Andreas Fink wrote:

this is correct... since it's "semantically illegal" to use a combination on TON=1 and addr value <7 digits. This would "mean", that there exist an international destination number with less then 7 digits, there is no such in real life.


Stipe, I have to disagree. Some countries might have short numbers in the international format that way.

Think of +49112 as the international format of the emergecny code 112 in germany (+49). This would make 5 digits. or +88234 as a country code which we own, we could easily make +882345 as a pseudo international short ID with 6 digits.

I would make this a warning, not an error.

ok, sounds reasonable, even whie I'm not "sure" if a generic PLMN shortcode (ie. 112 for emergency) can be dial from outside the home network, hence using the country code prefix plus the shortcode. Can you dial "+49112" from Switzerland? ;)

I'm +0 on this... so I'll change to a warning rather then error and refusing the PDU.

Stipe

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