On Aug 17, 2007, at 3:34 PM, JR Richardson wrote:
Questions:
1. Is the wiki DUNDi example and the dundi.conf file too difficult to
follow for new users?
difficult enough to impede playing with it,
to many things to do during a regular day,
meaning, I won't go thru it unless I am desperate
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I'm not sure that will work as how do I play process the menu
prompts if the user is inside the MeetMe application?
In the docs I've read it does mention MEETME_AGI_BACKGROUND but also
that it only works for zaptel channels (both the user and target
There was a discussion a while back about how to pass Calller ID, when
forwarding, as either the calling number, or the forwarding number.
Had something to do with scams IIRC, but could not find in browsing the
archives.
So, is it in the docs? Starting point or full tilt would be
Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
On Fri, Aug 17, 2007 at 06:15:28PM -0500, Asterisk Development Team wrote:
The ChangeLogs are also available separately on
the ftp site.
Old habits die hard :-)
Well, it's the ftp site but not an FTP site. :)
This was the first time when I realized that FIrefox
On Sat, 18 Aug 2007, Joe acquisto wrote:
There was a discussion a while back about how to pass Calller ID, when
forwarding, as either the calling number, or the forwarding number.
Had something to do with scams IIRC, but could not find in browsing
the archives.
So, is it in the docs?
Hi, when I try to call in it tells me: NOTICE[11664]: chan_sip.c:10637
handle_request_invite: Failed to authenticate user 585415198
sip:[EMAIL PROTECTED] sip:[EMAIL PROTECTED];tag=as18abefe8
Can someone help me out of this? I have Asterisk 1.2 on the Ubuntu 7.04.
Outcoming and internal calls
Doug wrote:
At 19:35 8/17/2007, Lee Jenkins wrote:
Bill Andersen wrote:
I'm a network admin that maintains 3 commercial Asterisk
servers for my employer.
I am wanting to move away from the pre-packaged commercial PBXs
to a more pure asterisk setup. The systems I have utilize a
Joe acquisto wrote:
There was a discussion a while back about how to pass Calller ID, when
forwarding, as either the calling number, or the forwarding number.
Had something to do with scams IIRC, but could not find in browsing the
archives.
So, is it in the docs? Starting point or
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Mike Clark [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
JR Richardson wrote:
I'm interested in putting together a new-user tutorial about DUNDi
configuration and setup. There is a lot of great information, setup
guides already but the feedback I get is that the current examples
On 8/17/07, JR Richardson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Questions:
1. Is the wiki DUNDi example and the dundi.conf file too difficult to
follow for new users?
2. Does the complexity of the DUNDi setup discourage you from using it
or even attempting to configure it?
3. If there was a simple
I have always been able to block toll-free numbers by catching them
with a line similar to this for each DID I have on my system:
exten = 5554441212/_888NXX,n,Playback(GoAway)
Where 15554441212 is one of the DIDs that rings into our Asterisk box.
The problem with this approach that I have
I am aware of how to match a particular caller-id or a caller-id
pattern and do something with the call like this:
exten = 15554441212/_888NXX,n,Playback(GoAway)
What I am curious about, is the best way to block unknown, private and
000-000- calls.
I know I can do this for 000-000-
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2007/8/18, voiplist :
Is there a better way to catch calls which are purposely blocked by
the calling party? Sometimes they come through as 000-000- and as
I recall sometimes just blank or unknown.
The problem here is How can you be sure
Hello,
You can generate a file using bash for example which will be included
inside extension.conf.
for example, in bash:
for i1 in `seq -f %02g 0 99`
do for i2 in `seq -g %06g 0 99`
echo 'exten = _N$i1N'$i2'/_888NXX,n,Playback(GoAway)'
done; done extension-include.conf
...
voiplist wrote:
I have always been able to block toll-free numbers by catching them
with a line similar to this for each DID I have on my system:
exten = 5554441212/_888NXX,n,Playback(GoAway)
Where 15554441212 is one of the DIDs that rings into our Asterisk box.
