| ==Phrack Inc.== |
|
|
| Volume Two, Issue Eleven, Phile #6 of 12 |
|
|
| Taran King Presents... |
|
|
| AIS - Automatic Intercept System |
|
|
| The DAIS II System by Computer Consoles Incorporated |
|
|
| INTRODUCTION... |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Computer Consoles Incorporated (CCI) manufactures various hardware |
| appliances to be used in conjunction with phone companies switches as well as |
| other aspects of the companies' uses, plus computer systems such as their own |
| Unix-supporting systems. |
| DAIS II is the Distributed Automatic Intercept System, which is the |
| system used to announce if the subscriber has dialed a non-working number. |
| This is what you hear, in action, when you dial a wrong number and get the 3 |
| tones plus the announcement or the ONI (Operator Number Identification) |
| intercept operator ("What number did you dial?"). |
| The information from this file comes mostly from an instructional |
| manual sent to me by CCI, who can be reached at 800-833-7477 or 716-482-5000 |
| directly, or may be written to at 97 Humbolt Street, Rochester, NY, 14609. |
|
|
| INTERCEPTION |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Most definitely any person who has used a telephone in his life has, |
| by some means or another, come across the dreaded 3 tones, leading up to the |
| ever-so-cumbersome announcement telling of the disconnected or non-working |
| number. This file will go into how the whole system works. |
| After dialing the non-working number, the telco's Class 5 End Office |
| routes the call to DAIS II. |
|
|
| ANI Calls |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
| Provided that the End Office has Automatic Number Identification |
| (ANI) equipment, the equipment then identifies the digits of the called number |
| and sends them to the intercept system. |
| The system receives the called number from the end office, retrieves |
| information for that number from the intercept database, formulates the |
| message, and delivers it to the customer in an automated announcement. These |
| announcements can either be standardized or tailored to the independent |
| telephone companies' needs. If further assistance is required, the caller can |
| then stay on the line and wait for an operator to come onto the line. |
|
|
| ONI Calls |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
| When the End Office is primitive, and they don't have the ANI |
| equipment to do the above ritual, operators are directly involved. These |
| operators are also called into action when there is an ANI or DAIS II failure. |
| When the ONI (Operator Number Identification) call comes in, DAIS II |
| routes the call to the operator. The operator asks for the number that the |
| customer called and then keys it into her KDT (Keyboard Display Terminal). |
| After she hits the command key, the number's information is searched for in |
| the intercept database, the message is formulated, and the automated response |
| is announced. Once again, if the caller needs further assistance, an operator |
| will return to the line to help the subscriber. |
|
|
| Operators will return to the line for any number of reasons. They |
| include the following: |
|
|
| Unsuccessful Searches - After DAIS II receives the called number from ANI |
| equipment or from an operator, it searches the |
| database to find the intercept message associated with |
| the telephone number. The database contains all |
| 10,000 line numbers for each exchange in the calling |
| area. If the system cannot complete the search, the |
| number was either keyed in incorrectly or there is a |
| problem in the system. The call is then routed to an |
| operator and displays the intercepted number |
| (including NPA) on the KDT screen along with a message |
| indicating why the search could not be completed. If |
| the number was keyed in wrong, the operator will |
| correct the number, or else she will ask the |
| subscriber to re-dial the number. |
| Aborted Announcements - If a search is given successful but for one reason or |
| another the automated announcement cannot be given, |
| the call is routed to an operator. The KDT display |
| shows the intercepted number, the appropriate |
| information for a verbal response, and the message, |
| "VERBAL REPORT." In this case, the operator quotes |
| the message to the caller rather than activating the |
| automated response. |
| Reconnects - If a customer remains on the line for more information |
| after receiving the automated announcement, the system |
| routes the call to an operator. The operator's KDT |
| display shows the called number plus other pertinent |
| information given to the caller in the previous |
| announcement. From here, the operator can respond |
| verbally to the customer's needs, or activate the |
| automated system again. The DAIS II system allows up |
| to 4 reconnects per call, but the possible number of |
| reconnects available ranges from 0-3. With 1 |
| reconnect, the operator must report verbally. |
