Provisioning Guide, Release 6.0.x
Preface

Table Of Contents

Preface

Introduction

Organization

Document Change History

Obtaining Documentation and Submitting a Service Request


Preface


Revised: September 15, 2009, OL-15999-15

Introduction

This document is the Provisioning Guide for the Cisco BTS 10200 Softswitch, Release 6.0.x.

Organization

This guide has the following chapters:

Chapter 1, "Overview and Scripts"—Provides an overview of BTS provisioning and tools

Chapter 2, "Call Agents and Feature Servers"—Describes how to provision BTS Call Agents (CAs) and Feature Servers (FSs)

Chapter 3, "Subscribers"—Explains how to provision the BTS to communicate with different subscriber types

Chapter 4, "CALEA"—Explains how to provision BTS interfaces to support the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA)

Chapter 5, "Features"—Shows you how to add features to BTS subscribers using CLI commands

Chapter 6, "Announcements, Centrex, MLHG, Voice Mail, and ENUM"—Discusses the announcement Centrex, MLHG, Voice Mail, and ENUM features supported by the BTS 10200

Chapter 7, "Routes"— Describes how to provision the BTS 10200 to communicate with another BTS, PSTN gateway, or another call agent.

Chapter 8, "Release Cause Codes and Announcement IDs"—Discusses the release cause codes and announcement IDs supported by the BTS 10200.

Chapter 9, "Signaling"— Explains how to set up BTS signaling.

Document Change History

This table provides the revision history for the Cisco BTS 10200 Softswitch Provisioning Guide, Release 6.0.x.

Table 1 Revision History

Version Number
Issue Date
Status
Reason for Change

OL-15999-01

31 Mar 2008

Initial

Initial document for Release 6.0

OL-15999-02

23 April 2008

Updated

Added MVP, Seasonal Suspend, and Enhanced SIP Cause Code information.

OL-15999-03

15 May 2008

Updated

Added release cause codes 1406 and 1407 and announcement ID information.

OL-15999-04

16 May 2008

Updated

Updated hostage negotiation provisioning.

OL-15999-05

 

Updated

Updated dialtone timeout provisioning for Hotline, Hotline-Variable, and Warmline features.

OL-15999-06

29 May 2008

Updated

Updated the office provisioning for Termination Attempt Trigger (TAT).

OL-15999-07

31 July 2008

Updated

Incorporated updated information for Release 6.0 MR1

OL-15999-08

13 October 2008

Updated

Added additional steps to the Subscriber Provisioning under the Multiple Directory Number section.

OL-15999-09

20 October 2008

Updated

Enhanced the provisioning steps in the Two-Level AR Activation section.

OL-15999-10

31 October 2008

Updated

Updated the section on the Multiline Variety Package feature.

OL-15999-11

17 Nov 2008

Updated

Updated Automatic Recall and Multiline Variety Package

OL-15999-12

13 January 2009

Updated

Updated the Resource Provisioning section of Voice Mail, Voice Mail Always, and Voice Mail Access

OL-15999-13

21 May 2009

Updated

Updated the Automatic Recall Office Provisioning section and the Announcement ID for Release Cause Code Number 1145 in Release Cause Codes and Announcement IDs chapter.

Added the Release Cause Code 184 in the Release Cause Codes and Announcement IDs chapter.

Updated the provisioning steps in IVR Collection of Account/Authorization Codes section.

OL-15999-14

28 July 2009

Updated

Updated the Announcement Provisioning section in the "No Solicitation Announcement" section on page 5-86.

Updated the Think Engine/IPUnity Ann ID for Release Cause Number 1172 in Chapter 8, "Release Cause Codes and Announcement IDs".

OL-15999-15

15 Septemeber 2009

Updated

Added the "PBX-DID Subscribers" section on page 3-4.


Obtaining Documentation and Submitting a Service Request

For information on obtaining documentation, submitting a service request, and gathering additional information, see the monthly What's New in Cisco Product Documentation, which also lists all new and revised Cisco technical documentation, at:

http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/general/whatsnew/whatsnew.html

Subscribe to the What's New in Cisco Product Documentation as a Really Simple Syndication (RSS) feed and set content to be delivered directly to your desktop using a reader application. The RSS feeds are a free service and Cisco currently supports RSS version 2.0.