[cisco-voip] how do calling party transformations work anyways?

paul dial dialp at ucar.edu
Fri Dec 23 11:42:36 EST 2011


Did you un-check the "Use Device Pool Calling Party Transformation
CSS".  I believe that will take precedence if its checked.

paul

On 12/23/2011 9:23 AM, Lelio Fulgenzi wrote:
> Turns out you can apply it to the device (phone), but I can't seem to
> get it working. Not sure if my upstream configs are overwriting it or
> not though.
>
> I will have to do some more troubleshooting......ugh, I haven't looked
> at CallManager traces in forever.
>
> ---
> Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
> Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
> (519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (ANNU)
> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> Cooking with unix is easy. You just sed it and forget it.
>                               - LFJ (with apologies to Mr. Popeil)
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> *From: *"paul dial" <dialp at ucar.edu>
> *To: *"Lelio Fulgenzi" <lelio at uoguelph.ca>
> *Cc: *cisco-voip at puck.nether.net
> *Sent: *Friday, December 23, 2011 11:20:56 AM
> *Subject: *Re: [cisco-voip] how do calling party transformations work
> anyways?
>
> You can apply the calling party transformation on the Device Pool or 
> (at least for MGCP GW) in the "Call Routing Information - Outbound
> Calls" section of the gateway configuration page.  There might be
> other locations too, but I think you'd want to put it as close to the
> destination as possible, the idea being that if you have a different
> local calling number presentation standard (i.e. 7 vs 10 digits, etc)
> at your remote destinations, you can customize for each remote location.
>
> paul
>
> On 12/23/2011 8:43 AM, Lelio Fulgenzi wrote:
>
>     sorry, i guess the question should read, where do i apply the CSS
>     that contains the partition that contains the transformations.
>
>
>
>
>     ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>     *From: *"Lelio Fulgenzi" <lelio at uoguelph.ca>
>     *To: *cisco-voip at puck.nether.net
>     *Sent: *Friday, December 23, 2011 10:42:22 AM
>     *Subject: *[cisco-voip] how do calling party transformations work
>     anyways?
>
>     OK, still on this remote destination kick, trying to see how we
>     can make things a bit better.
>
>     I'd like to be able to display the extension on the remote
>     destination rather than the external calling mask (which is the
>     same for everybody).
>
>     I was thinking of using a calling party transformation mask, but I
>     can't seem to find where to apply the darn thing. If I have to
>     create a transformation for each remote destination, I might be
>     able to live with that, but I just wanna see it work for now.
>
>     Going to CCO now....
>
>     Any ideas in the meantime?
>
>     ---
>     Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
>     Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
>     (519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (ANNU)
>     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>     Cooking with unix is easy. You just sed it and forget it.
>                                   - LFJ (with apologies to Mr. Popeil)
>
>
>
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>
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>

-- 
----
Paul Dial
Network Engineer
National Center for Atmospheric Research
303-497-1261
dialp at ucar.edu

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