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Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number

 

 

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nobrien at datapac

Nov 4, 2009, 11:22 AM

Post #1 of 25 (1946 views)
Permalink
Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number

Hi,





We have Unity Connection 7 and have multiple geographically disparate
sites. We have a requirement for a single call handler with various
options but the numbers these options ring will differ based on the
called number.



So for example, if Ben calls 555 1234 which is Remote Site A, it goes
through to the central call handler in HQ. Ben selects Option 1 is to
speak to a reception. It needs to go through to the reception of the
office he dialled. If Jerry calls 907 1234 for Remote Site B, it goes
through to the same call hander and Jerry selects Option 1 to speak to
reception, it needs to go through to the reception of the office he
called.



I am very unfamiliar with Unity Connection so I'd appreciate some
guidance.



Thanks in advance,



Neil


lelio at uoguelph

Nov 4, 2009, 11:30 AM

Post #2 of 25 (1896 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

This is what routing rules and search spaces are used for. It's a bit complicated to answer in email, but basically, if you create a routing rule for each called number and assign it a particular search space then route it to a call handler, the call handler is set to "inherit" the search space. Then when it dials "0", it will dial the appropriate "0" based on the search space.

It takes some time to get your head around it, but it should work.

I would read up on the routing rules and search space documentation. I had to read it more than once. ;)



---
Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
(519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt


----- Original Message -----
From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
To: cisco-voip [at] puck
Sent: Wednesday, November 4, 2009 2:22:41 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number




Hi,





We have Unity Connection 7 and have multiple geographically disparate sites. We have a requirement for a single call handler with various options but the numbers these options ring will differ based on the called number.



So for example, if Ben calls 555 1234 which is Remote Site A, it goes through to the central call handler in HQ. Ben selects Option 1 is to speak to a reception. It needs to go through to the reception of the office he dialled. If Jerry calls 907 1234 for Remote Site B, it goes through to the same call hander and Jerry selects Option 1 to speak to reception, it needs to go through to the reception of the office he called.



I am very unfamiliar with Unity Connection so I’d appreciate some guidance.



Thanks in advance,



Neil
_______________________________________________ cisco-voip mailing list cisco-voip [at] puck https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip


nobrien at datapac

Nov 4, 2009, 11:33 AM

Post #3 of 25 (1896 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

Thanks for the info, I kinda figured I’d have to do some reading, now I know what I have to read!!



Thanks again..........



Regards,



Neil O'Brien

Network Engineer



Datapac Ltd

Phone: +353 1 426 3500

Fax: +353 1 426 3501

Email: nobrien [at] datapac

Web: www.datapac.com







Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider

IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions | Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions

Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics Nav ERP | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables



From: Lelio Fulgenzi [mailto:lelio [at] uoguelph]
Sent: 04 November 2009 19:30
To: O'Brien, Neil
Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck
Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number



This is what routing rules and search spaces are used for. It's a bit complicated to answer in email, but basically, if you create a routing rule for each called number and assign it a particular search space then route it to a call handler, the call handler is set to "inherit" the search space. Then when it dials "0", it will dial the appropriate "0" based on the search space.

It takes some time to get your head around it, but it should work.

I would read up on the routing rules and search space documentation. I had to read it more than once. ;)



---
Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
(519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt


----- Original Message -----
From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
To: cisco-voip [at] puck
Sent: Wednesday, November 4, 2009 2:22:41 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number




Hi,





We have Unity Connection 7 and have multiple geographically disparate sites. We have a requirement for a single call handler with various options but the numbers these options ring will differ based on the called number.



So for example, if Ben calls 555 1234 which is Remote Site A, it goes through to the central call handler in HQ. Ben selects Option 1 is to speak to a reception. It needs to go through to the reception of the office he dialled. If Jerry calls 907 1234 for Remote Site B, it goes through to the same call hander and Jerry selects Option 1 to speak to reception, it needs to go through to the reception of the office he called.



I am very unfamiliar with Unity Connection so I’d appreciate some guidance.



Thanks in advance,



Neil


_______________________________________________ cisco-voip mailing list cisco-voip [at] puck https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip


pat-cv at wcyv

Nov 4, 2009, 2:39 PM

Post #4 of 25 (1888 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

The inherited search space that the call handler picks up from the
routing rules in the config that Lelio describes only governs what
extensions the user can enter directly, it doesn't impact the
caller-input config.

If you just need to do this for an operator, that will work, just
configure multiple users with the extension '0' and put them in
separate partitions. If there are multiple inputs that you need to go
to site specific locations, that doesn't really scale, you would be
much better off just making copies of the call handler with the
appropriate extensions and setting up the caller input. No need for
routing rules, search spaces, or partitions.

On Wed, Nov 4, 2009 at 2:33 PM, O'Brien, Neil <nobrien [at] datapac> wrote:
> Thanks for the info, I kinda figured Id have to do some reading, now I know
> what I have to read!!
>
>
>
> Thanks again..........
>
>
>
> Regards,
>
>
>
> Neil O'Brien
>
> Network Engineer
>
>
>
> Datapac Ltd
>
> Phone: +353 1 426 3500
>
> Fax: +353 1 426 3501
>
> Email: nobrien [at] datapac
>
> Web: www.datapac.com
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider
>
> IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions |
> Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions
>
> Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics Nav ERP
> | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables
>
>
>
> From: Lelio Fulgenzi [mailto:lelio [at] uoguelph]
> Sent: 04 November 2009 19:30
> To: O'Brien, Neil
> Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck
> Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called
> Number
>
>
>
> This is what routing rules and search spaces are used for. It's a bit
> complicated to answer in email, but basically, if you create a routing rule
> for each called number and assign it a particular search space then route it
> to a call handler, the call handler is set to "inherit" the search space.
> Then when it dials "0", it will dial the appropriate "0" based on the search
> space.
>
> It takes some time to get your head around it, but it should work.
>
> I would read up on the routing rules and search space documentation. I had
> to read it more than once. ;)
>
>
>
> ---
> Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
> Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
> (519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> "Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
> To: cisco-voip [at] puck
> Sent: Wednesday, November 4, 2009 2:22:41 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
> Subject: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called
> Number
>
>
> Hi,
>
>
>
>
>
> We have Unity Connection 7 and have multiple geographically disparate
> sites. We have a requirement for a single call handler with various options
> but the numbers these options ring will differ based on the called number.
>
>
>
> So for example, if Ben calls 555 1234 which is Remote Site A, it goes
> through to the central call handler in HQ. Ben selects Option 1 is to speak
> to a reception. It needs to go through to the reception of the office he
> dialled. If Jerry calls 907 1234 for Remote Site B, it goes through to the
> same call hander and Jerry selects Option 1 to speak to reception, it needs
> to go through to the reception of the office he called.
>
>
>
> I am very unfamiliar with Unity Connection so Id appreciate some guidance.
>
>
>
> Thanks in advance,
>
>
>
> Neil
>
> _______________________________________________ cisco-voip mailing list
> cisco-voip [at] puck
> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip
>
> _______________________________________________
> cisco-voip mailing list
> cisco-voip [at] puck
> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip
>
>
_______________________________________________
cisco-voip mailing list
cisco-voip [at] puck
https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip


nobrien at datapac

Nov 5, 2009, 12:49 AM

Post #5 of 25 (1884 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

Thanks Pat,



I think this is what Lelio was explaining - Multiple "operators" with a
0 extension just in separate partitions only accessible from the
partition the caller comes in on, I understand that from a CallManager
perspective.



I think it's just for one particular extension (operator) however I had
thought about separate call handlers but 1 handler for each site (9)
seems a bit OTT, but thanks for the suggestion.



