03-11-2015 04:29 AM - edited 03-17-2019 02:17 AM
Dear Friends,
Could you please tell me how to configure cucm that Ip Phones can call to numbers that starts with * or short prefixes for example: *189 or 188
Thanks
Solved! Go to Solution.
03-11-2015 04:41 AM
Simply configure them...
Directory Number | Enter a dialable phone number. Values can include route pattern wildcards and numeric characters (0 through 9). Special characters such as a question mark (?), exclamation mark (!), backslash (\), brackets ([ ]), plus sign (+), dash (-), asterisk (*), caret (^), pound sign (#), and an X are also allowable. Special characters that are not allowed are a period (.), at sign (@), dollar sign ($), and percent sign (%). At the beginning of the pattern, enter \+ if you want to use the international escape character +. For this field, \+ does not represent a wildcard; instead, entering \+ represents a dialable digit. |
If you want to translate *189 to something else, then simply configure the TP for that.
The rest of it is absolutely no different from configuring a DN without *, CSS and partitions.
03-11-2015 05:11 AM
Yes, just as any other number you want to reach on the PSTN you simply configure the RP and all associated elements to place the call on the CUCM side.
If you're using MGCP, then simply choose the interface to place the call.
If H.323 then add the necessary dial peers to your VGW.
03-11-2015 04:41 AM
Simply configure them...
Directory Number | Enter a dialable phone number. Values can include route pattern wildcards and numeric characters (0 through 9). Special characters such as a question mark (?), exclamation mark (!), backslash (\), brackets ([ ]), plus sign (+), dash (-), asterisk (*), caret (^), pound sign (#), and an X are also allowable. Special characters that are not allowed are a period (.), at sign (@), dollar sign ($), and percent sign (%). At the beginning of the pattern, enter \+ if you want to use the international escape character +. For this field, \+ does not represent a wildcard; instead, entering \+ represents a dialable digit. |
If you want to translate *189 to something else, then simply configure the TP for that.
The rest of it is absolutely no different from configuring a DN without *, CSS and partitions.
03-11-2015 05:08 AM
Dear Jaime,
Actually I don't want to translate it
it is a outgoing number I mean the number is reachable from general landline phones so from the cucm perspective I could not reach that number as I understand I need to create route pattern please correct iF I m not right
I need help to create that pattern to reach *189 from internal Ip phone to outside world
Thanks
03-11-2015 05:11 AM
Yes, just as any other number you want to reach on the PSTN you simply configure the RP and all associated elements to place the call on the CUCM side.
If you're using MGCP, then simply choose the interface to place the call.
If H.323 then add the necessary dial peers to your VGW.
03-11-2015 07:54 AM
Thanks
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