Vista Imaging Vista Routing 用户手册

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Troubleshooting Routing
Routing User Guide 
Additional Routing Considerations 
Transmission Processors and Drive Mapping 
For each Imaging destination that it sends exams to, the transmission processor will map 
a drive using the following progression of drive letters: Q – Z, then G – P.  If a drive 
letter (Q, for example) is not available, it will move to the next letter (R, for example) and 
so on. When all entries for a particular destination have been processed, the applicable 
drive is unmapped. This logic is not used for DICOM destinations. 
Factors Affecting Routing Speed 
Given a T1 connection and a light to moderate amount of network traffic, the first images 
in a routed exam will typically begin arriving at a destination within minutes. However, 
any of the following can impact the delivery of routed exams: 
ƒ  A backlog of images at the Image Gateway, which is responsible for adding entries to 
the rule evaluation queue.  
ƒ  A backlog of entries in the transmission queue. If numerous large exams are flagged 
for routing in a brief period of time, there will be a delay while all the images in the 
exam are transmitted. In situations where multiple destinations are being used, 
additional transmission processors may be used to alleviate delays. For more 
information, see pag
ƒ  Problems connecting to destinations. For Imaging destinations, the routing software 
will attempt to re-connect or retransmit the number of times specified for each 
destination in the 
NETWORK LOCATION 
File (#2005.2).  For DICOM destinations, retry 
attempts are part of the DICOM transmission protocol. Failed connection or 
transmission attempts are logged by the Routing Gateway. 
ƒ  The routing priority of a particular exam. For more information, see pag
Routed Images vs. Routed Exams 
The Routing Gateway evaluates and transmits data on an image-by-image basis. If the 
transmission processor is disabled when an exam is partially transmitted, the exam is 
usually treated as “unrouted” until the transmission processor is re-started, and the 
transmission of the exam is completed. 
In some situations, such as the presence of multiple Image Gateways or the use of 
on-demand routing, images from one exam will “interrupt” the transmission of images of 
an exam that is partially routed. This can occur because entries are added to the rule 
evaluation and transmission queues for each image, rather than for each exam. Usually, 
this behavior is invisible to the end user. 
If a partially routed exam is opened from VistARad, the VistARad software will first 
attempt to retrieve images from the local storage location identified in the MAGJ.INI file 
VistA Imaging V. 3.0, Patch 18
April 2006 
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