| Split Referrals - If a number has been changed but replaced with two |
| numbers, this is called a "split referral." When the |
| database finds 2 or more numbers, the DAIS II system |
| routes the customer to an operator, displaying the old |
| number and new listings on the KDT screen. The |
| operator then asks which number they are looking for |
| and keys in the command key to activate the |
| announcement, or else they do the announcement |
| verbally. |
|
|
| Operator Searches |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Situations may arise where the subscriber needs more information |
| than was given by the automated announcement, or believes the information to |
| be invalid. DAIS II provides for operators to have access to both the |
| intercept and the DA databases at all times as long as the system |
| administrator, who judges the extent to which operators can use the |
| cross-search capability, allows it. |
|
|
| Components Of The System |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| The telco's Class 5 End Offices contain switching equipment that |
| routes calls to DAIS II. If the office has ANI equipment, the switch routes |
| the called digits to the intercept system in the form of multi-frequency |
| tones. The end offices route calls to DAIS II on dedicated (direct) trunks. |
| These direct trunks can carry ANI traffic or ONI traffic, but not both. |
|
|
| If trunk concentrators are used, the concentrator trunks to DAIS II |
| may carry ANI calls, ONI calls, or both, depending on the types of trunks |
| coming into the concentrators from the end offices. The call is identified as |
| ANI or ONI through MF tones transmitted by the concentrators. |
|
|
| If an operator must be involved (due to ONI or further assistance), |
| DAIS II routes the call to the telco's ACD (Automatic Call Distributor), which |
| is a switching device that routes calls to any available operator. |
|
|
| The intercept data base resides on disk in the ARS (Audio Response |
| System). ARS processors known as Audio Response Controllers (ARCs) search the |
| intercept database. If a call requires an operator's services, the Marker |
| Decoder Unit (MDU) provides ACD routing information to the ARC. |
|
|
| The DAIS II Automatic Intercept Communications Controllers (AICCs) |
| route messages between the ARCs and the DAIS II subsystems. An intercept |
| subsystem that is housed at the same location as the database is called a |
| Colocated Automated Intercept System (CAIS). A subsystem located at a |
| distance from the database is known as a Local Automated Intercept System |
| (LAIS). Each subsystem can provide automated announcements without using |
| expensive trunking to route ANI calls to a centralized intercept office. Only |
| calls that require operator assistance are routed on trunks to the ARS site. |
| Because those trunks are only held white the operator identifies the number |
| and are released before the announcement begins, trunk requirements are |
| reduced. The automated announcement is always given by the intercept |
| subsystem. |
|
|
| Each CAIS or LAIS site contains a Trunk Time Switch (TTS) and DAIS II |
| Audio Response Units (DARUs). Intercept trunks from the concentrators and the |
| Class 5 End Offices terminate at the TTS. When an ONI call comes in on one of |
| these trunks, the TTS routes it to the ACD. When an ANI call comes in, the |
| TTS routes the called number to the ARC. After the ARC retrieves the |
| appropriate message from the database, it sends that information back to the |
| TTS, which connects a DARU port to the trunk on which the call came in. Then, |
| the DARU produces an automated announcement of the message and delivers it to |
| the caller. ARS hardware generates only DA announcements whereas DAIS II |
| hardware generates only intercept announcements. |
|
|
| Automatic Intercept Communications Controller (AICC) |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| The AICC routes messages between the ARC and the TTS. Two units are |
| required to enhance system reliability. Each pair of AICCs can communicate |
| with up to 4 CAIS or LAIS subsystems. |
|
|
| The AICCs are similar to the Audio Communications Controllers (ACCs) |
| in the ARS system, but AICCs use a Bisynchronous Communications Module (BSCM) |
| instead of a LACIM. |
|
|
| An AICC can be equipped with up to 8 BSCMs, each of which handles one |
| synchronous communication line to the TTS. The BSCM models selected depend on |
| the location of the AICC with respect to the CAIS/LAIS sites. Standard SLIMs |
| (Subscriber Line Interface Modules) are required for communication with the |
| ARC. |
|
|
| Trunk Time Switch (TTS) |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| The TTS has two types of components: the Peripheral Modules (PMs) and |
| the Common Controls (CCs). |
|
|
| The PM contains the printed circuit boards that provide the link |
| between the end office's ANI trunks and the ARC and between the ONI trunks and |