On a separate note, if neither of you mind. If I'm creating a complete
AutoAttendant within Unity - "Welcome to Acme & Co, Please Press 1 for
Sales, 2 for Tech Support.....etc". Then if you press 2 for Tech
Support, you get 2 further options like "Press 1 for Cisco VoIP, Press 2
for Cisco Routing and Switching.....". You get the idea. Do I need
completely separate call handlers for each "announcement" and link them
together?? So I would have a "Welcome" call handler which the caller
hears first, then another call handler called "Tech Support" which
announces the tech support options. Forgive my lack of understanding
but am I on the right track??



Just wondering from a best practices approach, if you had multiple
handlers for different auto attendants, is there a recommended naming
convention or format that would allow someone to look at the list of
call handlers and see what links to what?? Or is it just a matter of
drilling into each one to find out what it's linked to. Obviously
proper documentation is what you'd firstly recommend but I thought there
might be a real-world way. I was thinking prefixing the name of each
separate AA with a 3 digit code say 101, the first 1 (on the left)
identifying the AA, the middle digit identifying the tier within the AA
and the other 1 (right) identifying the message within that tier. So if
I had 3 seperate AA's for 3 seperate busineses, the welcome message for
each AA would have codes 101 - Welcome, 201 - Welcome and 301 - Welcome.
If we take the 101 - Welcome, and it says "Press 1 for Sales, 2 for Tech
Support, 3 for Stores". Then I have 3 further call handlers announcing
the different options for Sales, Tech Support and Stores. I would call
these 111 - Sales, 112 - Tech Support, 113 Stores.



Sorry for the rant, but it seems to me that unless you have a proper
structure to it, it could very easily and very quickly get out of
control.



Thanks for taking the time to read!!



Thanks again,



Neil









Regards,



Neil O'Brien

Network Engineer



Datapac Ltd

Phone: +353 1 426 3500

Fax: +353 1 426 3501

Email: nobrien [at] datapac

Web: www.datapac.com







Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider

IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions |
Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions

Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics Nav
ERP | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables





-----Original Message-----
From: pat [at] wcyv [mailto:pat [at] wcyv] On Behalf Of Pat Hayes
Sent: 04 November 2009 22:39
To: O'Brien, Neil
Cc: Lelio Fulgenzi; cisco-voip [at] puck
Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on
Called Number



The inherited search space that the call handler picks up from the

routing rules in the config that Lelio describes only governs what

extensions the user can enter directly, it doesn't impact the

caller-input config.



If you just need to do this for an operator, that will work, just

configure multiple users with the extension '0' and put them in

separate partitions. If there are multiple inputs that you need to go

to site specific locations, that doesn't really scale, you would be

much better off just making copies of the call handler with the

appropriate extensions and setting up the caller input. No need for

routing rules, search spaces, or partitions.



On Wed, Nov 4, 2009 at 2:33 PM, O'Brien, Neil <nobrien [at] datapac>
wrote:

> Thanks for the info, I kinda figured I'd have to do some reading, now
I know

> what I have to read!!

>

>

>

> Thanks again..........

>

>

>

> Regards,

>

>

>

> Neil O'Brien

>

> Network Engineer

>

>

>

> Datapac Ltd

>

> Phone: +353 1 426 3500

>

> Fax: +353 1 426 3501

>

> Email: nobrien [at] datapac

>

> Web: www.datapac.com

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider

>

> IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions
|

> Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions

>

> Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics
Nav ERP

> | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables

>

>

>

> From: Lelio Fulgenzi [mailto:lelio [at] uoguelph]

> Sent: 04 November 2009 19:30

> To: O'Brien, Neil

> Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck

> Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on
Called

> Number

>

>

>

> This is what routing rules and search spaces are used for. It's a bit

> complicated to answer in email, but basically, if you create a routing
rule

> for each called number and assign it a particular search space then
route it

> to a call handler, the call handler is set to "inherit" the search
space.

> Then when it dials "0", it will dial the appropriate "0" based on the
search

> space.

>

> It takes some time to get your head around it, but it should work.

>

> I would read up on the routing rules and search space documentation. I
had

> to read it more than once. ;)

>

>

>

> ---

> Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.

> Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1

> (519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)

> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

> "Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt

>

>

> ----- Original Message -----

> From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>

> To: cisco-voip [at] puck

> Sent: Wednesday, November 4, 2009 2:22:41 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada
Eastern

> Subject: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called

> Number

>

>

> Hi,

>

>

>

>

>

> We have Unity Connection 7 and have multiple geographically disparate

> sites. We have a requirement for a single call handler with various
options

> but the numbers these options ring will differ based on the called
number.

>

>

>

> So for example, if Ben calls 555 1234 which is Remote Site A, it goes

> through to the central call handler in HQ. Ben selects Option 1 is to
speak

> to a reception. It needs to go through to the reception of the office
he

> dialled. If Jerry calls 907 1234 for Remote Site B, it goes through
to the

> same call hander and Jerry selects Option 1 to speak to reception, it
needs

> to go through to the reception of the office he called.

>

>

>

> I am very unfamiliar with Unity Connection so I'd appreciate some
guidance.

>

>

>

> Thanks in advance,

>

>

>

> Neil

>

> _______________________________________________ cisco-voip mailing
list

> cisco-voip [at] puck

> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip

>

> _______________________________________________

> cisco-voip mailing list

> cisco-voip [at] puck

> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip

>

>


lelio at uoguelph

Nov 5, 2009, 6:31 AM

Post #6 of 25 (1881 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

You can be as complicated or as simple as you want with call handlers. We typically build our call handlers with an empty (or very very simple) pilot call handler in the front in the event we want to temporarily modify the greeting.

The alternate greeting is fine for this, but we still want the remainder to be the same.

So, for example, our call handlers are:

CH1: Welcome to the University of Guelph >CH2
CH2: If you know the extension you are trying to reach, you may enter it at any time > CH3
CH3: Please select from one of the following options > CH4
CH4: blah blah blah

(I'm not 100% sure if CH3/CH4 are separate)

This way here, we can modify CH1 to say: "Welcome to the University, the University is closed because we got some bad a$$ snow storm coming down on us" and not have to worry about the rest of the greetings.

Choosing where to error out in each greeting is one of the hardest things to decide on. We decided each CH will error out on itself.

If you haven't already, check out www.ciscounitytools.com, it has a new call handler design tool which will make your life easier.

Right now, you have to build your call handlers backwards since you have to point to them down stream. The tool from above allows you to start at the top, and create call handlers as you point to them.



---
Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
(519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt


----- Original Message -----
From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
To: "Pat Hayes" <pat-cv [at] wcyv>
Cc: "Lelio Fulgenzi" <lelio [at] uoguelph>, cisco-voip [at] puck
Sent: Thursday, November 5, 2009 3:49:26 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: RE: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number




Thanks Pat,



I think this is what Lelio was explaining - Multiple "operators" with a 0 extension just in separate partitions only accessible from the partition the caller comes in on, I understand that from a CallManager perspective.



I think it's just for one particular extension (operator) however I had thought about separate call handlers but 1 handler for each site (9) seems a bit OTT, but thanks for the suggestion.



On a separate note, if neither of you mind. If I'm creating a complete AutoAttendant within Unity - " Welcome to Acme & Co, Please Press 1 for Sales, 2 for Tech Support.....etc”. Then if you press 2 for Tech Support, you get 2 further options like “ Press 1 for Cisco VoIP, Press 2 for Cisco Routing and Switching.....”. You get the idea. Do I need completely separate call handlers for each “announcement” and link them together?? So I would have a “Welcome” call handler which the caller hears first, then another call handler called “Tech Support” which announces the tech support options. Forgive my lack of understanding but am I on the right track??



