
Avaya Media Processing Server Series System Reference Manual
Page 144 # P0602477 Ver: 3.1.11
The commgr.cfg File
The COMMGR (Communications Manager) is the VOS software process that
provides external host management functions. This process is a generic application
interface to communication services independent of protocol. For information about
the COMMGR process and related COMMGR commands, see COMMGR on page
43.
The commgr.cfg file defines configuration parameters for the COMMGR process.
It is stored in the directory $MPSHOME/mpsN/etc (%MPSHOME%\mpsN\etc).
For more information and protocol-specific examples, refer to the COMMGR
Reference Manual.
VMM Configuration Files
VMM is responsible for many of the speech recording and playback functions in the
MPS system. VMM provides run-time services for application-controlled playback
and recording of speech elements. There are two VMM configuration files, which are
stored in the $MPSHOME/mpsN/etc (%MPSHOME%\mpsN\etc) directory:
vmm.cfg and vmm-mmf.cfg. For information about the VMM process, see VMM
on page 49.
The vmm.cfg File
The vmm.cfg file defines configuration parameters for the Voice Memory Manager.
Any configuration option available to VMM can be entered here and processed for
VMM on system startup; however, options to VMM entered at a system console
override those provided in this file. For the default file, basic descriptions and formats
of file entries are given immediately preceding the actual data to which they apply,
and are relatively self-explanatory. The options contained in the default file can only
be issued through the file and not from the command line. The following example is
the basic default file provided with the system.
COMMAND LINE Actual command line (binary) to be executed. Command line
arguments can be specified if the command and all arguments are
enclosed in quotes (see proxy in examples above). The normal shell
backslash escape mode ("\")may be used to embed quotes in the
command line. A command with a path component with a leading slash
is assumed to be a full path designation and SRP makes no other
attempt to locate the program. If the command path doesn’t begin with
a slash, SRP uses the (system) PATH environment variable to locate the
item. Avaya package installations add the various binary location paths
to this environment variable during their executions.
Variable Description
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