches
For Japan:
ntt—Japanese NTT ISDN switches
For voice/PBX systems:
basic-qsig—PINX (PBX) switches with QSIG signaling per Q.931
Check this check box if your service provider requires SPIDs.
Some service providers use SPIDs to define the services that are subscribed to by
an ISDN device that is accessing the ISDN service provider. The service provider
assigns the ISDN device one or more SPIDs when you first subscribe to the
service. If you are using a service provider that requires SPIDs, your ISDN device
cannot place or receive calls until it sends a valid, assigned SPID to the service
provider when the device accesses the switch to initialize the connection.
Currently, only the DMS-100 and NI switch types require SPIDs. The AT&T
5ESS switch type may support a SPID, but we recommend that you set up the
ISDN service without SPIDs. In addition, SPIDs have significance only at the
local access ISDN interface. Remote routers never receive the SPID.
Chapter 3
Create Connection Wizards
OL-4015-08

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