Just wondering from a best practices approach, if you had multiple handlers for different auto attendants, is there a recommended naming convention or format that would allow someone to look at the list of call handlers and see what links to what?? Or is it just a matter of drilling into each one to find out what it’s linked to. Obviously proper documentation is what you’d firstly recommend but I thought there might be a real-world way. I was thinking prefixing the name of each separate AA with a 3 digit code say 101, the first 1 (on the left) identifying the AA, the middle digit identifying the tier within the AA and the other 1 (right) identifying the message within that tier. So if I had 3 seperate AA’s for 3 seperate busineses, the welcome message for each AA would have codes 101 - Welcome, 201 - Welcome and 301 - Welcome. If we take the 101 – Welcome, and it says “ Press 1 for Sales, 2 for Tech Support, 3 for Stores”. Then I have 3 further call handlers announcing the different options for Sales, Tech Support and Stores. I would call these 111 – Sales, 112 – Tech Support, 113 Stores.



Sorry for the rant, but it seems to me that unless you have a proper structure to it, it could very easily and very quickly get out of control.



Thanks for taking the time to read!!



Thanks again,



Neil









Regards,



Neil O'Brien

Network Engineer



Datapac Ltd

Phone: +353 1 426 3500

Fax: +353 1 426 3501

Email: nobrien [at] datapac

Web: www.datapac.com







Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider

IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions | Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions

Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics Nav ERP | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables





-----Original Message-----
From: pat [at] wcyv [mailto:pat [at] wcyv] On Behalf Of Pat Hayes
Sent: 04 November 2009 22:39
To: O'Brien, Neil
Cc: Lelio Fulgenzi; cisco-voip [at] puck
Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number



The inherited search space that the call handler picks up from the

routing rules in the config that Lelio describes only governs what

extensions the user can enter directly, it doesn't impact the

caller-input config.



If you just need to do this for an operator, that will work, just

configure multiple users with the extension '0' and put them in

separate partitions. If there are multiple inputs that you need to go

to site specific locations, that doesn't really scale, you would be

much better off just making copies of the call handler with the

appropriate extensions and setting up the caller input. No need for

routing rules, search spaces, or partitions.



On Wed, Nov 4, 2009 at 2:33 PM, O'Brien, Neil <nobrien [at] datapac> wrote:

> Thanks for the info, I kinda figured I’d have to do some reading, now I know

> what I have to read!!

>

>

>

> Thanks again..........

>

>

>

> Regards,

>

>

>

> Neil O'Brien

>

> Network Engineer

>

>

>

> Datapac Ltd

>

> Phone: +353 1 426 3500

>

> Fax: +353 1 426 3501

>

> Email: nobrien [at] datapac

>

> Web: www.datapac.com

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider

>

> IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions |

> Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions

>

> Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics Nav ERP

> | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables

>

>

>

> From: Lelio Fulgenzi [mailto:lelio [at] uoguelph]

> Sent: 04 November 2009 19:30

> To: O'Brien, Neil

> Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck

> Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called

> Number

>

>

>

> This is what routing rules and search spaces are used for. It's a bit

> complicated to answer in email, but basically, if you create a routing rule

> for each called number and assign it a particular search space then route it

> to a call handler, the call handler is set to "inherit" the search space.

> Then when it dials "0", it will dial the appropriate "0" based on the search

> space.

>

> It takes some time to get your head around it, but it should work.

>

> I would read up on the routing rules and search space documentation. I had

> to read it more than once. ;)

>

>

>

> ---

> Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.

> Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1

> (519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)

> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

> "Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt

>

>

> ----- Original Message -----

> From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>

> To: cisco-voip [at] puck

> Sent: Wednesday, November 4, 2009 2:22:41 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern

> Subject: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called

> Number

>

>

> Hi,

>

>

>

>

>

> We have Unity Connection 7 and have multiple geographically disparate

> sites. We have a requirement for a single call handler with various options

> but the numbers these options ring will differ based on the called number.

>

>

>

> So for example, if Ben calls 555 1234 which is Remote Site A, it goes

> through to the central call handler in HQ. Ben selects Option 1 is to speak

> to a reception. It needs to go through to the reception of the office he

> dialled. If Jerry calls 907 1234 for Remote Site B, it goes through to the

> same call hander and Jerry selects Option 1 to speak to reception, it needs

> to go through to the reception of the office he called.

>

>

>

> I am very unfamiliar with Unity Connection so I’d appreciate some guidance.

>

>

>

> Thanks in advance,

>

>

>

> Neil

>

> _______________________________________________ cisco-voip mailing list

> cisco-voip [at] puck

> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip

>

> _______________________________________________

> cisco-voip mailing list

> cisco-voip [at] puck

> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip

>

>


nobrien at datapac

Nov 5, 2009, 6:43 AM

Post #7 of 25 (1869 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

Thanks again Lelio.



Regards,



Neil O'Brien

Network Engineer



Datapac Ltd

Phone: +353 1 426 3500

Fax: +353 1 426 3501

Email: nobrien [at] datapac

Web: www.datapac.com







Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider

IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions | Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions

Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics Nav ERP | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables



From: Lelio Fulgenzi [mailto:lelio [at] uoguelph]
Sent: 05 November 2009 14:31
To: O'Brien, Neil
Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck; Pat Hayes
Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number



You can be as complicated or as simple as you want with call handlers. We typically build our call handlers with an empty (or very very simple) pilot call handler in the front in the event we want to temporarily modify the greeting.

The alternate greeting is fine for this, but we still want the remainder to be the same.

So, for example, our call handlers are:

CH1: Welcome to the University of Guelph >CH2
CH2: If you know the extension you are trying to reach, you may enter it at any time > CH3
CH3: Please select from one of the following options > CH4
CH4: blah blah blah

(I'm not 100% sure if CH3/CH4 are separate)

This way here, we can modify CH1 to say: "Welcome to the University, the University is closed because we got some bad a$$ snow storm coming down on us" and not have to worry about the rest of the greetings.

Choosing where to error out in each greeting is one of the hardest things to decide on. We decided each CH will error out on itself.

If you haven't already, check out www.ciscounitytools.com, it has a new call handler design tool which will make your life easier.

Right now, you have to build your call handlers backwards since you have to point to them down stream. The tool from above allows you to start at the top, and create call handlers as you point to them.



---
Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
(519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt


----- Original Message -----
From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
To: "Pat Hayes" <pat-cv [at] wcyv>
Cc: "Lelio Fulgenzi" <lelio [at] uoguelph>, cisco-voip [at] puck
Sent: Thursday, November 5, 2009 3:49:26 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: RE: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number

Thanks Pat,



I think this is what Lelio was explaining - Multiple "operators" with a 0 extension just in separate partitions only accessible from the partition the caller comes in on, I understand that from a CallManager perspective.



I think it's just for one particular extension (operator) however I had thought about separate call handlers but 1 handler for each site (9) seems a bit OTT, but thanks for the suggestion.



On a separate note, if neither of you mind. If I'm creating a complete AutoAttendant within Unity - "Welcome to Acme & Co, Please Press 1 for Sales, 2 for Tech Support.....etc”. Then if you press 2 for Tech Support, you get 2 further options like “Press 1 for Cisco VoIP, Press 2 for Cisco Routing and Switching.....”. You get the idea. Do I need completely separate call handlers for each “announcement” and link them together?? So I would have a “Welcome” call handler which the caller hears first, then another call handler called “Tech Support” which announces the tech support options. Forgive my lack of understanding but am I on the right track??



Just wondering from a best practices approach, if you had multiple handlers for different auto attendants, is there a recommended naming convention or format that would allow someone to look at the list of call handlers and see what links to what?? Or is it just a matter of drilling into each one to find out what it’s linked to. Obviously proper documentation is what you’d firstly recommend but I thought there might be a real-world way. I was thinking prefixing the name of each separate AA with a 3 digit code say 101, the first 1 (on the left) identifying the AA, the middle digit identifying the tier within the AA and the other 1 (right) identifying the message within that tier. So if I had 3 seperate AA’s for 3 seperate busineses, the welcome message for each AA would have codes 101 - Welcome, 201 - Welcome and 301 - Welcome. If we take the 101 – Welcome, and it says “Press 1 for Sales, 2 for Tech Support, 3 for Stores”. Then I have 3 further call handlers announcing the different options for Sales, Tech Support and Stores. I would call these 111 – Sales, 112 – Tech Support, 113 Stores.



