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<pprofile>BLANK</pprofile>
</user_MAC_defaults>
The default values specified in
user-MAC-defaults.xml
map to
transaction values in your XML input file when the transaction value in
your file is empty. The substituted parameter value depends on the
parameter.
■
For parameters such as
<zip>
, the default value specified in
user-MAC-defaults.xml
(
00000
) is used if your file does not specify a
value.
■
For parameters such as
<email>
, the default value specified in
user-MAC-defaults.xml
is
BLANK
. In these cases, if your file does not
specify a value the value
BLANK
translates to a empty field.
■
For the parameters
<first>
and
<last>
, the default value specified
in
user-MAC-defaults.xml
is
UNAME
. In these two cases, if your file
does not specify a value the value for
UNAME
is used.The value for
UNAME
is a mandatory, user-supplied value that specifies the name of
the user account.
■
The phone profile (
<pprofile>
) parameter value is the name string
associated with a particular phone profile. When this parameter is set
to blank in both the input XML and the default XML file, VCX
software creates a default phone profile. This is not recommended.
Ask your VCX administrator for the name of the default phone profile.
You can edit
user-MAC-defaults.xml
to change a default parameter
value. For example, you could change the default value (
12345
) for
<phonepass>
to some other standard value (for example,
999
).
Adding User
Accounts with a CSV
File
You can use a comma separated value (CSV) file as input to the
user-MAC
command. Transactions in the file can add user accounts, but not modify
or delete accounts. 3Com Corporation recommends that a CSV file
contain no more than 5000 transactions. While this is not a hard limit,
exceeding 5000 transactions may cause performance issues.
Use the following syntax to specify a CSV file as input to the
user-MAC
command:
./user-MAC --csv
InputFileName
.csv [--non-stop]
The CSV file
must
have the following column headings in the following
order to be compatible with the
user-MAC
command line script:
Summary of Contents for VCX V7000
Page 26: ...26 CHAPTER 1 VCX SYSTEM MAINTENANCE OVERVIEW ...
Page 68: ...68 CHAPTER 3 MANAGING VCX SERVERS ...
Page 78: ...78 CHAPTER 4 BACKING UP AND RESTORING A VCX CONFIGURATION ...
Page 88: ...88 CHAPTER 5 MANAGING AUTHENTICATION AND DIRECTORY SERVICE DATABASES ...
Page 100: ...100 CHAPTER 6 MANUALLY CONFIGURING MULTI MASTER REPLICATION ...
Page 140: ...140 CHAPTER 8 MANAGING UNINTERRUPTIBLE POWER SUPPLIES ...
Page 250: ...250 APPENDIX B UPGRADING VCX SERVER SOFTWARE FROM V7 1 X TO V7 1 Y ...
Page 290: ...290 APPENDIX C UPGRADING VCX SERVER SOFTWARE FROM V6 0 TO V7 0 ...
Page 328: ...328 APPENDIX D DOWNGRADING VCX SERVER SOFTWARE ...
Page 339: ...CLI Command Descriptions 339 ...