A call detail record contains
data fields that describe a specific instance of a telecommunication transaction, but does not include the content of that transaction. By way of simplistic example, a call detail record describing a particular phone call might include the phone numbers of both the calling and receiving parties, the start time, and duration of that call. In actual modern practice, call detail records are much more detailed, and contain attributes such as: • the
phone number of the subscriber originating the call (
calling party, A-party) • the phone number receiving the call (
called party, B-party) • the starting time of the call (date and time) • the call duration • the billing phone number that is charged for the call • the identification of the telephone exchange or equipment writing the record • a unique
sequence number identifying the record • additional digits on the called number used to route or charge the call • the disposition or the results of the call, indicating, for example, whether or not the call was connected • the route by which the call entered the exchange • the route by which the call left the exchange • call type (voice,
SMS, etc.) • voice call type (call setup, call continue, call operation, call end, call idle, call busy, out of service call) • any
fault condition encountered Each exchange manufacturer decides which information is emitted on the tickets and how it is formatted. Examples: • Send the
timestamp of the end of call instead of duration • Voice-only machines may not send call type • Some small PBX does not send the calling party In some corporate
private branch exchange (PBX) systems, a call detail record is termed a
station messaging detail record (
SMDR).03287948224 ==Uses==