User Guide

From TBwiki
(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(Annexes)
Line 8: Line 8:
 
*[[CMC Server]]
 
*[[CMC Server]]
 
*[[HA Manager]]
 
*[[HA Manager]]
*[[TCAP Control Library]] *
+
*[[TCAP Control Library]]
  
  

Revision as of 08:42, 8 May 2009

This is the User Guide for the Toolpack software. It is intended to give system designers and software developers a clear understanding of the different modules available to easily build small and large, fault-tolerant, scaleable systems.

The initial content presented here is copied from the documentation supplied with release 2.3 of Toolpack. Items marked with an asterisk are incomplete as copied from the manual.

Contents

Toolpack Architecture


Toolpack Concepts


ToolPack Reference Applications


ToolPack Modules

  • Callandlegmanagement
  • CMC Call Leg class
  • CAF Call interface
  • CAF Bridge class.
  • CallBehaviors
  • CAFCallRingbackTone
  • CAFCallVoiceMailFallback ..
  • CAFCallFaxRelay
  • CAFCallFollowMe


Database

  • System Logging


ToolPack Classes

Annexes

Advanced programming concepts

  • Factory objects and CTBCAFPoolOfBuffers template
  • ITBCMCFreeListener interface template

Internal data flows

  • CTBCAFBridge internal data flow
  • CTBCAFCallBehaviorRbt detailed internal data flow

Glossary

Behavior: A C++ class using a ITBCAFCall implementation and modifying the way it handles the call flow to achieve a new functionality (e.g. follow-me, ring-back-tone, etc).
Call: An agglomeration of two or more call legs.
Call leg: A full-duplex endpoint representing the media resource and its associated signaling (e.g. a Voip media resource with its associated SIP signaling call).
DAO: Data access object
Interface: C++ base class containing a set of member functions to be used as an application programming interface (API) by other classes inheriting from it.
IVR: Interactive voice response. This functions includes digit/tone play/collection and voice playing/recording.
Leg: A full-duplex endpoint representing the media resource (e.g. a TDM trunk/timeslot or a VoIP RTP media resource).
NAP: Network access point represents the entry point to another network or destination peer (e.g. SIP proxy, ISUP interface peer, etc).




Return to the Main Page

Personal tools