[cisco-voip] Dial-peer voip with dest-patt starting # and CME 4.0.1

Paul Choi asobihoudai at yahoo.com
Sun Sep 2 16:38:47 EDT 2007


Erik,

says here....

http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/iosswrel/ps1835/products_configuration_guide_chapter09186a0080080aec.html

In addition to wildcard characters, the following
characters can also be used in the destination
pattern:

•Asterisk (*) and pound sign (#)—These characters on
standard touch-tone dial pads can be used anywhere in
the pattern. They can be used as the leading character
(for example, *650), except on the Cisco 3600 series.

•Dollar sign ($)—Disables variable-length matching.
Must be used at the end of the dial string.

The same destination pattern can be shared across
multiple dial peers to form hunt groups. For
information on building hunt groups, see the "Hunt
Groups and Preferences" section.

For information on how the terminating router strips
off digits after matching a destination pattern, see
the "Digit Stripping on Outbound POTS Dial Peers"
section. 

So if you set a pattern as such, you should be able to
use it without issue. Make sure your set your
interdigit timeout to something reasonable.

Paul

--- Erik Goppel <egoppel at gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi,
> 
> 
> does anyone know if it is possible to use a # as a
> prefix in voip dial-peer
> while using CME on the same router?
> My current CME is blocking the # because of the
> personal speeddial edting
> feature which utilizes a # after lifting the
> handset.
> 
> 
> example:
> 
> dial-peer voice 10 voip
> destination-pattern #1234
> session-target (whatever)
> 
> 
> I need to use the pound because the cusomer insists
> on using a pound prefix
> as a trunk prefix to another site.(yes i know)



       
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