Re: [Asterisk-Users] x100p question for incomming calls

2005-08-16 Thread asterisk asterisk
Check your extensions.conf on the context setted on zapata.conf
probably you have the command answer you should remove it.

On 8/16/05, Hubert Hoefsloot [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 This must be a question asked before but can't find it so here I go:
 
 I have a Asterisk box connected, thou a x100p, to a PSTN PBX. When we
 get a incomming call on that PBX the phones in the office wil ring and
 there will also be a ring signal on the x100p. At my current
 configuration the call wil be answered by the Asterisk box.
 
 Is it possible to configure Asterisk to not answer the line and only
 extend the ring signal to the callgroup?
 
 TIA
 
 Hubert
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RE: [Asterisk-Users] X100P question

2004-09-01 Thread David J Carter
Gilbert,

The phone port is only a loop thru port for the analogue line.

It is not an FXS port.

Dave

  -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 Sent: 01 September 2004 09:32
 To:   Asterisk-Users; Asterisk-Dev-Admin
 Subject:  [Asterisk-Users] X100P question
 
 Hi,
 
 I have a question regarding X100P card.
 
 I have one X100P card in an * box.
 I have the telco line connected to the line port of the X100P card, and an
 analog phone connected to the phone port of the X100P card.
 
 My question is:
 How to make ringing the analog phone connected to the phone port when you
 receive a VoIP call?
 
 Thanks.
 
   GIBERT Frédéric
   Mobile: +33 6 72 08 35 16
   Fax : +33 1 30 71 39 33
   Mail : [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 
   Bureau Paris :
   Ste VIGINETWORKS (Chez CAP retraite)
   137, rue vielle du temple
   75003 Paris
   France
  
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Re: [Asterisk-Users] X100P question

2004-09-01 Thread Trevor Peirce
GIBERT Frédéric wrote:
I have one X100P card in an * box.
I have the telco line connected to the line port of the X100P card, and an
analog phone connected to the phone port of the X100P card.
My question is:
How to make ringing the analog phone connected to the phone port when you
receive a VoIP call?
 

The phone port on the X100P is only for use when the system is powered 
down.  For example, during a power outage the connected phone will ring 
and you can still answer and place calls with the connected phone.

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Re: [Asterisk-Users] X100P question about odd behavior

2003-03-13 Thread Roderick Montgomery
According to Jim Archer:
 
 Well, the line has two pairs on it, on the red/green pair and the 
 blk/yellow pair.  I am not sure which pins those correspond to on the 
 connector so I'm sure your right (it seems the inner pins are one pair and 
 the outer pins another).

I once heard a phone wiring tech mumble the following mnemonic, and I've
never been able to forget it: Christmas Tree, Bumble Bee.

The red and green pair is for the primary line (the inner two pins), and the
yellow and black pair is for the seconadry line (the outer two pins).

rm
-
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the fool stands only to fall, but the wise trip on grace... [Sarah Masen]
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Re: [Asterisk-Users] X100P question about odd behavior

2003-03-06 Thread Randy Smith
 First, I see that the X100P is only a single channel.  Does this 
 mean that I can only use one POTS line with it?  When I installed it 
 I thought that it would support two POTS lines.  I guess I thought 
 this because it has an ordinary phone jack that had 4 little metal 
 fingers in it.
 
 Is it possible that the X100P is really dialing both lines at the 
 same time and if so is there a way to stop this?

I used the single line (two wire) phone cord that shipped with the X100P. 

I've noticed this issue with some modems also. If I use a two line (four 
wire) phone cord they will bleed over onto the second line. 

Randy
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Re: [Asterisk-Users] X100P question about odd behavior

2003-03-06 Thread Tilghman Lesher
On Thursday 06 March 2003 21:43, Jim Archer wrote:
 Hi All...

 I have installed a single X100P card in my PC and am playing
 with Asterisk. The wire I plugged into the X100P has two POTS
 lines on it, wired on the RJ45 in the normal way.

1.  It's not two POTS lines.  The second port is a pass-through
port.
2.  RJ45 is 4 pair.  The port on the back of the X100P is 1
pair -- RJ11.

