Hi Matt,

thanks for the answer. Actually the other box is avaya.My problem is
that I would like to have a single "coverage point" (in Avaya
wording...) where to forward all calls.

I already have the extensions in both world. The caveat is that - to my
knowlegde - there is no way to tell avaya to forward all unanswered
calls to the called extension on a different box. But it is easy to put
all Avaya extensions in a coverage group that forwards to a single fix
extension, that's why I was asking for a solution similar to the one in
the link I gave.

I'll keep looking on the avaya side though, your suggestion is the best
solution if I can forward correctly on the Avaya side...

Regards,
Gael

On 11/09/2012 01:51 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> Hi Gael,
>
> If a sipx extension isn't registered to a phone and receives a call it goes 
> to the dialed user's voicemail by default. It should be as simple as setting 
> up the extension in sipx and configuring your Asterisk box to forward after 
> no answer to the sipx extension. If you need to match up user data between 
> the two you may be able to leverage the AD or LDAP features.
>
> HTH,
> Matt
> ________________________________________
> From: [email protected] 
> [[email protected]] On Behalf Of Gael Ravot 
> [[email protected]]
> Sent: Friday, November 09, 2012 7:19 AM
> To: Discussion list for users of sipXecs software
> Subject: [sipx-users] custom voicemail diaplan?
>
> Hello all,
>
> I am trying to use sipXecs as a voicemail system for extensions on
> another PBX.
>
> Is there a way to customize the dialplan for voicemail to have a single
> number (instead of 8+ext) that can be dialed to leave voicemails and
> look into the sip messages to find the destination mailbox?
>
> The call flow would be something like:
> - someone calls A@remotesystem
> - no answer
> - transfer to VMEXT@sipX via a SIP trunk (the invite here contains a
> "History-Info: A@remotesystem", VMEXT is the new voicemail extension I
> wish to create)
> - let caller leave a message to mailbox of A@sipX
>
> The first 3 steps are of course configured on the remote system. But how
> can I get to the correct mailbox in the end? I guess I have to tell
> SipXecs to look for the History-Info of the resulting invite to get to
> the correct mailbox (all the extensions exist on both systems).
>
> It seems like something similar can be done with Asterisk as explained here:
> http://voipspot.wordpress.com/2012/03/08/avaya-cm-to-asterisk-voicemail-without-sip-enablement-server-ses-or-session-manager/
>
> I haven't found any hints on how to do this with sipXecs , is it
> possible? Or maybe there is a complete different way of doing that?
>
> Thanks in advance for any help/tips!
>
> Regards,
>
> Gael
>
> --
> Gaël Ravot
> Ingénieur Réseau & Télécom
> +41 21 692 22 67
> UNIL, Centre Informatique, 1015 Lausanne
> Switzerland
>
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>
>   


-- 
Gaël Ravot
Ingénieur Réseau & Télécom
+41 21 692 22 67
UNIL, Centre Informatique, 1015 Lausanne
Switzerland 

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