[cisco-voip] Getting a tone when dialing long distance

Lelio Fulgenzi lelio at uoguelph.ca
Tue Mar 4 15:49:58 EST 2008


Do a dump of your route plan report and you will find a DN or route pattern somewhere that matches where things go wrong.

Typically, with a delay it means a DN or route patterns that matches a longer set of digits. With a dialtone in the wrong place it means a DN (or route pattern without a "provide dialtone" option checked) which matches other digits is included.

Lelio
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
(519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 
Java-Clavis-Domus Theorem: The ability to keep your hands on the home keys is inversely
related to the amount of caffeine ingested in the last 30 minutes. 

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Kevin LaMarca 
  To: cisco-voip at puck.nether.net 
  Sent: Tuesday, March 04, 2008 3:22 PM
  Subject: [cisco-voip] Getting a tone when dialing long distance


  A couple of weeks ago we started getting a tone when dialing long distance. When we start the dial sequence, i.e. 9,1,215XXXXXXX we will hear a tone when the 1 in the area code is pressed. Depending upon the area code the tone will happen in a different spot. Again this just started happening. We are using Cisco CM 4.1.



------------------------------------------------------------------------------


  _______________________________________________
  cisco-voip mailing list
  cisco-voip at puck.nether.net
  https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: https://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-voip/attachments/20080304/be30a2c6/attachment.html 


More information about the cisco-voip mailing list