 I am getting odd behavior.  It seems when I dial out that the
 X100P dials both lines at the same time.

That's understandable; if you've connected two lines together,
the X100P will take the line off hook.  It has no way of knowing
that you've plugged two lines together.

 I have two questions.

 First, I see that the X100P is only a single channel.  Does
 this mean that I can only use one POTS line with it?  When I
 installed it I thought that it would support two POTS lines. 
 I guess I thought this because it has an ordinary phone jack
 that had 4 little metal fingers in it.

Yes; it's only one channel and it can only handle one line at
once.

 Is it possible that the X100P is really dialing both lines at
 the same time and if so is there a way to stop this?

Don't connect two lines together via the pass-through port?

-Tilghman

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Re: [Asterisk-Users] X100P question about odd behavior

2003-03-06 Thread Jon Pounder
I can't speak for the x100p in particular but when a phone jack in an 
arrangement like that has 4wires (2pair) the second pair is normally just 
passed straight through from the line to the phone jack. This may be used 
to supply power to the phones for lighted dials etc, supply end of line 
resistors to ensure circuit integrity, pass a second line straight through 
on the same cable, or various other scenarios. Normally though you will 
only find single pair cable supplied with the device as the patch cable so 
using that effectively limits your options on the second pair right away.

Again I have not actually tested the x100p, but I would assume in offhook 
mode the phone jack is disconnected from the line jack, but I could be 
wrong here, I have seen devices that handle this both ways (jacks in 
parallel and jacks interrupted when off hook.)

The usual way to tell is there are 2 relays in the type that disconnect the 
phone jack from the line jack when off hook (one is the disconnector, and 
one is the hookswitch), but that is just a clue, not a guarantee.

At 10:32 PM 3/6/2003 -0600, you wrote:
On Thursday 06 March 2003 21:43, Jim Archer wrote:
 Hi All...

 I have installed a single X100P card in my PC and am playing
 with Asterisk. The wire I plugged into the X100P has two POTS
 lines on it, wired on the RJ45 in the normal way.
1.  It's not two POTS lines.  The second port is a pass-through
port.
2.  RJ45 is 4 pair.  The port on the back of the X100P is 1
pair -- RJ11.
 I am getting odd behavior.  It seems when I dial out that the
 X100P dials both lines at the same time.
That's understandable; if you've connected two lines together,
the X100P will take the line off hook.  It has no way of knowing
that you've plugged two lines together.
 I have two questions.

 First, I see that the X100P is only a single channel.  Does
 this mean that I can only use one POTS line with it?  When I
 installed it I thought that it would support two POTS lines.
 I guess I thought this because it has an ordinary phone jack
 that had 4 little metal fingers in it.
Yes; it's only one channel and it can only handle one line at
once.
 Is it possible that the X100P is really dialing both lines at
 the same time and if so is there a way to stop this?
Don't connect two lines together via the pass-through port?

-Tilghman

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Re: [Asterisk-Users] X100P question about odd behavior

2003-03-06 Thread Wasim Baig
Jim:

An RJ-11 has 4 pins and is the most commonly used POTS physical interface

1 2 3 4

A standard one line POTS will be on pins 23, and if you have a dual line
wire, then the other line is mapped to 14? If both your lines are on 23,
then X100P will dial out on both lines.

Do you have a RJ-11 breakout box handy?  If so, you should be able to
isolate where the lines are getting shorted.

-- 
Mirza Wasim Baig | Principal Consultant | Convergence Business Systems
VOX: +92(51)282-0628 x7400 | FAX: +92(51)282-0621 | IAX: (700)282-0628

On Fri, 7 Mar 2003, Jim Archer wrote:

 terrible with numbers) and not a RJ-45.  Both line 1 and line 2, each a 
 POTS line, are both on that wire, so I can plug it into my 2 line analog 
 phone.  I have plugged nothing into the pass through port (which is labeled 
 phone).
 
 When I plug this into the X100P it seems to dial out on both. So it seems 
 to be shorting the lines together.
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