Board 1 was _really_ board 1 for 2 years ... don't think they just swaped by themselves. 
Any way ... i replaced board 1 and 3 and now it's everyting back to normal...
thx for the help...


On 5/9/06, Rich Adamson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Bogdan Tocu wrote:
> The outline is like this :
> Board 1 channels 1-4 # channels 1-4
> Port 1 unused
> Port 2 unused
> Port 3 - FXO module - not working
> Port 4 - FXO module - working ok
> Board 2 - 4 FXO modules - all working ok  # channels 5-8
> Board 3 - 4 FXO modules - none works .... #channels 9-12
>
> Any ideeas?

Which part of the previous post did you not understand?

You wrote the entries in /etc/zaptel.conf "assuming" that what you are
calling Board 1 really is Board 1, and its not. Its Board 3 using your
numbering scheme.

I don't know of any way to determine exactly how three identical boards
are numbered, so you'll have to experiment to determine which board
holds channels 1-4, which has channels 5-8, and which has channels 9-12.

Its obvious from the error message that you posted that channel 9 and 10
correspond to what you are calling Board 1 (since there are no modules
in the first two positions of that board).

So, change your /etc/zaptel.conf and zapata.conf to address the empty
channel 9 and 10 slots.

Once you get asterisk to run, then (and only then) you can place a call
to each pstn line and see which Zap channel corresponds to which board
by watching the CLI.


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