Sorry for the rant, but it seems to me that unless you have a proper structure to it, it could very easily and very quickly get out of control.



Thanks for taking the time to read!!



Thanks again,



Neil









Regards,



Neil O'Brien

Network Engineer



Datapac Ltd

Phone: +353 1 426 3500

Fax: +353 1 426 3501

Email: nobrien [at] datapac

Web: www.datapac.com







Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider

IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions | Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions

Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics Nav ERP | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables





-----Original Message-----
From: pat [at] wcyv [mailto:pat [at] wcyv] On Behalf Of Pat Hayes
Sent: 04 November 2009 22:39
To: O'Brien, Neil
Cc: Lelio Fulgenzi; cisco-voip [at] puck
Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number



The inherited search space that the call handler picks up from the

routing rules in the config that Lelio describes only governs what

extensions the user can enter directly, it doesn't impact the

caller-input config.



If you just need to do this for an operator, that will work, just

configure multiple users with the extension '0' and put them in

separate partitions. If there are multiple inputs that you need to go

to site specific locations, that doesn't really scale, you would be

much better off just making copies of the call handler with the

appropriate extensions and setting up the caller input. No need for

routing rules, search spaces, or partitions.



On Wed, Nov 4, 2009 at 2:33 PM, O'Brien, Neil <nobrien [at] datapac> wrote:

> Thanks for the info, I kinda figured I’d have to do some reading, now I know

> what I have to read!!

>

>

>

> Thanks again..........

>

>

>

> Regards,

>

>

>

> Neil O'Brien

>

> Network Engineer

>

>

>

> Datapac Ltd

>

> Phone: +353 1 426 3500

>

> Fax: +353 1 426 3501

>

> Email: nobrien [at] datapac

>

> Web: www.datapac.com

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider

>

> IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions |

> Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions

>

> Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics Nav ERP

> | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables

>

>

>

> From: Lelio Fulgenzi [mailto:lelio [at] uoguelph]

> Sent: 04 November 2009 19:30

> To: O'Brien, Neil

> Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck

> Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called

> Number

>

>

>

> This is what routing rules and search spaces are used for. It's a bit

> complicated to answer in email, but basically, if you create a routing rule

> for each called number and assign it a particular search space then route it

> to a call handler, the call handler is set to "inherit" the search space.

> Then when it dials "0", it will dial the appropriate "0" based on the search

> space.

>

> It takes some time to get your head around it, but it should work.

>

> I would read up on the routing rules and search space documentation. I had

> to read it more than once. ;)

>

>

>

> ---

> Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.

> Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1

> (519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)

> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

> "Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt

>

>

> ----- Original Message -----

> From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>

> To: cisco-voip [at] puck

> Sent: Wednesday, November 4, 2009 2:22:41 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern

> Subject: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called

> Number

>

>

> Hi,

>

>

>

>

>

> We have Unity Connection 7 and have multiple geographically disparate

> sites. We have a requirement for a single call handler with various options

> but the numbers these options ring will differ based on the called number.

>

>

>

> So for example, if Ben calls 555 1234 which is Remote Site A, it goes

> through to the central call handler in HQ. Ben selects Option 1 is to speak

> to a reception. It needs to go through to the reception of the office he

> dialled. If Jerry calls 907 1234 for Remote Site B, it goes through to the

> same call hander and Jerry selects Option 1 to speak to reception, it needs

> to go through to the reception of the office he called.

>

>

>

> I am very unfamiliar with Unity Connection so I’d appreciate some guidance.

>

>

>

> Thanks in advance,

>

>

>

> Neil

>

> _______________________________________________ cisco-voip mailing list

> cisco-voip [at] puck

> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip

>

> _______________________________________________

> cisco-voip mailing list

> cisco-voip [at] puck

> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip

>

>


nobrien at datapac

Dec 1, 2009, 9:19 AM

Post #8 of 25 (1757 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

Hey Guys,



I’m still having a bit of trouble with this one, if you can cast your mind back.



OK, so I understand that I can configure a rule based on the called number and that rule puts the call into a CSS. The handler it get’s handed off to will inherit the CSS from the call. I want the caller to press 0 and be routed appropriately (based on his called number) but I don’t see where the CSS come into play. I still have to configure a Caller Input for 0 to point to either another call handler or extension number, but I don’t see how a different CSS works.



Does the Unity CSS relate in any way to the CCM CSS, is that where I need to configure my multiple “0” destinations? If I configure multiple Operator handlers all with extension 0 put in different partitions/css, the handler can still only hand off to one of them specified in the call action of caller input 0.



I’d appreciate your help,



Thanks,



Neil







Regards,



Neil O'Brien

Network Engineer



Datapac Ltd

Phone: +353 1 426 3500

Fax: +353 1 426 3501

Email: nobrien [at] datapac

Web: www.datapac.com







Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider

IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions | Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions

Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics Nav ERP | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables



From: Lelio Fulgenzi [mailto:lelio [at] uoguelph]
Sent: 05 November 2009 14:31
To: O'Brien, Neil
Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck; Pat Hayes
Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number



You can be as complicated or as simple as you want with call handlers. We typically build our call handlers with an empty (or very very simple) pilot call handler in the front in the event we want to temporarily modify the greeting.

The alternate greeting is fine for this, but we still want the remainder to be the same.

So, for example, our call handlers are:

CH1: Welcome to the University of Guelph >CH2
CH2: If you know the extension you are trying to reach, you may enter it at any time > CH3
CH3: Please select from one of the following options > CH4
CH4: blah blah blah

(I'm not 100% sure if CH3/CH4 are separate)

This way here, we can modify CH1 to say: "Welcome to the University, the University is closed because we got some bad a$$ snow storm coming down on us" and not have to worry about the rest of the greetings.

Choosing where to error out in each greeting is one of the hardest things to decide on. We decided each CH will error out on itself.

If you haven't already, check out www.ciscounitytools.com, it has a new call handler design tool which will make your life easier.

Right now, you have to build your call handlers backwards since you have to point to them down stream. The tool from above allows you to start at the top, and create call handlers as you point to them.



---
Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
(519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt


----- Original Message -----
From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
To: "Pat Hayes" <pat-cv [at] wcyv>
Cc: "Lelio Fulgenzi" <lelio [at] uoguelph>, cisco-voip [at] puck
Sent: Thursday, November 5, 2009 3:49:26 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: RE: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number

Thanks Pat,



I think this is what Lelio was explaining - Multiple "operators" with a 0 extension just in separate partitions only accessible from the partition the caller comes in on, I understand that from a CallManager perspective.



I think it's just for one particular extension (operator) however I had thought about separate call handlers but 1 handler for each site (9) seems a bit OTT, but thanks for the suggestion.



On a separate note, if neither of you mind. If I'm creating a complete AutoAttendant within Unity - "Welcome to Acme & Co, Please Press 1 for Sales, 2 for Tech Support.....etc”. Then if you press 2 for Tech Support, you get 2 further options like “Press 1 for Cisco VoIP, Press 2 for Cisco Routing and Switching.....”. You get the idea. Do I need completely separate call handlers for each “announcement” and link them together?? So I would have a “Welcome” call handler which the caller hears first, then another call handler called “Tech Support” which announces the tech support options. Forgive my lack of understanding but am I on the right track??



