Avaya 4600 Manual Do Utilizador

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4600 Series IP Telephone Scripts and Application Files
Issue 2.2 April 2005
69
 
The Avaya-provided upgrade script file includes lines that tell the telephone to GET 
46xxsettings.scr and 46xxsettings.txt. These lines cause the telephone to use TFTP/HTTP to 
attempt to download the file specified in the 
GET
 command. If the file is obtained, its contents 
are interpreted as an additional script file. That is how your settings are changed from the 
default settings. If the file cannot be obtained, the telephone continues processing the upgrade 
script file. The upgrade script file is processed so that if there is no 46xxsettings.scr file, the 
telephone looks for a 46xxsettings.txt file. If the settings file is successfully obtained but does 
not include any setting changes the telephone stops using TFTP or HTTP. This happens when 
you initially download the script file template from the Avaya support Web site, before you make 
any changes. When the settings file contains no setting changes, the telephone does not go 
back to the upgrade script file. 
You can change the settings file name, if desired, as long as you also edit the corresponding 
GET
 command in the upgrade script file. However, we encourage you not to alter the 
Avaya-provided upgrade script file. If Avaya changes the upgrade script file in the future, any 
changes you have made will be lost. We strongly encourage you to use the 46xxsettings file to 
customize your settings instead.
For more details on customizing your settings file, se
Choosing the Right Application File and Upgrade Script File
The 4600 IP Telephone software Releases are bundled together in *exe and *zip files on the 
Avaya support Web site. See 
 for a 
detailed description. As of Release 2.0, you have four “bundles” from which to choose. Only one 
bundle is likely to be optimal for any one environment.
Which bundle to choose depends on the answer to two questions:
Which version of 4610SW/4620SW software do you need in that environment?
Are the majority of your 4602/4602SW, 4610SW, 4620, 4620SW, and 4621SW 
Telephones in that environment H.323-based or SIP-based?
The 4610SW, 4620SW, 4621SW, and 4622SW IP Telephones support multi-byte characters, so 
the software bundles come in one of three versions: 
a default version which only supports single-byte characters like those used in English, 
French, Japanese Katakana, etc., 
a multi-byte version for 4610SW, 4620SW, 4621SW, and 4622SWs that support Chinese 
and Russian, and 
a separate multi-byte version for 4610SW, 4620SW, 4621SW, and 4622SWs that support 
Japanese and Russian. 
If multi-byte support is not relevant to you, select the default bundle, even if you do not have any 
4610SW, 4620SW, 4621SW, and 4622SW phones. Otherwise, select the software bundle that 
includes Chinese or Japanese, as appropriate.