Use 9.011![0-9#] and pre-dot trailing pound if you want a single route pattern.
On Feb 13, 2015, at 3:56 PM, Brian Meade <bmead...@vt.edu<mailto:bmead...@vt.edu>> wrote: If your route pattern is 9.011!#, users have to dial the # at the end to match and your discard should be pre-dot trailing hash. Usually you'll have 2 RPs for international (9.011! and 9.011!#). On Fri, Feb 13, 2015 at 3:29 PM, Ryan Huff <ryanh...@outlook.com<mailto:ryanh...@outlook.com>> wrote: Try this one on; Was working fine ... Standard Int'l route pattern 9.011!# Discard set to PreDot (again, this was working ... no issue on gateway ... etc) So today it stops working, just rings busy. I debug the ISDN and it shows called party as the last 7 digits. I go over to DNA and use an int'l pattern with the css I was using and it blocks pattern for unallocation. I create a new test partition with a new 9.011!# pattern in it and a new css with only the new partition in it. I go back over to DNA and try the int'l pattern with the new test css and it blocks for unallocated. Now I scratch my head, so I take off the octothorpe on the pattern (9.011!) and BOOM, DNA routes and everything is happy. I move to production and it works just fine without the octothorpe. What does this sound like? Do you think I may have competing patterns somewhere in the dial plan? Thanks, Ryan _______________________________________________ cisco-voip mailing list cisco-voip@puck.nether.net<mailto:cisco-voip@puck.nether.net> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip _______________________________________________ cisco-voip mailing list cisco-voip@puck.nether.net<mailto:cisco-voip@puck.nether.net> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip
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