| the ACD. The activity of the PM is under direction of the CC |
|
|
| A PM rack contains five types of circuit boards: Multi-frequency |
| Receivers (MFRs), Analog Line Front Ends (ALFEs), T1 Front Ends (T1FEs), |
| Peripheral Module Access Controllers (PMACs), and Multi-purpose Peripheral |
| Devices (MPPDs). |
|
|
| The MFRs translate the intercepted number from multi-frequency tones |
| to ASCII digits for ANI calls; for ONI calls that come through a trunk |
| concentrator, the MFRs translate the tones sent by the concentrator to |
| indicate an ONI call. Based on the tones, the MFR determines the type of |
| call: regular, trouble, etc. |
|
|
| ALFEs convert incoming analog data to digital form so that it can be |
| switched on the digital network. They also convert outgoing digital data back |
| to analog. Incoming ALFEs provide the link between the TTS and the analog |
| trunks from the Class 5 End Offices. Outgoing ALFEs provide the link between |
| the TTS and the analog trunks to the ACD. |
| ALFE is subdivided into two types for both incoming and outgoing: |
| ALFE-A (contains the control logic, PCM bus termination, and ports for 8 |
| trunks) and ALFE-B (contains ports for 16 trunks, but must be paired with an |
| ALFE-A in order to use the control logic and PCM bus on the backplane). |
| ALFE-As can be used without ALFE-Bs, but not vice versa. |
| Incoming ALFEs support E&M 2-wire, E&M 4-wire, reverse battery, and |
| 3-way signalling trunks. Outgoing ALFEs support E&M 2-wire, reverse battery, |
| and high-low trunking. |
|
|
| T1FEs provide the links between the TTS and the D3-type T1 spans from |
| the end offices. They also link the DARU VOCAL board ports and the TTS. Each |
| board has 24 ports in order to handle a single T1 span which carries 24 voice |
| channels. |
|
|
| PMAC is based on a Motorola 68000 microprocessor that directs and |
| coordinates data flow within the PM. |
|
|
| MPPD boards provide bus termination and the system clocks for the |
| digital network. The MPPD contains a master and a secondary clock, which are |
| synchronized with the frequency of an incoming T-1 span. The module also |
| contains its own clock for use when T-1 synchronization is not available or |
| lost. |
| The MPPD also generates the ringing tones, busy signals, and reorder |
| tones heard by the customer and sends the zip (alert) tone to the operator. |
|
|
| The CC controls the interaction between the PM components and the |
| DARU. It contains the Office Dependent Data Base (ODDB), which is a system |
| table that describes the configuration of the TTS. The CC uses the ODDB to |
| determine whether an incoming call is an ANI or ONI trunk. |
| The CC sets up paths through the digital network in order to |
| coordinate the resources of the CAIS/LAIS. It receives messages from the |
| PMAC, stores information necessary for returning a response to the appropriate |
| trunk, and controls message routing to and from the ARC or the operator. It |
| also synchronizes the TTS and the Directory Assistance System (DAS) for |
| operator-caller communications. |
| The CC is a Power-series standalone processor that contains a central |
| processing unit (CPU-2), based on the Motorola 68000 microprocessor. The |
| processor also contains distributed intelligence for controlling the memory |
| subsystem, the IO (input/output) subsystem, and the disk/tape subsystem. Each |
| CC includes a Winchester disk drive, a quarter-inch tape drive, and additional |
| miscellaneous hardware. |
|
|
| DAIS II Audio Response Unit (DARU) |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| The DARU contains the VOCAL boards that produce automated |
| announcements, which are compiled from a vocabulary stored in RAM. A |
| CAIS/LAIS contains 1 to 3 DARUs, each with 48 ports. |
| If a CAIS/LAIS houses more than one DARU, the units are multi-dropped |
| together. One DARU is always linked to the ARCs (either directly or by modems |
| and telephone lines) so that the announcement vocabulary can be downloaded |
| from the ARCs if necessary. |
|
|
| :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=: |
|
|
| Much of the information in this file is copied verbatim from the |
| instructional booklet sent to me by CCI. Their documentation is extremely |
| in-depth and well written, and, with some looking over, is easy to |
| understand. Much of the information in here is confusing with all of the |
| acronyms used as well as technical terms, but if you cross-reference acronyms |
| throughout the file, you should be able to see what it stands for. Also, if |
| you don't understand what something does, just think of it in terms of use by |
| the telephone company in the context used and you can generally get an idea |
| of what it does or is used for. I hope you enjoyed this file and continue to |
| read Phrack Inc. files to learn more about the system we use and experience. |
| Any constructive suggestions are welcomed directly or indirectly. |
|
|
| Taran King |
|
|
| :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=: |
|
|