Just wondering from a best practices approach, if you had multiple handlers for different auto attendants, is there a recommended naming convention or format that would allow someone to look at the list of call handlers and see what links to what?? Or is it just a matter of drilling into each one to find out what it’s linked to. Obviously proper documentation is what you’d firstly recommend but I thought there might be a real-world way. I was thinking prefixing the name of each separate AA with a 3 digit code say 101, the first 1 (on the left) identifying the AA, the middle digit identifying the tier within the AA and the other 1 (right) identifying the message within that tier. So if I had 3 seperate AA’s for 3 seperate busineses, the welcome message for each AA would have codes 101 - Welcome, 201 - Welcome and 301 - Welcome. If we take the 101 – Welcome, and it says “Press 1 for Sales, 2 for Tech Support, 3 for Stores”. Then I have 3 further call handlers announcing the different options for Sales, Tech Support and Stores. I would call these 111 – Sales, 112 – Tech Support, 113 Stores.



Sorry for the rant, but it seems to me that unless you have a proper structure to it, it could very easily and very quickly get out of control.



Thanks for taking the time to read!!



Thanks again,



Neil









Regards,



Neil O'Brien

Network Engineer



Datapac Ltd

Phone: +353 1 426 3500

Fax: +353 1 426 3501

Email: nobrien [at] datapac

Web: www.datapac.com







Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider

IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions | Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions

Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics Nav ERP | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables





-----Original Message-----
From: pat [at] wcyv [mailto:pat [at] wcyv] On Behalf Of Pat Hayes
Sent: 04 November 2009 22:39
To: O'Brien, Neil
Cc: Lelio Fulgenzi; cisco-voip [at] puck
Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number



The inherited search space that the call handler picks up from the

routing rules in the config that Lelio describes only governs what

extensions the user can enter directly, it doesn't impact the

caller-input config.



If you just need to do this for an operator, that will work, just

configure multiple users with the extension '0' and put them in

separate partitions. If there are multiple inputs that you need to go

to site specific locations, that doesn't really scale, you would be

much better off just making copies of the call handler with the

appropriate extensions and setting up the caller input. No need for

routing rules, search spaces, or partitions.



On Wed, Nov 4, 2009 at 2:33 PM, O'Brien, Neil <nobrien [at] datapac> wrote:

> Thanks for the info, I kinda figured I’d have to do some reading, now I know

> what I have to read!!

>

>

>

> Thanks again..........

>

>

>

> Regards,

>

>

>

> Neil O'Brien

>

> Network Engineer

>

>

>

> Datapac Ltd

>

> Phone: +353 1 426 3500

>

> Fax: +353 1 426 3501

>

> Email: nobrien [at] datapac

>

> Web: www.datapac.com

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider

>

> IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions |

> Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions

>

> Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics Nav ERP

> | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables

>

>

>

> From: Lelio Fulgenzi [mailto:lelio [at] uoguelph]

> Sent: 04 November 2009 19:30

> To: O'Brien, Neil

> Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck

> Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called

> Number

>

>

>

> This is what routing rules and search spaces are used for. It's a bit

> complicated to answer in email, but basically, if you create a routing rule

> for each called number and assign it a particular search space then route it

> to a call handler, the call handler is set to "inherit" the search space.

> Then when it dials "0", it will dial the appropriate "0" based on the search

> space.

>

> It takes some time to get your head around it, but it should work.

>

> I would read up on the routing rules and search space documentation. I had

> to read it more than once. ;)

>

>

>

> ---

> Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.

> Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1

> (519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)

> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

> "Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt

>

>

> ----- Original Message -----

> From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>

> To: cisco-voip [at] puck

> Sent: Wednesday, November 4, 2009 2:22:41 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern

> Subject: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called

> Number

>

>

> Hi,

>

>

>

>

>

> We have Unity Connection 7 and have multiple geographically disparate

> sites. We have a requirement for a single call handler with various options

> but the numbers these options ring will differ based on the called number.

>

>

>

> So for example, if Ben calls 555 1234 which is Remote Site A, it goes

> through to the central call handler in HQ. Ben selects Option 1 is to speak

> to a reception. It needs to go through to the reception of the office he

> dialled. If Jerry calls 907 1234 for Remote Site B, it goes through to the

> same call hander and Jerry selects Option 1 to speak to reception, it needs

> to go through to the reception of the office he called.

>

>

>

> I am very unfamiliar with Unity Connection so I’d appreciate some guidance.

>

>

>

> Thanks in advance,

>

>

>

> Neil

>

> _______________________________________________ cisco-voip mailing list

> cisco-voip [at] puck

> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip

>

> _______________________________________________

> cisco-voip mailing list

> cisco-voip [at] puck

> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip

>

>


pat-cv at wcyv

Dec 1, 2009, 3:03 PM

Post #9 of 25 (1747 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

Neil,

You're right, there is no way to do it the way you are describing.
Caller-input on a call handler can only point to a single specific
destination, there is no way to just provide an extension and leave it
up to the search space to route. The search spaces and partitions in
UC have no relation to those in CUCM, other than in name.

What I was trying to get at before is that there are basically two
ways you can do this (as far as I can see, at least):

First - the tried and true way. Have a separate set of call handlers,
one for each site (copy each from the first one to make it easier). If
you assign the extension of the dummy dn to the call handler, you
don't even need any extra routing rules, it will just work. Then you
set caller-input 0 on each CH to go to whatever operator you want to
for each site (or use 'transfer to alternate contact number' to save
the extra user/call handler). You can do pretty much the exact same
thing in Unity. Any changes down the road will have to be synced
across each CH, but that isn't too hard and it give you some
flexibility in case you want to do something different.

Second - the way I haven't actually tried but am pretty sure would
work. You use the routing rules to set the search space appropriately
and it is inherited down when the call is routed to the one call
handler. You configure a separate operator user (or call handler) for
each site and assign them extension '0' and put them in the partition
that is reachable for the search space you are assigning. You don't
set up caller-input 0 on the call handler, you just enable the option
to allow users to dial extensions. Thus, when the caller dials 0, it
is routed to whatever user (operator) has extension 0 in the active
search space.

Both should work, and the second one does utilize the snazzy new
search space feature, but, in my opinion at least, it is a little
unnecessarily complicated. If it were me, I'd go with the more
straight forward first option.

