User guide
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- Chapter 1: Revision history
- Chapter 2: Regulatory and safety information
- Chapter 3: Introduction to the Avaya 1140E IP Deskphone
- Chapter 4: Accessing the Avaya 1140E IP Deskphone
- Chapter 5: Installing the 1140E IP Deskphone
- Chapter 6: Configuring the Avaya 1140E IP Deskphone
- Chapter 7: Making a call
- Chapter 8: Receiving a call
- Chapter 9: The Address Book
- Chapter 10: Call Inbox and Call Outbox
- Chapter 11: Instant Messaging
- Chapter 12: Active calls and call features
- Making a new call
- Ring Again Busy / Automatic Callback
- Whisper Page
- Call Waiting
- Placing a call on Hold
- Using 3-way calling
- Ad hoc conferencing when connecting to the Call Server
- Transferring a call
- Using Park Call
- Using the Friends feature
- Feature keys
- Using Call Forward
- Configuring Do Not Disturb
- Configuring a Presence state
- Audio Codecs
- PC Client softphone interworking with the IP Deskphone
- Automatic remote software updates
- Busy lamp field
- Group Call Pickup
- Chapter 13: Advanced features
- Viewing the IP Deskphone information
- Network menu
- USB flash drive
- Customizable banner for login
- Phone Information - Details screen
- Screensaver/screen lock
- Background image
- Service Package Group Support
- Speed Dial List
- USB flash memory device support
- Multi-Level Precedence and Preemption
- Announcement Record / Listen
- Abbreviated Dialing Lists
- Change Class of Restriction
- Change Coverage
- EC500 Self Administration
- Malicious Call Trace Activation
- Station Lock and Unlock
- Chapter 14: Multiuser
- Index
secondary account takes precedence: it is logged in, and the feature key acts as a Line key.
If the account is logged out manually, the programmed feature key becomes available.
Secondary account logout
You can log out of a secondary account by selecting the secondary account in the Logout
Select User screen. This causes the secondary account to be removed from the autologin list.
If you restart the IP Deskphone, the secondary account is not logged back in.
Server failover
If the connection to your account proxy is lost, then the IP Deskphone notifies your account
and periodically attempts to reconnect. Some features remain accessible for other accounts
(for example, incoming calls), but other features are not available until connection is
reestablished or you cancel the re-connection. Cancelling the call has the same effect as
logging out. If you are the primary account, the IP Deskphone returns to the initial login screen.
If you are logged in on a secondary account, that secondary account is removed from the list
of secondary accounts that are logged in on automatic login.
If more than one account loses connection, the IP Deskphone attempts to reconnect the
accounts in sequence. The first account to lose connection retries until it re-registers or you
cancel the attempt, after which a reconnect attempt begins for the next account. Canceling the
re-connection attempt of the primary account immediately abandons attempts for all other
accounts, logs out secondary accounts that are still connected, and returns the IP Deskphone
to the login screen.
A single login queue is used for automatic logins and failover. This means that if automatic
logins are still pending when an account cannot connect, a reconnection attempt for that
account only begins after all automatic logins have completed or are cancelled.
Related topics:
Cable unplugged on page 201
Cable unplugged
If the IP Deskphone detects that the network cables are unplugged while accounts were logged
in, then the IP Deskphone assumes that all accounts have lost their connection to the server.
When you reconnect the cable, the IP Deskphone proceeds to re-register all accounts starting
with the primary account.
Server failover
Avaya 1140E IP Deskphone with SIP Software on Avaya Aura
®
User Guide November 2013 201