Dialogic 4000 Media Gateway Series SU4.1 Reference Guide
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Select the name of a regular expression list to be applied on calls
received on this interface. See Address Maps for more information about
setting up a regular expression list. If you upgraded from Diva
SIPcontrol version 1.5 or 1.5.1, an address map is automatically
generated here to provide the same number processing behavior in the
current Diva SIPcontrol version as in former Diva SIPcontrol versions. If
you used regular expressions in Diva SIPcontrol version 1.5.1, they will
be included in this address map as well, unless they cannot be converted
to the new scheme. In this case, the entry <Use Windows Registry
values> is available. Diva SIPcontrol will then use the regular
expressions defined in the registry keys that were used by Diva
SIPcontrol 1.5.1.
Regular expressions can be used to add or remove dial prefixes required
by a PBX or to rewrite public phone numbers with different number
ranges into a common format. See Address Map Examples for more
information.
Select the name of a regular expression list to be applied on calls sent
out by this interface. See Address Maps for more information about
setting up a regular expression list. If you upgraded from Diva
SIPcontrol version 1.5 or 1.5.1, an address map is automatically
generated here to provide the same number processing behavior in the
current Diva SIPcontrol version as in former Diva SIPcontrol versions. If
you used regular expressions in Diva SIPcontrol version 1.5.1, they will
be included in this address map as well, unless they cannot be converted
to the new scheme. In this case, the entry <Use Windows Registry
values> is available. Diva SIPcontrol will then use the regular
expressions defined in the registry keys that were used by Diva
SIPcontrol 1.5.1.
Regular expressions can be used to add or remove dial prefixes required
by a PBX or to rewrite public phone numbers of different number ranges
into a common format. See the Address Map Examples for more
information.
Enhanced
In the Enhanced section, you can configure the settings for early media support. Early
media refers to audio and video data that is exchanged before a session is accepted by the
called user. It can be unidirectional or bidirectional, and can be generated by the calling
party, called party, or both. Typical examples of early media generated by the called party
are ringing tone and announcements (e.g., queuing status). Early media generated by the
calling party typically consists of voice commands or DTMF tones to drive interactive voice
response (IVR) systems.
You can configure the following parameters in the Enhanced section when you create or
modify a PSTN interface:
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