Specifications
Remote Maintenance
344 025-9035AA
It is possible to ascertain some information about the origin and destination of the voice
message in a temporary file by examining the file name. The meanings of the digits in the
voice file name are described in the following subtopics.
Temporary Files
&tttttssssssppu
where & = "temporary file"
ttttt = 5 digit serial number (00000 - 65535)
ssssss= 6 digit subscriber ID number
(the last 6 digits of the subscriber
number from the database)
pp = 2 digit trunk port address
(usually the same as the card slot number)
u = 1 digit trunk unit number
(always 0 for single trunk 702-9037,
0 or 1 for dual trunk 702-9117)
Temporary files will normally be resident on the system for a few seconds to a few
minutes. If any temporary files are seen that have “old” dates (say several hours or several
days old) then something has happened that caused the paging terminal to record a voice
message and fail to delete it. A typical cause is calls to wrong numbers.
PageSaver Files
PageSaver files, files that are made due to a pager being in Insure, Notify, or Mailbox
mode, are named in the following manner:
Ctttttdddddhhmm
where C = I for Insure, R for Notify, & M for Mailbox, mode pager
was in when file was made
ttttt = ticket number, 00000 to 65535
ddddd = day of expiration, number of days since Jan. 1 1980
hh = hour of expiration, 00 to 23
mm = minute of expiration, 00 to 59
System Files
Other files are permanent voice files such as files containing prompts. These file names
may contain up to 15 characters. System voice prompt files have description names such
as "main_menu". See the "Voice Prompts" section in 2000 Series Paging Terminals
Operating and Programming Manual (Part No. 025-9034-001).
Client Greeting (Custom Prompts)
Custom prompt files start with one of three letters followed by the customer’s telephone
number.
p5551234 Paging/insure greeting for customer id 555-1234
a5551234 Announcement greeting
s5551234 Save (mailbox/notify) greeting
ZlinkW “vget”, “vput”
(Transfer files between Voice Storage and DOS)
Refer to Maintenance on page 205, for information on using these commands.










