RE: ISDN SPID

From: Scott Morris (smorris@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Mon Oct 29 2001 - 22:07:18 GMT-3


   
You will use the DN number, or whatever you're required to dial to get to
the other side. SPID is simply an identifier between the terminal device
and the CO switch. (used for billing primarily)

The DN is what is expected to be passed as a "dialed number" from the CO
switch. But in real life, if your offices are in different areas, you may
have to dial 1+area code+ number... Some areas you may have 10-digit
dialing, others 7-digit, or if you've worked things out with your service
provider, you may have 4-digit dialing between offices. So your dialed
number may vary.

In lab though, you dial the DN of the other router.

Hope that helps.

Scott

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of
Khalid Nafie
Sent: Monday, October 29, 2001 7:47 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: ISDN SPID

Dear All,
        Can any one clearify to me under the bri interface dialer map are we
using spid or DN no.
thx in advance
-----Original Message-----
From: Bernard [mailto:ccie10@usa.net]
Sent: Monday, October 29, 2001 12:28 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Cc: knafie@ncr.com.kw
Subject: RE: isdn Dialer Profile

In cases like this, usually the ISDN simulator is the culprit, not the
routers.
Did you check "show isdn st" on both routers before rebooting your routers?

I know for a fact that Teltone has a nasty habit of dying silently in the
middle of action.

HTH
Bernard

Khalid Nafie <knafie@ncr.com.kw> wrote:
> Dear All,
> After many tries i just restarted the router then every thing worked
> on the same configurations, i don;t have a clue y this is happining, and i
> don't know if i'll have enough time in the lab to restart the routers
> whenever i have a problem a s 1st phase of troubleshoting!!!!!!!!!!!
>



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