> -----Original Message----- > From: Andrew Kohlsmith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Friday, August 11, 2006 2:10 PM > To: [email protected] > Subject: Re: [asterisk-dev] 'IAX2 call variable passing > between servers > ' > > > On Friday 11 August 2006 15:00, Douglas Garstang wrote: > > It's my understanding that rdnis comes from the phone. When someone > > forwards their calls, the phone sends back the 'Moved > Temporarily' message > > to Asterisk. Asterisk interprets the SIP message and passes > rdnis, dnid and > > extension back to the dial plan when it re-enters it. It > tries to dial the > > new extension. My original DIAL() command has 'g' in it... > which I guess is > > what causes Asterisk to re-enter the dial plan as it does, > and try to find > > a match for the new extension. > > Asterisk doesn't "re-enter" the dialplan, it CONTINUES along the SAME > extension, at the next priority when option 'g' is used for Dial(). > > e.g. > > [ooga] > exten => 500,1,Dial(SIP/500,,) > exten => 500,n,NoOp(After trying 500...) > exten => 501,1,Dial(SIP/501,,g) > exten => 501,n,NoOp(After trying 501...) > exten => 501,n,Goto(${RDNIS},1) > > (this is all untested, I don't have a SIP phone handy.) > > In this example, if 500 has a redirect, Asterisk will > (should) send back a > CHANUNAVAIL to whoever tried to call 500. However, whomever > called 501 > (which has the same redirect) should get "another kick at the > cat" with > whatever the RDNIS was set to.
I don't know if I'd call it a continuation of the dial plan. The relevant context here has _X. in it, so there's nowhere else to go after it executes that. Therefore, it must be matching _X. again. ooga looks good... of course the problem here is that if you trunked the call from pbxA to pbxB via IAX, you don't get rdnis. :( _______________________________________________ --Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com -- asterisk-dev mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-dev
