Patterns For Denoting Phone Numbers And Sip Uris - AudioCodes Mediant 4000 SBC User Manual

Session border controllers
Hide thumbs Also See for Mediant 4000 SBC:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

CHAPTER 59    Patterns for Denoting Phone Numbers and SIP URIs
59
Patterns for Denoting Phone Numbers and
SIP URIs
The table below lists the supported patterns (notations) that you can use in various configuration
tables for matching rules, based on source and/or destination phone numbers and SIP URIs
(user@host parts).
When configuring phone numbers in the Web interface, enter them only as digits
without any other characters. For example, if you wish to enter the phone number 555-
1212, type it as 5551212 without the hyphen (-). If the hyphen is entered, the entry is
invalid.
Table 59-1: Supported Patterns for Phone Numbers and SIP URIs
Pattern
x (letter "x")
# (pound
symbol)
* (asterisk
symbol)
$ (dollar sign)
Range of
Digits
Wildcard that denotes any single digit or character.
When located at the end of a pattern, it denotes the end of a number. For
example, 54324# denotes a 5-digit number that starts with the digits
54324.
When located anywhere in the pattern except at the end, it is part of the
number (pound key). For example, 3#45 represents the prefix number
3#45.
To denote the # key when it appears at the end of the number, enclose it in
square brackets. For example, 134[#] denotes any number that starts with
134#.
When used on its own, it denotes any number or string.
When used as part of a number, it denotes the asterisk (*) key. For
example, *345 denotes a number that starts with *345.
For incoming IP calls: Denotes a Request-URI that does not have a user part.
This pattern is used for the following matching criteria:
Source and Destination Phone
Source and Destination Username
Source and Destination Calling Name
Note:
To denote a prefix that is a range, enclose it in square brackets, for
example, [4-8] or 23xx[456].
To denote a prefix that is not a range, do not enclose in brackets, for
example, 12345#.
To denote a suffix, enclose it in parenthesis, for example, (4) and (4-8).
To denote a suffix that includes multiple ranges, enclose the range in
square brackets, for example, (23xx[4,5,6]).
Example of using both a prefix and a suffix in a pattern: Assume you want to
match a rule whose destination phone prefix is 4 through 8, and suffix is 234,
235, or 236. The pattern for this would be: [4-8](23[4,5,6]).
- 856 -
Mediant 4000 SBC | User's Manual
Description

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents