The AUTOVON system provided a facility for placing calls with
multilevel precedence and preemption (MLPP). If in the public switched telephone network a caller encounters congestion because no circuits are available, the caller typically receives the
reorder tone ("fast-busy" signal) and is unable to reach the
called party. In military networks such an event was not acceptable, as some calls must always be completed. AUTOVON included four
message precedence levels:
Routine,
Priority,
Immediate and
Flash, and had an additional capability called
Flash Override. These levels were activated using the buttons in an additional column of the keypad, which produced the
dual-tone multi-frequency (DTMF) signals A, B, C, and D: • A (697/1633
Hz): Flash Override (FO) • B (770/1633 Hz): Flash (F) • C (852/1633 Hz): Immediate (I) • D (941/1633 Hz): Priority (P)
Routine was the level of calls without priority and required no special signaling; the user would only dial the telephone number. Calls with precedence required preceding the telephone number with the desired precedence signal. Calls of increasing precedence could preempt calls of lower priority, giving them a special tone, if need be. For example, if a call was placed with Flash precedence and the route had no available trunks, the switch would preempt a Routine call, and if none in progress, would search for Priority and Immediate type calls. Only when all lines of a switch were already used with Flash or Flash Override precedence would the caller receive a reorder signal. The authority of a caller to use the precedence levels was granted by complex regulations. Flash Override was not designated as a precedence level, but a
capability designed to allow the
President of the United States or other
National Command Authority to preempt any other traffic in the network in an emergency. The
International Telecommunication Union accepted the MLPP specification as recommendation Q.955.3 in March 1993.{{cite web ==Numbering plan==