Dial plan explanation

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Dogzipp:
Quote from: RonR on February 07, 2012, 06:31:38 pm

Each of these rule is an exact match, therefore no S0 is needed anywhere


What does the S0 do exactly?

RonR:
Quote from: Dogzipp on February 07, 2012, 06:56:35 pm

What does the S0 do exactly?


Sn overrides the default interdigit timer.  S0 would force an immediate exit of the Digit Map Processor if the asociated rule mates but there is sill an indefinite match rule possible.

Dogzipp:
Wouldn't <**2>1xxxxxxxxxx and 1xxx conflict then?

RonR:
You're right.  Unless there's something unique between those two that you can use to qualify them, you'll have to add an Sn (1xxxS2) to allow possibly dialing a fifth digit after 1xxx.

Dogzipp:
Quote from: RonR on February 07, 2012, 08:11:16 pm

You're right.  Unless there's something unique between those two that you can use to qualify them, you'll have to add an Sn (1xxxS2) to allow possibly dialing a fifth digit after 1xxx.



So (<**1>4xxxxxxx|<**2>1xxxxxxxxxx|911|1xxxS2|[2-35-8]xxxxxxx) should be allright?

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