[Asterisk-Users] How to delay dialing
David Liu
dtliu at scu.edu
Thu Jan 29 18:03:53 MST 2004
Thanks Eric for the suggestion.
I currently do use that method to just give user the dialtone. However, the
problem is that our 7960s somehow don't send out correct DTMF.
For example, say if I dial 555-1212 on the Cisco 7960 keypad. I would end
up connecting to 555-1221 or some other random numbers. I couldn't set DTMF
to inband as that will crash Asterisk (because Voicetronix detects DTMF on
the line and crashing it)
Is there anyway to go about this?
David
----- Original Message -----
From: "Eric Wieling" <eric at fnords.org>
To: <asterisk-users at lists.digium.com>
Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2004 4:54 PM
Subject: Re: [Asterisk-Users] How to delay dialing
>
> I would suggest that you use exten => _9.,1,Dial(vpb/1-1/ww${EXTEN:1})
>
> But as I understand it the VPB channel driver does not support the "w"
> (wait) option on the Dial string. An alternative would be this:
>
> exten => 9,1,Dial(vpb/1-1/)
>
> Which would just connect you to the PSTN dialtone when you dialed "9".
>
> On Thu, 2004-01-29 at 18:10, David Liu wrote:
> > Hi there,
> >
> > I am trying to delay sending out DTMF from Voicetronix OpenLine4 to
> > the CO
> > line. The reason being is that Voicetronix sends out the DTMF too
> > fast even
> > before the line is fully established with the carrier. Usually when
> > dialing
> > an 8 digit number, only 7 digits are actually successfully heard by
> > the
> > carrier.
> >
> > Currently, my dial plan is:
> > exten => _9.,1,Dial(vpb/1-1/${EXTEN:1})
> >
> > Daniel said to insert a , before the numbers. I am not too sure where
> > to
> > insert it. I tried
> > exten => _9.,1,Dial(vpb/1-1/,${EXTEN:1}) and that seems to be cause a
> > parsing error.
> >
> > Anybody has any ideas for a hack?
> >
> > David
> >
> >
> > ______________________________________________________________________
> > This message has been scaned for viruses. This means that potentially
> > dangerous content or viruses has been rewritten or removed. The
> > following log describes which actions were taken.
> >
> > Sanitizer (start="1075422274"):
> > Part (pos="2797"):
> > SanitizeFile (filename="unnamed.txt", mimetype="text/plain"):
> > Match (names="unnamed.txt", rule="1"):
> > Enforced policy: accept
> >
> > Part (pos="3586"):
> > SanitizeFile (filename="unnamed.html", mimetype="text/html"):
> > Match (names="unnamed.html", rule="2"):
> > ScanFile (file="/tmp/att-4019a442-1FJ-unnamed.html"):
> > Scan succeeded, file is clean.
> >
> > Enforced policy: unknown
> >
> > Match (names="unnamed.html", rule="4"):
> > Enforced policy: accept
> >
> > Note: Styles and layers give attackers many tools to fool the
> > user and common browsers interpret Javascript code found
> > within style definitions. References:
> > - http://www.securityfocus.com/bid/630
> > -
http://archives.indenial.com/hypermail/bugtraq/2001/January2001/0512.html
> > Rewrote HTML tag: >>_style_0 _/STYLE_<<
> > as: >>_DANGEROUS_style_0 _/STYLE_<<
> > Total modifications so far: 1
> >
> >
> >
> > Anomy 0.0.0 : Sanitizer.pm $Id: Sanitizer.pm,v 1.81 2003/12/17
> > 12:49:44 bre Exp $
> >
> --
> Go to http://www.digium.com/index.php?menu=documentation and look at
> the "Unofficial Links" section. This section has links to a wide
> variety of 3rd party Asterisk related pages. My page is the
> "Asterisk Resource Pages".
>
> BTEL Consulting 504-899-1387 or 850-484-4545 or 877-677-9643
>
>
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