[cisco-voip] off-net and on-net classification of route patterns and gateways

Lelio Fulgenzi lelio at uoguelph.ca
Tue Jan 27 16:03:02 EST 2015


This was my understanding as well. This is a strange one for me. 

I don't understand why this is happening. Especially the "To Private" part. 

I might try switching everything to on-net and see if that helps. 


--- 
Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A. 
Senior Analyst, Network Infrastructure 
Computing and Communications Services (CCS) 
University of Guelph 

519‐824‐4120 Ext 56354 
lelio at uoguelph.ca 
www.uoguelph.ca/ccs 
Room 037, Animal Science and Nutrition Building 
Guelph, Ontario, N1G 2W1 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Brian Meade" <bmeade90 at vt.edu> 
To: "Lelio Fulgenzi" <lelio at uoguelph.ca> 
Cc: "Cisco-voip (cisco-voip at puck.nether.net)" <cisco-voip at puck.nether.net> 
Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2015 3:20:05 PM 
Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] off-net and on-net classification of route patterns and gateways 


Only things I know of it's used for is the different on-net/off-net ringing behavior as well as being able to use the service parater od blocking offnet-to-offnet transfers. 


On Tue, Jan 27, 2015 at 3:03 PM, Lelio Fulgenzi < lelio at uoguelph.ca > wrote: 





Just wondering what exactly the call classification of off-net and on-net for route patterns and gateways does? I always thought it had more to do with ring type, i.e. single ring vs double ring. 

I'm trying out a scenario where I have a test gateway connected to a production gateway using a T1 crossover cable. It's not working out to well. I'm working with the TAC to figure out where things are going wrong, and I'm hoping it's not a bug since I had this working without issue in v7. We've since moved to v9. 

I had the two connected gateway ports configured as on-net and the route pattern which sent the calls across as off-net, and things would not work. We modified both gateway ports to off-net and things are working, but now the calls show "To Private". 

Very weird. 

In my scenario, I want to be able to send calls to extensions, not only PSTN numbers, so I'm thinking I should be marking all route patterns and the gateways as on-net. Then, the calls is marked as off-net when it leaves the phone system and hits the PSTN. I'm still hoping I can mark route patterns as "secondary dialtone" even if marked as on-net. 

So: 

phone -> route pattern -> test gateway o/b port -> T1 Xover <- production gateway A i/b port -> production gateway B o/b port -> PSTN 

Any thoughts? 

Note: The reason for this set up is so that I can test ACLs on the test gateway first, before applying to the production gateways. 


--- 
Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A. 
Senior Analyst, Network Infrastructure 
Computing and Communications Services (CCS) 
University of Guelph 

519‐824‐4120 Ext 56354 
lelio at uoguelph.ca 
www.uoguelph.ca/ccs 
Room 037, Animal Science and Nutrition Building 
Guelph, Ontario, N1G 2W1 


_______________________________________________ 
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/20150127/e2b43c87/attachment.html>


More information about the cisco-voip mailing list