07-04-2013 09:42 AM - edited 03-21-2019 07:32 AM
Hello everyone!
We recently switched to a hosted phone provider with provisoning for our 2 SPA525G2's but still want to maintain an internal paging function between them using a speed dial button. For less confusion, lets call in ex5.
I have successfully created a dial plan and am able to dial *96 + extension number to activate the paging system. My objective is to just hit ex5 and having it automatically activate the paging function.
I feel I'm very close but need help with the last step.
Please help!
07-05-2013 10:49 AM
put in the dial plan <5:*965>
07-05-2013 12:04 PM
Thanks for your response!
Question, wouldn't that use my provisioned phone system still? How could I directly dial the LAN side IP?
I currently have (<5:5@192.168.0.104:5060>S0|xx.<:@192.168.0.104:5061>) which allows me to call the other phone but not page it.
07-05-2013 12:55 PM
Oops, I didn't see "internal" aspect.
To direct dial, you'd have to do what you did.
Since you are already using 5 for direct dial, maybe you can substitute another digit. Like <3:*965@192.168.0.104>
07-05-2013 01:31 PM
Feels like we are getting close but I'm still getting an invalid number error when I dial it.
04-30-2020 10:22 AM - edited 04-30-2020 10:24 AM
Sorry for resurrecting a dead thread, but I still have the same question, which wasn't answered here, and I couldn't find anything here or in Google:
How can I put the SPA525G2's internal LAN-based paging function (the one that *96 invokes by default invokes) on a phone or attendant call button?
As the OP was trying to get across, just using "fnc=sd;ext=*96123@$PROXY" (or without "@$PROXY") sends a dial command to my VoIP provider; it does not invoke the Cisco internal extension paging function.
Interestingly enough, if I have a group page defined (I'm using the default group "800"), this command does work: "fnc=sd;ext=800". But group pages are of limited utility because of the many limitations.
Thanks.
...R
04-30-2020 11:00 AM
Doesn't it always work this way... I've fought this for 4 hours. I posted my query here as a last resort, and then I thought, "I wonder what would happen if I used "*96#123" instead of just "*96123..."
The answer is, it works. I'll leave this up hopefully to save someone the 4 hours.
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