480
Setting system timers
N0008589 3.3
3
The possible settings are described in the following table.
Table 100
Timer values
Attribute
Values
Description
Camp timeout
30, 45, 60, 90,120, 150
or 180 seconds
Assign the number of seconds before an unanswered camped call
returns to the telephone that camped the call.
Park timeout
30, 45, 60, 90, 120, 150,
180, 300 or 600 seconds
Assign the number of seconds before a parked call on an external line
returns to the telephone which parked the call. This interval is used for
SWCA lines as well.
Page timeout
15, 30, 60, 120, 180,
300, 600 2700 seconds
Define the period of time after which the paging feature automatically
disconnects.
Transfer
callback timeout
Off
after 3 rings
after 4 rings
after 5 rings
after 6 rings
after 12 rings
Specify the number of rings before a callback occurs on a transferred
call. You can estimate the delay in seconds if you multiply the number of
rings by six.
Note: This setting can affect transferred calls from voice mail and should
be configured accordingly.
Host delay
200, 400, 600, 800,
1000, 1200, 1400, 1600,
1800 or 2000
milliseconds
Assign the delay between the moment an outgoing line is selected to
make an external call (for example, by lifting the receiver off the
telephone) and the moment that Business Communications Manager
sends dialed digits or codes on the line.This ensures that a dial tone is
present before the dialing sequence is sent. Minimizing this delay
provides faster access to the requested features.
Link time
100, 200, 300, 400, 500,
600, 700, 800, 900 or
1000 milliseconds
Specify the duration of a signal required to access a feature through a
remote system.
The Link time depends on the requirements of the host switching
system. For example, to program external dialing through a Centrex
system requires a Link time of 400 ms.
Link is another name for recall or flash.
*Network
Callback Timer
<XX seconds>
This timeout value determines when a transfer attempt will stop and then
attempt a retry of the transfer.
*Not available in all region profiles.
Summary of Contents for BCM 3.7
Page 4: ...4 Software licensing N0008589 3 3...
Page 32: ...32 Contents N0008589 3 3 W 937 Index 939...
Page 46: ...46 Tables N0008589 3 3...
Page 64: ...64 How to get help N0008589 3 3...
Page 90: ...90 Manually activating Telnet N0008589 3 3...
Page 116: ...116 Delayed system restart N0008589 3 3...
Page 194: ...194 Configuring a data module N0008589 3 3...
Page 276: ...276 Setting line telco features N0008589 3 3...
Page 310: ...310 Using COS passwords N0008589 3 3...
Page 364: ...364 Enhanced 911 E911 configuration N0008589 3 3...
Page 380: ...380 Renumbering DNs N0008589 3 3...
Page 398: ...398 Saving wizard pages on your computer N0008589 3 3...
Page 458: ...458 Voice Mail settings N0008589 3 3...
Page 488: ...488 Setting system telco features N0008589 3 3...
Page 508: ...508 Other programming that affects public networking N0008589 3 3...
Page 522: ...522 PRI networking using Call by Call services N0008589 3 3...
Page 592: ...592 Monitoring Hunt groups N0008589 3 3...
Page 636: ...636 Configuring Double Density N0008589 3 3...
Page 640: ...640 Using the Network Update Wizard N0008589 3 3...
Page 666: ...666 Importing and Exporting DHCP data N0008589 3 3...
Page 722: ...722 Restarting the router N0008589 3 3...
Page 726: ...726 Important Web Cache considerations N0008589 3 3...
Page 748: ...748 Configuring an Interface with NAT N0008589 3 3...
Page 794: ...794 IPSec N0008589 3 3...
Page 818: ...818 Configuring the Policy Agent characteristics N0008589 3 3...
Page 832: ...832 Firewall rules for Business Communications Manager with Dialup interfaces N0008589 3 3...
Page 876: ...876 ISDN Programming N0008589 3 3...
Page 1004: ...1004 Index N0008589 3 3...