Hi David, > > That's very similar to a setup I made. And I was troubleshooting > similar problems. Let me ask you a question: > > Are you quite confident that the inbound faxes that fail are going to > succeed on an ordinary fax machine?
At least I'm sure of a couple of calling numbers that I know are real faxes that work. There are others, I suspect, are not really "good" faxes. > > In my case I was able to crank through my logs, and trace that the > failing calls were people who were calling a fax line by mistake, or > wardialers, or clients with lousy fax configurations where those faxes > also fail to our 'real' fax machines. > > When we stopped counting the 'never going to work anyway' faxes in our > fax success calculations we had nearly perfect success rates. > > And here's my debugging tip. Pick a number that always fails, change > the Cisco dialpeer to send those as ordinary audio fax passthrough, no > t.38, use asterisk with monitor to record them, and watch whether they > ever succeed. I'm willing to be my two cents that they don't. > Thanks for the tip, I'll try this in order to figure out which are "real" and which are not. Best regards, Santiago Gimeno _______________________________________________ -- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com -- asterisk-users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
