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

paul dial dialp at ucar.edu
Fri Dec 23 11:52:28 EST 2011


I believe the Calling party transformation on the phone is used to
localize the calling party number for an external call coming into your
phone system.  I'm guessing here, but I think you want to localize the
calling number for an internal to external call, in which case you'd
want to apply it on the GW. 

If the remote destination is still an IP phone under your control, then
I think applying the transform to the phone would work.

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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