Lets keep this one short and sweet, 3 words…
TELNET PORT 1752
Alas, I need to say more. It is true that SMDR can be seen simply by telneting to port 1752 of the IP address of your ICP. If you see no SMDR data on port 1752, you may need to check if the COS for your Trunks allows SMDR. Here is how:-
- Open a web browser and point it to the IP Address of your Mitel 3300.
- Log in.
- Open the “System Administration Tool”.
- Drill down to your “Class Of Service Options” form (Under System Properties, System Feature Settings).
- Highlight the COS (Class of Service) that is applied to your incoming/Outgoing Trunks.
- Click “Change”.
- Scroll down until you get to the SMDR section.
- Flick both settings to “Yes” (External Trunk SMDR is given preference over station to station i.e. Internal SMDR when both these are on).
- Save the form.
- Ta da.
You can now Telnet to you ICP IP address on port 1752 and watch the SMDR data stream across your screen like ceefax has gone out of fashion. You can also point any 3rd party IP buffer to the same IP/PORT to log your SMDR data for reporting and such like.
1 |
telnet x.x.x.x 1752 |
(where x.x.x.x is your ICP IP Address)
Thats it. Job done.
Short and sweet answer – love it & thx!
Very cool
Hi,
It’s great but does anyone have a script to generate and capture this data in any file to analyse ?
Many thanks
I guess you could just use the -f telnet switch? e.g.
telnet x.x.x.x 1752 -f C:\smdr.log
when i made call and person other end not answering also it log.
how to disable that?
i dont know of a way to selectively exclude specific events from the smdr logs. Head over to tek-tips, there are some good mitel guys there. http://www.tek-tips.com/threadminder.cfm?pid=1329