The problem with this
Trevor Peirce wrote:
[macro-blocktollfree]
exten = s,1,GotoIf($[${MACRO_EXTEN:3} = 800]?goaway)
exten = s,n,GotoIf($[${MACRO_EXTEN:3} = 888]?goaway)
You'll probably have better results using ${CALLERID(num)} here...
--
Does your Canadian VoIP service need CRTC-compliant 9-1-1 services?
On 8/18/07, Arnaud Ligot [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
You can generate a file using bash for example which will be included
inside extension.conf.
for example, in bash:
for i1 in `seq -f %02g 0 99`
do for i2 in `seq -g %06g 0 99`
echo 'exten =
On 8/18/07, Trevor Peirce [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
voiplist wrote:
I have always been able to block toll-free numbers by catching them
with a line similar to this for each DID I have on my system:
exten = 5554441212/_888NXX,n,Playback(GoAway)
Where 15554441212 is one of the DIDs
voiplist wrote:
I have always been able to block toll-free numbers by catching them
with a line similar to this for each DID I have on my system:
exten = 5554441212/_888NXX,n,Playback(GoAway)
Where 15554441212 is one of the DIDs that rings into our Asterisk box.
The problem with this
Tony Mountifield wrote:
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Mike Clark [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
JR Richardson wrote:
I'm interested in putting together a new-user tutorial about DUNDi
configuration and setup. There is a lot of great information, setup
guides already but the feedback I
Hi...
I have what is, I am sure, a relatively common straightforward problem
(no, NOT that kind of problem!)... I'm trying to hook two asterisk servers
together so I can make a distributed PBX.
Here's the scenario:
[MASTER] is in the office. It has unrestricted access to the internet, and a
On 8/18/07, Andres Jimenez [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
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2007/8/18, voiplist :
Is there a better way to catch calls which are purposely blocked by
the calling party? Sometimes they come through as 000-000- and as
I recall sometimes just
Panic over...
I have a weird network problem (now solved), whereby incoming packets
arrived directly to the Asterisk box (eth1); but outgoing packets attempted
to leave via the LAN (eth0)... solved it by sending the IAX packets thru the
firewall at both ends of the connection (i.e. binding IAX to
I am using GotoIf all over the place in 1.4.8 but for some reason, the
following in my dial plan:
#
exten = _1NXXNXX,1,GotoIf([${EXTEN} = 15554441212]?100)
exten = _1NXXNXX,n,Dial(SIP/provider1/${EXTEN},60)
exten =
You are missing a dollar sign $
On 8/18/07, voiplist [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am using GotoIf all over the place in 1.4.8 but for some reason, the
following in my dial plan:
#
exten = _1NXXNXX,1,GotoIf([${EXTEN} =
On 8/18/07, C F [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You are missing a dollar sign $
On 8/18/07, voiplist [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am using GotoIf all over the place in 1.4.8 but for some reason, the
following in my dial plan:
#
exten
On 8/18/07, voiplist [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 8/18/07, C F [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You are missing a dollar sign $
On 8/18/07, voiplist [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am using GotoIf all over the place in 1.4.8 but for some reason, the
following in my dial plan:
At 08:29 PM 8/18/2007, you wrote:
exten = _1NXXNXX,1,GotoIf($[${EXTEN} = 15554441212]?100)
Where?
I the only variable I am using is ${EXTEN} and as far as I can see I
have a dollar sign on each ${EXTEN}.
I think it's this one.
GotoIf($[${EXTEN} = 15554441212]?100)
Ira
It looks like when you use odbc for CDR storage, rather than getting a
Dispositon string like ANSWERED, CONGESTION etc, you'll get an integer
(1,2,4,8). Does anyone know where I can find what strings (ANSWERED etc)
these integers map to?
Doug.
___
Hi:
Which was released for free download under a Creative Commons license for
The Future of Telephony, by Leif Madsen, Jared Smith, and Jim Van Meggelen.
Regards.
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