Cisco CP-7911G-CH1 Administration Guide - Page 239
Entry, Description, Command or Action, Purpose, no forward-digits, extra - asterisk
View all Cisco CP-7911G-CH1 manuals
Add to My Manuals
Save this manual to your list of manuals |
Page 239 highlights
Integrating Voice Mail with Cisco Unified SRST How to Integrate Voice Mail with Cisco Unified SCCP and SIP SRST Step 4 Step 5 Command or Action Purpose forward-digits {num-digit | all | extra} (Optional for FXO or FXS) Specifies which digits to forward for voice calls. Example: Router(config-dial-peer)# forward-digits all • num-digit: The number of digits to be forwarded. If the number of digits is greater than the length of a destination phone number, the length of the destination number is used. Range is 0 to 32. Setting the value to 0 is equivalent to entering the no forward-digits command. • all: Forwards all digits. If all is entered, the full length of the destination pattern is used. • extra: If the length of the dialed digit string is greater than the length of the dial-peer destination pattern, the extra right-justified digits are forwarded. However, if the dial-peer destination pattern is variable length and ends with the character "T" (for example: T, 123T, 123...T), extra digits are not forwarded. exit (FXO or FXS and BRI or PRI) Exits dial-peer configuration mode. Example: Router(config-dial-peer)# exit Table 1 Valid Entries for the String Argument in the destination-pattern command Entry Digits 0 to 9 Letters A through D Asterisk (*) and pound sign (#) Comma (,) Period (.) Percent sign (%) Plus sign (+) Circumflex (^) Dollar sign ($) Backslash symbol (\) Question mark (?) Brackets ( [ ] ) Description - - These appear on standard touch-tone dial pads. Inserts a pause between digits. Matches any entered digit (this character is used as a wildcard). Indicates that the preceding digit occurred zero or more times; similar to the wildcard usage. Indicates that the preceding digit occurred one or more times. Note The plus sign used as part of a digit string is different from the plus sign that can be used in front of a digit string to indicate that the string is an E.164 standard number. Indicates a match to the beginning of the string. Parentheses ( ( ) ), which indicate a pattern and are the same as the regular expression rule. Matches the null string at the end of the input string. Is followed by a single character and matches that character. Can be used with a single character with no other significance (matching that character). Indicates that the preceding digit occurred zero or one time. Indicates a range. A range is a sequence of characters enclosed in the brackets; only numeric characters from 0 to 9 are allowed in the range. OL-13143-04 Cisco Unified SCCP and SIP SRST System Administrator Guide 239