North America calling, no fancy codes, wife approved
rjdyck:
I registered my device on obitalk without realizing the implications. Now I cannot make changes directly on my device. How do I override this behaviour?
drgeoff:
Quote from: rjdyck on January 31, 2017, 01:18:24 pm
I registered my device on obitalk without realizing the implications. Now I cannot make changes directly on my device. How do I override this behaviour?
Registering your device on the portal and using the portal to configure it are separate things. You can have the former without the latter. If you really want to configure the device via its local onboard GUI, log in to it and click on System Management, then on Auto Provisioning. Then in the Obitalk Provisioning section, set the Method to Disabled.
However, virtually everthing you can configure locally can also be done using Expert mode on the portal.
azrobert:
Quote from: rjdyck on January 31, 2017, 11:58:31 am
Am I making any more incorrect asumptions?
Your assumptions are correct, but there might be minor implications depending on the modifications you make.
I wrote the following for someone else:
The OBi analyzes each digit as they are received and will process the received digits immediately or wait for more digits depending on the rules in the DigitMap.
There are 2 timers.
The short timer is 2 seconds.
The long timer is 10 seconds.
If a dialed number only matches a rule ending with "x.", there will be a 10 second delay.
This is considered an Indefinite Match because "x." will match any number of digits and the long timer is used. The OBi doesn't know if you will enter additional digits, so it waits.
If the dialed number matches a rule without "x.", it will result in an Exact Match. If the dialed number can potentially match another rule if more digits are entered, the OBi will use the short timer of 2 seconds. If the dialed number cannot potentially match another rule if more digits are entered the OBi will process the call immediately and not wait for additional digits.
An S suffix on a DigitMap rule followed by a number will override the wait period.
The OBi2xx has the option to globally change the default short and long timers.
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The way I coded the digit maps, there is zero wait for 10 or 11 digit numbers. If you add "xx." or "xx.S3" to the line digit map you will introduce a 2 second wait. Not a big deal, but I thought you should be aware of this. You could add "S0" to the 10 and 11 digit rules.
rjdyck:
[quoteHowever, virtually everthing you can configure locally can also be done using Expert mode on the portal.][/quote]
I recently purchased an obi110 which I returned but not before registering it on the portal. For my obi200 I see I can delete it from the portal but the entry for obi110 does not that option or anything else.
rjdyck:
Thank you azrobert aand drgeoff for your help.
The routing suggestions work fine and I learned a lot. My early attempts were not wrong it would seem although the new configuration is more straight forward and understandable. What threw me off was the grief I had getting my international routing working and it still was not working after implementing your suggestions.
I had been getting error 503 service unavailable with my call attempts. Then my attempts started failing differently. I just got dead air. The call history was very perplexing. It showed two simultaneous calls. One showed as connected to my service provider with correct digits dialed. The other showed an origination from SP1 ( my play account ) and connected to LI. Now I knew why I got 503 sometimes. It happened when the line was busy. I never figured out how that routing happened but at least I found the root cause. There was a typo in the proxy uri but the registrar was fine. When checking the provider's dashboard I could see my registration. The bogus proxy however would not accept calls of course.
Perhaps time for wifey to test drive it.
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