[cisco-voip] route pattern for toll-bypass

Voll, Scott Scott.Voll at wesd.org
Fri Apr 14 19:11:19 EDT 2006


Route patterns work on a best case match system.

IE> 1503xxxxxxx would be a better match then 150xxxxxxxx.  Therefore
15031234567 would match the first and route accordingly.  It will also
route based on first match.  So your CSS should have the partition with
the routable pattern first rather then the deny option.

Hope that helps.

Scott

-----Original Message-----
From: cisco-voip-bounces at puck.nether.net
[mailto:cisco-voip-bounces at puck.nether.net] On Behalf Of Ross Montejano
Sent: Friday, April 14, 2006 4:05 PM
To: cisco-voip at puck.nether.net
Subject: [cisco-voip] route pattern for toll-bypass

Hi

i would like to exclude 2 area codes from a route pattern for the
purpose of toll-bypass. i have configured the following:
9.16[^5][^0]XX[2-9]XXXXXX and 9.16[^5][^7]XX[2-9]XXXXXX my question
revolves around whether when a user dials 91657(or0)XXXXXXX it will
match the other pattern and route to this route list. ie, user dials
916575551212 although it is denied by 9.16[^5][^7]XX[2-9]XXXXXX will it
match 9.16[^5][^0]XX[2-9]XXXXXX and still be routed or does a match on a
denied pattern take precedence. I could not find an answer on CCO. Does
anyone have a better way to deny these patterns?

TIA

Ross
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