01-15-2015 06:51 PM - edited 03-17-2019 01:36 AM
Can someone please tell me, why when i dial 911 from IP_Phone 1000 i get fastbusy?
From the DATAFILL ABOVE i'm thinking by dialing 911 IP_phone 1001 should ring?
I can call from IP_Phone 1000 to IP_Phone 1001 when dialing each extension; and calls complete;
I'm trying to test a translation-profile being added to a dial-peer....and it's not working.
HELP!!!
Question: can i originate a 911 call without a dial-peer with a destination-pattern for 911? or does the translation-rule cover the
destination-pattern funtionality?
voice translation-rule 911
rule 1 /^911$/ /1001/
rule 2 /^9911$/ /1001/
voice translation-profile EMGCY
translate called 911
dial-peer voice 17 voip
translation-profile incoming EMGCY
session protocol sipv2
session target sip-server
voice-class codec 1
voice-class sip dtmf-relay force rtp-nte
dtmf-relay rtp-nte
no vad
LAP_3825_1PORT#show sip-ua register status
Line peer expires(sec) registered P-Associated-URI
============ ============= ============ =========== ================
1000 20001 2 yes
1001 20002 6 yes
LAP_3825_1PORT#
01-15-2015 07:43 PM
Sorry editing my post didn't read your question:
Yes you will need a dial-peer for that, as the translation profile is applied under dial-peer. Can you clarify if this is CME? both the extensions 1000 and 1001 are registered on the same CME?
if that's the case you can apply num-expansion to replace the numbers as num-expansions apply gloably, if you don't want to create the dial-peer, use below command:
num-exp 911 1001
-Terry
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01-15-2015 07:46 PM
Sorry, I have edited my below post, please let me know if the below solves your issue. As per below post you can just use the command:
num-exp 911 1001
if you just want to to translate 911 to 1001. As the translation-rules will need to have a dial-peer pattern matched before it can apply those rules.
Let me know how you go.
-Terry
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01-15-2015 10:39 PM
You should know that a phone is a dial-peer, and that every call includes exactly two dial-peers: The Incoming dial-peer and the Outgoing dial-peer. So, now you should know that if a phone is a dial-peer, and there are only two dial-peers in a call, then when the phone makes a call, its own dial-peer is acting as the Incoming dial-peer, and when it receives a call, its own dial-peer acts as the Outgoing dial-peer.
To see your dial-peers that represent your phones, use the command:
show voice register dial-peer
If you have two phones: 1000 and 1001, then you have two dial-peers. When 1000 calls 1001, then 1000 is the Incoming dial-peer and 1001 is the Outgoing dial-peer. That's it. You cannot create extra dial-peers to use in that scenario. In other words: you cannot have a call go through three dial-peers. E.g., 1000 as Incoming, 911 as middle, and 1001 as Outgoing.
The suggestion that Terry gave, to use the num-exp command is probably your best option. Simply enter this command into global config mode:
num-exp 911 1001
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