RE: [Openh323gk-users] How to Rewrite?

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One more help...after keeping this line, which will remove "011" from
the call.
[RasSrv::RewriteE164]
011=

Now, in order to route the call I have to type all this country codes...
Which is ugly cozz it will be at least 1000 of codes... Any simple way
to route the calls to my Gw, without typing all this codes...

[RasSrv::PermanentEndpoints]
192.168.88.254=USA;886,255,86,852......

Please help...

Regards
Nitesh



-----Original Message-----
From: openh323gk-users-admin@lists.sourceforge.net
[mailto:openh323gk-users-admin@lists.sourceforge.net] On Behalf Of Vance
Shipley
Sent: Monday, July 21, 2003 6:48 PM
To: Nitesh Divecha
Cc: openh323gk-users@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: Re: [Openh323gk-users] How to Rewrite?


On Mon, Jul 21, 2003 at 05:03:37PM -0700, Nitesh Divecha wrote:
}   
}  My new T1 provider does not want me to send "011". How can I remove
011 }  when sending call to my provider...?

Nitesh,

Add the following to your gnugk.ini configuration file:

    
    
}  I just want to send a call with CountryCode+AreaCode+Number. NO
011...

This is how you should be doing it anyway.  "011" is an "international
prefix" and is not part of an E.164 address.  In (most) other parts of
the world the prefixed used for international dialing is "00".  The
complete form of an E.164 globally unique telephony address is:

    <CC><NSN>

Where:
    <CC>                            Country Code
    <NSN>                           National (Significant) Number

A North American number is as:

    12125551234

    <CC>                            1
    <NSN>                           2125551234

This can be confusing though because within the US (and Canada ...) you
would dial:

    12125551234

However in this context it is:

    "national (trunk) prefix"       1
    <NDC>                           212
    <SN>                            5551234

The NSN can be broken down, within a national plan, as:

    <NDC><SN>

    <NDC>                           National Destination Code
    <SN>                            Subscriber Number

In the UK to reach this subscriber number you would dial:

    0012125551234

    "internation aprefix"           00
    <CC>                            1
    <NSN>                           2125551234

This UK subscriber might have an E.164 address as:

    441712221234

    <CC>                            44
    <NSN>                           1712221234

To dial him from the North America we dial:

    011441712221234

    "international prefix"          011
    <CC>                            44
    <NSN>                           1712221234

Within the UK, from some areas, you might dial:

    01712221234

    "national (trunk) prefix"       0
    <NDC>                           171
    <SN>                            2221234

To unambiguously represent E.164 numbers they should be
written as:

    +12125551234
    +441712221234

Alrgough you will often see things like:

    +44(0)1712221234

This is wrong, but common.  The national (trunk) prefix has been written
included in parenthesis.  You should delete it.

So the thing is that you need to seperate out "prefixes" from the actual
address and not let them leak out into other address spaces. To ask your
UK partners to send their destination digits including a "011" prefix
would be wrong as "011" has no meaning in the UK.

On international connections everyone should use a straight E.164
<CC><NSN> format.  When interconnecting with the US it would also be a
good idea however you could drop the country code / national
(trunk) prefix (1).

	-Vance


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_______________________________________________
List: Openh323gk-users@lists.sourceforge.net
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Homepage: http://www.gnugk.org/



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_______________________________________________
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Homepage: http://www.gnugk.org/

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