also sprach Danny Nicholas da...@debsinc.com [2009.06.16.1656 +0200]:
The problem is the Asterisk Read function. It is set to accept as
many 0-9 and * as you want to throw at it, then stop on # or
timeout. Unless you disable the # stops, you can't use # in
features. I would strongly caution
On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 9:56 AM, Danny Nicholasda...@debsinc.com wrote:
The problem is the Asterisk Read function. It is set to accept as many 0-9
and * as you want to throw at it, then stop on # or timeout. Unless you
disable the # stops, you can't use # in features. I would strongly
The problem is the Asterisk Read function. It is set to accept as many 0-9
and * as you want to throw at it, then stop on # or timeout. Unless you
disable the # stops, you can't use # in features. I would strongly caution
against that because you would almost certainly break something else.
: [asterisk-users] Unable to use # as feature key prefix
On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 9:56 AM, Danny Nicholasda...@debsinc.com wrote:
The problem is the Asterisk Read function. It is set to accept as many
0-9
and * as you want to throw at it, then stop on # or timeout. Unless you
disable the # stops