ISDN Port Configuration
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Step 4
node
(prt-isdn)[
slot/port
]#channel-
hunting down
or
node
(prt-isdn)[
slot/port
]#channel-
hunting down-cyclic
or
node
(prt-isdn)[
slot/port
]#channel-
hunting up
or
node
(prt-isdn)[
slot/port
]#channel-
hunting up-cyclic
Specify channel hunting
The hunting mode defines how the available
time slots are filled. The cyclic modes use a
’round-robin’ implementation. The ’up’ and
’down’ modes define whether the time slots are
filled at the lowest or highest available slot, i.e.
’up’ means that always the lowest available slot
is used, ‘down’ uses always the highest
available slot.
Step 5
node
(prt-isdn)[
slot/port
]#channel-
numbering etsi
or
node
(prt-isdn)[
slot/port
]#channel-
numbering pss1-old
Specify channel numbering
Some older Q-SIG variants make use of a
channel numbering scheme that differs from the
standard ETSI method. In most cases the ETSI
numbering applies. Unless the connected ISDN
devices and configured protocols require a
different scheme, make shure the numbering is
set to ETSI.
Example
Configure PRI port 1/0 as clock master. From the Local Exchange timeslots 1 through 20 are available
and the total number of concurrent calls shall be limited to 10. Use down-cyclic channel hunting.
SN(cfg)#
port isdn 1 0
SN(prt-isdn)[1/0]#
clock-mode master
SN(prt-isdn)[1/0]#
channel-range 1 20
SN(prt-isdn)[1/0]#
max-channels 10
SN(prt-isdn)[1/0]#
channel-hunting down-cyclic
Software Configuration Guide, Revision 1.03