-Pat

On Tue, Dec 1, 2009 at 12:19 PM, O'Brien, Neil <nobrien [at] datapac> wrote:
> Hey Guys,
>
>
>
> Im still having a bit of trouble with this one, if you can cast your mind
> back.
>
>
>
> OK, so I understand that I can configure a rule based on the called number
> and that rule puts the call into a CSS. The handler it gets handed off to
> will inherit the CSS from the call. I want the caller to press 0 and be
> routed appropriately (based on his called number) but I dont see where the
> CSS come into play. I still have to configure a Caller Input for 0 to
> point to either another call handler or extension number, but I dont see
> how a different CSS works.
>
>
>
> Does the Unity CSS relate in any way to the CCM CSS, is that where I need to
> configure my multiple 0 destinations? If I configure multiple Operator
> handlers all with extension 0 put in different partitions/css, the handler
> can still only hand off to one of them specified in the call action of
> caller input 0.
>
>
>
> Id appreciate your help,
>
>
>
> Thanks,
>
>
>
> Neil
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Regards,
>
>
>
> Neil O'Brien
>
> Network Engineer
>
>
>
> Datapac Ltd
>
> Phone: +353 1 426 3500
>
> Fax: +353 1 426 3501
>
> Email: nobrien [at] datapac
>
> Web: www.datapac.com
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider
>
> IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions |
> Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions
>
> Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics Nav ERP
> | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables
>
>
>
> From: Lelio Fulgenzi [mailto:lelio [at] uoguelph]
> Sent: 05 November 2009 14:31
> To: O'Brien, Neil
> Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck; Pat Hayes
> Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called
> Number
>
>
>
> You can be as complicated or as simple as you want with call handlers. We
> typically build our call handlers with an empty (or very very simple) pilot
> call handler in the front in the event we want to temporarily modify the
> greeting.
>
> The alternate greeting is fine for this, but we still want the remainder to
> be the same.
>
> So, for example, our call handlers are:
>
> CH1: Welcome to the University of Guelph >CH2
> CH2: If you know the extension you are trying to reach, you may enter it at
> any time > CH3
> CH3: Please select from one of the following options > CH4
> CH4: blah blah blah
>
> (I'm not 100% sure if CH3/CH4 are separate)
>
> This way here, we can modify CH1 to say: "Welcome to the University, the
> University is closed because we got some bad a$$ snow storm coming down on
> us" and not have to worry about the rest of the greetings.
>
> Choosing where to error out in each greeting is one of the hardest things to
> decide on. We decided each CH will error out on itself.
>
> If you haven't already, check out www.ciscounitytools.com, it has a new call
> handler design tool which will make your life easier.
>
> Right now, you have to build your call handlers backwards since you have to
> point to them down stream. The tool from above allows you to start at the
> top, and create call handlers as you point to them.
>
>
>
> ---
> Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
> Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
> (519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> "Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
> To: "Pat Hayes" <pat-cv [at] wcyv>
> Cc: "Lelio Fulgenzi" <lelio [at] uoguelph>, cisco-voip [at] puck
> Sent: Thursday, November 5, 2009 3:49:26 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
> Subject: RE: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called
> Number
>
> Thanks Pat,
>
>
>
> I think this is what Lelio was explaining - Multiple "operators" with a 0
> extension just in separate partitions only accessible from the partition the
> caller comes in on, I understand that from a CallManager perspective.
>
>
>
> I think it's just for one particular extension (operator) however I had
> thought about separate call handlers but 1 handler for each site (9) seems a
> bit OTT, but thanks for the suggestion.
>
>
>
> On a separate note, if neither of you mind. If I'm creating a complete
> AutoAttendant within Unity - "Welcome to Acme & Co, Please Press 1 for
> Sales, 2 for Tech Support.....etc. Then if you press 2 for Tech Support,
> you get 2 further options like Press 1 for Cisco VoIP, Press 2 for Cisco
> Routing and Switching...... You get the idea. Do I need completely
> separate call handlers for each announcement and link them together?? So
> I would have a Welcome call handler which the caller hears first, then
> another call handler called Tech Support which announces the tech support
> options. Forgive my lack of understanding but am I on the right track??
>
>
>
> Just wondering from a best practices approach, if you had multiple handlers
> for different auto attendants, is there a recommended naming convention or
> format that would allow someone to look at the list of call handlers and
> see what links to what?? Or is it just a matter of drilling into each one
> to find out what its linked to. Obviously proper documentation is what
> youd firstly recommend but I thought there might be a real-world way. I
> was thinking prefixing the name of each separate AA with a 3 digit code say
> 101, the first 1 (on the left) identifying the AA, the middle digit
> identifying the tier within the AA and the other 1 (right) identifying the
> message within that tier. So if I had 3 seperate AAs for 3 seperate
> busineses, the welcome message for each AA would have codes 101 - Welcome,
> 201 - Welcome and 301 - Welcome. If we take the 101 Welcome, and it says
> Press 1 for Sales, 2 for Tech Support, 3 for Stores. Then I have 3
> further call handlers announcing the different options for Sales, Tech
> Support and Stores. I would call these 111 Sales, 112 Tech Support, 113
> Stores.
>
>
>
> Sorry for the rant, but it seems to me that unless you have a proper
> structure to it, it could very easily and very quickly get out of control.
>
>
>
> Thanks for taking the time to read!!
>
>
>
> Thanks again,
>
>
>
> Neil
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Regards,
>
>
>
> Neil O'Brien
>
> Network Engineer
>
>
>
> Datapac Ltd
>
> Phone: +353 1 426 3500
>
> Fax: +353 1 426 3501
>
> Email: nobrien [at] datapac
>
> Web: www.datapac.com
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider
>
> IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions |
> Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions
>
> Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics Nav ERP
> | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables
>
>
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: pat [at] wcyv [mailto:pat [at] wcyv] On Behalf Of Pat Hayes
> Sent: 04 November 2009 22:39
> To: O'Brien, Neil
> Cc: Lelio Fulgenzi; cisco-voip [at] puck
> Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called
> Number
>
>
>
> The inherited search space that the call handler picks up from the
>
> routing rules in the config that Lelio describes only governs what
>
> extensions the user can enter directly, it doesn't impact the
>
> caller-input config.
>
>
>
> If you just need to do this for an operator, that will work, just
>
> configure multiple users with the extension '0' and put them in
>
> separate partitions. If there are multiple inputs that you need to go
>
> to site specific locations, that doesn't really scale, you would be
>
> much better off just making copies of the call handler with the
>
> appropriate extensions and setting up the caller input. No need for
>
> routing rules, search spaces, or partitions.
>
>
>
> On Wed, Nov 4, 2009 at 2:33 PM, O'Brien, Neil <nobrien [at] datapac> wrote:
>
>> Thanks for the info, I kinda figured Id have to do some reading, now I
>> know
>
>> what I have to read!!
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> Thanks again..........
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> Regards,
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> Neil O'Brien
>
>>
>
>> Network Engineer
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> Datapac Ltd
>
>>
>
>> Phone: +353 1 426 3500
>
>>
>
>> Fax: +353 1 426 3501
>
>>
>
>> Email: nobrien [at] datapac
>
>>
>
>> Web: www.datapac.com
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider
>
>>
>
>> IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions |
>
>> Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions
>
>>
>
>> Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics Nav
>> ERP
>
>> | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> From: Lelio Fulgenzi [mailto:lelio [at] uoguelph]
>
>> Sent: 04 November 2009 19:30
>
>> To: O'Brien, Neil
>
>> Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck
>
>> Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called
>
>> Number
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> This is what routing rules and search spaces are used for. It's a bit
>
>> complicated to answer in email, but basically, if you create a routing
>> rule
>
>> for each called number and assign it a particular search space then route
>> it
>
>> to a call handler, the call handler is set to "inherit" the search space.
>
>> Then when it dials "0", it will dial the appropriate "0" based on the
>> search
>
>> space.
>
>>
>
>> It takes some time to get your head around it, but it should work.
>
>>
>
>> I would read up on the routing rules and search space documentation. I had
>
>> to read it more than once. ;)
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> ---
>
>> Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
>
>> Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
>
>> (519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
>
>> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>
>> "Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>
>> From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
>
>> To: cisco-voip [at] puck
>
>> Sent: Wednesday, November 4, 2009 2:22:41 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
>
>> Subject: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called
>
>> Number
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> Hi,
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> We have Unity Connection 7 and have multiple geographically disparate
>
>> sites. We have a requirement for a single call handler with various
>> options
>
>> but the numbers these options ring will differ based on the called number.
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> So for example, if Ben calls 555 1234 which is Remote Site A, it goes
>
>> through to the central call handler in HQ. Ben selects Option 1 is to
>> speak
>
>> to a reception. It needs to go through to the reception of the office he
>
>> dialled. If Jerry calls 907 1234 for Remote Site B, it goes through to
>> the
>
>> same call hander and Jerry selects Option 1 to speak to reception, it
>> needs
>
>> to go through to the reception of the office he called.
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> I am very unfamiliar with Unity Connection so Id appreciate some
>> guidance.
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> Thanks in advance,
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> Neil
>
>>
>
>> _______________________________________________ cisco-voip mailing list
>
>> cisco-voip [at] puck
>
>> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip
>
>>
>
>> _______________________________________________
>
>> cisco-voip mailing list
>
>> cisco-voip [at] puck
>
>> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip
>
>>
>
>>
_______________________________________________
cisco-voip mailing list
cisco-voip [at] puck
https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip


lelio at uoguelph

Dec 1, 2009, 4:24 PM

Post #10 of 25 (1735 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

I think Pat has it down right.

