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This is a discussion on How NOT to dial with Sipura's dial plan ? within the uk.telecom.voip forums, part of the Newsgroup Forums category; I have a SPA-3000 whose PSTN interface is connected to an analog PBX extension, and the VOIP interface is ...
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I have a SPA-3000 whose PSTN interface is connected to an analog PBX
extension, and the VOIP interface is SIP registered. I'd like VOIP incoming calls to be answered and connected to the PBX dialtone, so I managed to put something in the dialplan like <:>SO but it doesn't work. I solved the problem by automatically dialling some dummy digits that do nothing harmless to the PBX, but the goal would be NOT to dial anything. Has anyone a clue about that ? |
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On Tue, 25 Mar 2008 13:03:55 +0100, Marc Zirnheld
<Marc.Zirnheld@teaser.fr> wrote: [color=blue] >I have a SPA-3000 whose PSTN interface is connected to an analog PBX >extension, and the VOIP interface is SIP registered. > >I'd like VOIP incoming calls to be answered and connected to the PBX >dialtone, so I managed to put something in the dialplan like <:>SO but >it doesn't work. > >I solved the problem by automatically dialling some dummy digits that do >nothing harmless to the PBX, but the goal would be NOT to dial anything. > >Has anyone a clue about that ? >[/color] I THINK I understand what you are getting at. Normally the default dialtone would be for dialling the 'main' provider, that is the one that is registered as your incoming provider. However, if you have working what you are wanting by dialling some digits then there is an alternative - a 'warm' line. In this case you can get the digits that you want to dial to be dialled automatically. Then it will be up to the configuration of the exchange to accept the numbers dialled after that. Example: If you want a 'warm line' do this:- P4 <:12345> Here, if no number is dialled in the first 4 seconds of 'off hook' then 12345 is automatically dialled. Simply don't dial anything until you are routed, then dial the number you want via your PBX. If you want this to be routed via provider 4, on your gateway settings, for example, then add <:@gw4> to make P4 <:12345><:@gw4> So, in summary, for this example, pick up the phone, wait 4 seconds, the dial tone changes, then dial via your PBX. --- Remove 'no_spam_' from email address. --- |
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On Tue, 25 Mar 2008 12:55:43 GMT, Brian A
<no_spam_bca1000@hotmail.com> wrote: [color=blue] >On Tue, 25 Mar 2008 13:03:55 +0100, Marc Zirnheld ><Marc.Zirnheld@teaser.fr> wrote: >[color=green] >>I have a SPA-3000 whose PSTN interface is connected to an analog PBX >>extension, and the VOIP interface is SIP registered. >> >>I'd like VOIP incoming calls to be answered and connected to the PBX >>dialtone, so I managed to put something in the dialplan like <:>SO but >>it doesn't work. >> >>I solved the problem by automatically dialling some dummy digits that do >>nothing harmless to the PBX, but the goal would be NOT to dial anything. >> >>Has anyone a clue about that ? >>[/color] >I THINK I understand what you are getting at. >Normally the default dialtone would be for dialling the 'main' >provider, that is the one that is registered as your incoming >provider. >However, if you have working what you are wanting by dialling some >digits then there is an alternative - a 'warm' line. > In this case you can get the digits that you want to dial to be >dialled automatically. Then it will be up to the configuration of the >exchange to accept the numbers dialled after that. >Example: > >If you want a 'warm line' do this:- >P4 <:12345> >Here, if no number is dialled in the first 4 seconds of 'off hook' >then 12345 is automatically dialled. Simply don't dial anything until >you are routed, then dial the number you want via your PBX. >If you want this to be routed via provider 4, on your gateway >settings, for example, then add <:@gw4> to make >P4 <:12345><:@gw4> >So, in summary, for this example, pick up the phone, wait 4 seconds, >the dial tone changes, then dial via your PBX.[/color] I should also add that if you don't need to dial any digits then the following will work. P3, xx. <:@gw3> Here, after 3 seconds, a new dial tone is presented (sounds like the 'unobtainable' tone). Then dial away. If you want you can put it all together:- P3, <0:0044>[1-2]xx. <:@gw3> Here a UK number, starting 01 or 02, can be dialled, via gateway 3, after wating for the second dial tone which is presented after 3 seconds of 'off hook'. --- Remove 'no_spam_' from email address. --- |
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D'apres Brian A <no_spam_bca1000@hotmail.com>,
dans le forum uk.telecom.voip... [color=blue] > I THINK I understand what you are getting at.[/color] [color=blue] > However, if you have working what you are wanting by dialling some > digits then there is an alternative - a 'warm' line.[/color] No, you didn't understand. I want NO dialling be made by the SPA-3000. Dialling is to be done in audio DTMF after the (PBX) analog line dialtone (or voice message, if any) is heard at the remote end (where BTW there is a SPA-2100 and a cheap analog phone). The correct answer was: <:@gw> which I found after some (many) trials. This way, I have a PBX extension in a remote location and everything is transparent for the user, including tones, voice messages and hookflash. The drawbacks are: - getting the dialtone takes 1~2 seconds - CID is not transmitted - ringing patterns are not transmitted (PBX ringing varies depending wether the call is internal or from an inbound trunk) But these are small annoyances. We'll try to improve this later (mainly by setting direct peer-to-peer IP calls and not through a SIP registrar). Note: if you plan to do so, restrict the SPA-3000 access with the "Voip caller ID pattern" field (in the PSTN tab), otherwise anybody calling the gateway will access all your PBX features, including outbound trunks. |
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