Cisco Cisco Customer Voice Portal Downloads Guide Du Développeur
C
HAPTER
6:
D
YNAMIC
E
LEMENT
C
ONFIGURATIONS
P
ROGRAMMING
G
UIDE FOR
C
ISCO
U
NIFIED
CVP
VXML
S
ERVER
AND
C
ISCO
U
NIFIED
C
ALL
S
TUDIO
R
ELEASE
4.1(1)
29
•
“inputs”. One of the standard arguments passed to all components utilizing the XML API as
described in Chapter 3: Session API.
described in Chapter 3: Session API.
•
“settings”. One of the standard arguments passed to all components utilizing the XML API as
described in Chapter 3: Session API.
described in Chapter 3: Session API.
•
“base”. The base configuration for the element represented as an XML document. If there is
no base configuration, this argument is not included. There are two possible DTDs for this
argument. One is used if the dynamic configuration is for a voice element and the other is if
the dynamic configuration is for decision and action elements.
no base configuration, this argument is not included. There are two possible DTDs for this
argument. One is used if the dynamic configuration is for a voice element and the other is if
the dynamic configuration is for decision and action elements.
The response must contain the final configuration to use, which follows the same DTD as the
base configuration XML document. Incidentally, this DTD is the same one used for the fixed
element configuration XML files created by Builder for Call Studio.
base configuration XML document. Incidentally, this DTD is the same one used for the fixed
element configuration XML files created by Builder for Call Studio.
Decision and Action Element Configuration DTD
Figure 6-1 shows the DTD for decision and action element configurations sent in the argument
“base”. The DTD for decision element configurations is defined in the file
“base”. The DTD for decision element configurations is defined in the file
DecisionElementConfiguration.dtd
and the DTD for action element configurations is
defined in the file
ActionElementConfiguration.dtd
, both in the VXML Server
dtds
folder.
Each are stored as separate files despite being syntactically identical in order to allow for future
divergence.
divergence.
Figure 6-1