Just a few comments about the second way. As far as I can tell, you can use caller input to transfer to an alternate contact number, i.e. an extension - say "0". Then depending on the routing rule which assigned the appropriate search space, it will go to the appropriate 0 voice mail subcriber (or call handler) and you can use the "transfer rules" to go to the right extension in CallManager.

In a rudimentary design:


Partitions:

EastCoast_PT
WestCoast_PT

CSS:

EastCoast = EastCoast_PT
WestCoast = WestCoast_PT

subscribers:

EastCoastOperator, DN=0, Transfer=1007, PT=EastCoast_PT
WestCoastOperator, DN=0, Transfer=2007, PT=WestCoast_PT

routing rules:

FWD #= 1001, CSS=WestCoast, CallHandler=CorporateAutoAttendant
FWD #= 2001, CSS=EastCoast, CallHandler=CorporateAutoAttendant

when someone dials 1001, they get the CorporateAutoAttendant (just as someone who dials 2001), but when they press 0, the callhandler has been assigned the WestCoast CSS, so when they press 0, which transfers them to the alternate contact number of "0", it reach the user with the extension "0" in the WestCoast_PT, which then transfers to 1007.

A bit more complicated then multiple callhandlers? Yes? But more scalable as well. If you have two corporate offices with no chance of expansion, then stick with multiple call handler trees. If you have 10 offices and you might add more, then embrace the partitions.



---
Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
(519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt


----- Original Message -----
From: "Pat Hayes" <pat-cv [at] wcyv>
To: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
Cc: "Lelio Fulgenzi" <lelio [at] uoguelph>, cisco-voip [at] puck
Sent: Tuesday, December 1, 2009 6:03:00 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number

Neil,

You're right, there is no way to do it the way you are describing.
Caller-input on a call handler can only point to a single specific
destination, there is no way to just provide an extension and leave it
up to the search space to route. The search spaces and partitions in
UC have no relation to those in CUCM, other than in name.

What I was trying to get at before is that there are basically two
ways you can do this (as far as I can see, at least):

First - the tried and true way. Have a separate set of call handlers,
one for each site (copy each from the first one to make it easier). If
you assign the extension of the dummy dn to the call handler, you
don't even need any extra routing rules, it will just work. Then you
set caller-input 0 on each CH to go to whatever operator you want to
for each site (or use 'transfer to alternate contact number' to save
the extra user/call handler). You can do pretty much the exact same
thing in Unity. Any changes down the road will have to be synced
across each CH, but that isn't too hard and it give you some
flexibility in case you want to do something different.

Second - the way I haven't actually tried but am pretty sure would
work. You use the routing rules to set the search space appropriately
and it is inherited down when the call is routed to the one call
handler. You configure a separate operator user (or call handler) for
each site and assign them extension '0' and put them in the partition
that is reachable for the search space you are assigning. You don't
set up caller-input 0 on the call handler, you just enable the option
to allow users to dial extensions. Thus, when the caller dials 0, it
is routed to whatever user (operator) has extension 0 in the active
search space.

Both should work, and the second one does utilize the snazzy new
search space feature, but, in my opinion at least, it is a little
unnecessarily complicated. If it were me, I'd go with the more
straight forward first option.

-Pat

On Tue, Dec 1, 2009 at 12:19 PM, O'Brien, Neil <nobrien [at] datapac> wrote:
> Hey Guys,
>
>
>
> I’m still having a bit of trouble with this one, if you can cast your mind
> back.
>
>
>
> OK, so I understand that I can configure a rule based on the called number
> and that rule puts the call into a CSS. The handler it get’s handed off to
> will inherit the CSS from the call. I want the caller to press 0 and be
> routed appropriately (based on his called number) but I don’t see where the
> CSS come into play. I still have to configure a Caller Input for 0 to
> point to either another call handler or extension number, but I don’t see
> how a different CSS works.
>
>
>
> Does the Unity CSS relate in any way to the CCM CSS, is that where I need to
> configure my multiple “0” destinations? If I configure multiple Operator
> handlers all with extension 0 put in different partitions/css, the handler
> can still only hand off to one of them specified in the call action of
> caller input 0.
>
>
>
> I’d appreciate your help,
>
>
>
> Thanks,
>
>
>
> Neil
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Regards,
>
>
>
> Neil O'Brien
>
> Network Engineer
>
>
>
> Datapac Ltd
>
> Phone: +353 1 426 3500
>
> Fax: +353 1 426 3501
>
> Email: nobrien [at] datapac
>
> Web: www.datapac.com
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider
>
> IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions |
> Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions
>
> Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics Nav ERP
> | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables
>
>
>
> From: Lelio Fulgenzi [mailto:lelio [at] uoguelph]
> Sent: 05 November 2009 14:31
> To: O'Brien, Neil
> Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck; Pat Hayes
> Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called
> Number
>
>
>
> You can be as complicated or as simple as you want with call handlers. We
> typically build our call handlers with an empty (or very very simple) pilot
> call handler in the front in the event we want to temporarily modify the
> greeting.
>
> The alternate greeting is fine for this, but we still want the remainder to
> be the same.
>
> So, for example, our call handlers are:
>
> CH1: Welcome to the University of Guelph >CH2
> CH2: If you know the extension you are trying to reach, you may enter it at
> any time > CH3
> CH3: Please select from one of the following options > CH4
> CH4: blah blah blah
>
> (I'm not 100% sure if CH3/CH4 are separate)
>
> This way here, we can modify CH1 to say: "Welcome to the University, the
> University is closed because we got some bad a$$ snow storm coming down on
> us" and not have to worry about the rest of the greetings.
>
> Choosing where to error out in each greeting is one of the hardest things to
> decide on. We decided each CH will error out on itself.
>
> If you haven't already, check out www.ciscounitytools.com, it has a new call
> handler design tool which will make your life easier.
>
> Right now, you have to build your call handlers backwards since you have to
> point to them down stream. The tool from above allows you to start at the
> top, and create call handlers as you point to them.
>
>
>
> ---
> Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
> Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
> (519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> "Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
> To: "Pat Hayes" <pat-cv [at] wcyv>
> Cc: "Lelio Fulgenzi" <lelio [at] uoguelph>, cisco-voip [at] puck
> Sent: Thursday, November 5, 2009 3:49:26 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
> Subject: RE: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called
> Number
>
> Thanks Pat,
>
>
>
> I think this is what Lelio was explaining - Multiple "operators" with a 0
> extension just in separate partitions only accessible from the partition the
> caller comes in on, I understand that from a CallManager perspective.
>
>
>
> I think it's just for one particular extension (operator) however I had
> thought about separate call handlers but 1 handler for each site (9) seems a
> bit OTT, but thanks for the suggestion.
>
>
>
> On a separate note, if neither of you mind. If I'm creating a complete
> AutoAttendant within Unity - "Welcome to Acme & Co, Please Press 1 for
> Sales, 2 for Tech Support.....etc”. Then if you press 2 for Tech Support,
> you get 2 further options like “Press 1 for Cisco VoIP, Press 2 for Cisco
> Routing and Switching.....”. You get the idea. Do I need completely
> separate call handlers for each “announcement” and link them together?? So
> I would have a “Welcome” call handler which the caller hears first, then
> another call handler called “Tech Support” which announces the tech support
> options. Forgive my lack of understanding but am I on the right track??
>
>
>
> Just wondering from a best practices approach, if you had multiple handlers
> for different auto attendants, is there a recommended naming convention or
> format that would allow someone to look at the list of call handlers and
> see what links to what?? Or is it just a matter of drilling into each one
> to find out what it’s linked to. Obviously proper documentation is what
> you’d firstly recommend but I thought there might be a real-world way. I
> was thinking prefixing the name of each separate AA with a 3 digit code say
> 101, the first 1 (on the left) identifying the AA, the middle digit
> identifying the tier within the AA and the other 1 (right) identifying the
> message within that tier. So if I had 3 seperate AA’s for 3 seperate
> busineses, the welcome message for each AA would have codes 101 - Welcome,
> 201 - Welcome and 301 - Welcome. If we take the 101 – Welcome, and it says
> “Press 1 for Sales, 2 for Tech Support, 3 for Stores”. Then I have 3
> further call handlers announcing the different options for Sales, Tech
> Support and Stores. I would call these 111 – Sales, 112 – Tech Support, 113
> Stores.
>
>
>
> Sorry for the rant, but it seems to me that unless you have a proper
> structure to it, it could very easily and very quickly get out of control.
>
>
>
> Thanks for taking the time to read!!
>
>
>
> Thanks again,
>
>
>
> Neil
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Regards,
>
>
>
> Neil O'Brien
>
> Network Engineer
>
>
>
> Datapac Ltd
>
> Phone: +353 1 426 3500
>
> Fax: +353 1 426 3501
>
> Email: nobrien [at] datapac
>
> Web: www.datapac.com
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider
>
> IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions |
> Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions
>
> Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics Nav ERP
> | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables
>
>
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: pat [at] wcyv [mailto:pat [at] wcyv] On Behalf Of Pat Hayes
> Sent: 04 November 2009 22:39
> To: O'Brien, Neil
> Cc: Lelio Fulgenzi; cisco-voip [at] puck
> Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called
> Number
>
>
>
> The inherited search space that the call handler picks up from the
>
> routing rules in the config that Lelio describes only governs what
>
> extensions the user can enter directly, it doesn't impact the
>
> caller-input config.
>
>
>
> If you just need to do this for an operator, that will work, just
>
> configure multiple users with the extension '0' and put them in
>
> separate partitions. If there are multiple inputs that you need to go
>
> to site specific locations, that doesn't really scale, you would be
>
> much better off just making copies of the call handler with the
>
> appropriate extensions and setting up the caller input. No need for
>
> routing rules, search spaces, or partitions.
>
>
>
> On Wed, Nov 4, 2009 at 2:33 PM, O'Brien, Neil <nobrien [at] datapac> wrote:
>
>> Thanks for the info, I kinda figured I’d have to do some reading, now I
>> know
>
>> what I have to read!!
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> Thanks again..........
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> Regards,
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> Neil O'Brien
>
>>
>
>> Network Engineer
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> Datapac Ltd
>
>>
>
>> Phone: +353 1 426 3500
>
>>
>
>> Fax: +353 1 426 3501
>
>>
>
>> Email: nobrien [at] datapac
>
>>
>
>> Web: www.datapac.com
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> Datapac is the leading Irish business technologies provider
>
>>
>
>> IT Maintenance & Managed Services | Virtualisation & Storage Solutions |
>
>> Microsoft Infrastructure Solutions
>
>>
>
>> Voice & Data Networks | Unified Communications | Microsoft Dynamics Nav
>> ERP
>
>> | EPOS Retail Solutions | IT Consumables
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> From: Lelio Fulgenzi [mailto:lelio [at] uoguelph]
>
>> Sent: 04 November 2009 19:30
>
>> To: O'Brien, Neil
>
>> Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck
>
>> Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called
>
>> Number
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> This is what routing rules and search spaces are used for. It's a bit
>
>> complicated to answer in email, but basically, if you create a routing
>> rule
>
>> for each called number and assign it a particular search space then route
>> it
>
>> to a call handler, the call handler is set to "inherit" the search space.
>
>> Then when it dials "0", it will dial the appropriate "0" based on the
>> search
>
>> space.
>
>>
>
>> It takes some time to get your head around it, but it should work.
>
>>
>
>> I would read up on the routing rules and search space documentation. I had
>
>> to read it more than once. ;)
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> ---
>
>> Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
>
>> Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
>
>> (519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
>
>> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>
>> "Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>
>> From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
>
>> To: cisco-voip [at] puck
>
>> Sent: Wednesday, November 4, 2009 2:22:41 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
>
>> Subject: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called
>
>> Number
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> Hi,
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> We have Unity Connection 7 and have multiple geographically disparate
>
>> sites. We have a requirement for a single call handler with various
>> options
>
>> but the numbers these options ring will differ based on the called number.
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> So for example, if Ben calls 555 1234 which is Remote Site A, it goes
>
>> through to the central call handler in HQ. Ben selects Option 1 is to
>> speak
>
>> to a reception. It needs to go through to the reception of the office he
>
>> dialled. If Jerry calls 907 1234 for Remote Site B, it goes through to
>> the
>
>> same call hander and Jerry selects Option 1 to speak to reception, it
>> needs
>
>> to go through to the reception of the office he called.
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> I am very unfamiliar with Unity Connection so I’d appreciate some
>> guidance.
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> Thanks in advance,
>
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>
>> Neil
>
>>
>
>> _______________________________________________ cisco-voip mailing list
>
>> cisco-voip [at] puck
>
>> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip
>
>>
>
>> _______________________________________________
>
>> cisco-voip mailing list
>
>> cisco-voip [at] puck
>
>> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip
>
>>
>
>>


nobrien at datapac

Dec 2, 2009, 1:45 AM

Post #11 of 25 (1751 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

Thanks for the help guys. I really want to go with the CSS/Partitions solution for scalability reasons however I’m still having difficulty getting it working.



When you use the Transfer to Alternate Extension option, unity attempts to transfer it back to the phone system, it doesn’t appear to look for the extn locally (be it a CH or user) first regardless of whether I have it in a separate CSS or not.



Straight from the Help menus “Transfer to Alternate Contact Number-Connection transfers the call to the phone number that you specify in the Extension field, for example to a cell phone or other external number. Connection transfers the call by releasing it to the phone system.”



I can’t see how I can get around this other than to create separate call handlers but I really don’t want to have to do this.



I’ll keep plugging away at it for alternatives but I’d be grateful if you had any further ideas?



Thanks again,


Neil


nobrien at datapac

Dec 2, 2009, 3:53 AM

Post #12 of 25 (1721 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

Hi Pat,

I tried your second suggestion below however the system won't allow you
to dial a "single digit extension". It keeps thinking it's a caller
input which I have set to ignore but it won't transfer.

I did play with the prepend digit for extensions but that didn't work
either.

Thanks,

Neil

_______________________________________________
cisco-voip mailing list
cisco-voip [at] puck
https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip


nobrien at datapac

Dec 2, 2009, 4:04 AM

Post #13 of 25 (1717 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

@ Lelio



Also, the transfer settings on each subscriber only affects calls that have been transferred from the handler via the “User with mailbox” option. Any other type of transfer appears to go directly to the phone system.





From: O'Brien, Neil
Sent: 02 December 2009 09:46
To: 'Lelio Fulgenzi'; Pat Hayes
Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck
Subject: RE: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number





Thanks for the help guys. I really want to go with the CSS/Partitions solution for scalability reasons however I’m still having difficulty getting it working.



When you use the Transfer to Alternate Extension option, unity attempts to transfer it back to the phone system, it doesn’t appear to look for the extn locally (be it a CH or user) first regardless of whether I have it in a separate CSS or not.



Straight from the Help menus “Transfer to Alternate Contact Number-Connection transfers the call to the phone number that you specify in the Extension field, for example to a cell phone or other external number. Connection transfers the call by releasing it to the phone system.”



I can’t see how I can get around this other than to create separate call handlers but I really don’t want to have to do this.



I’ll keep plugging away at it for alternatives but I’d be grateful if you had any further ideas?



Thanks again,


Neil


lelio at uoguelph

Dec 2, 2009, 5:21 AM

Post #14 of 25 (1711 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

hmmmm, i'll have to think about this a bit more....

---
Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
(519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt


----- Original Message -----
From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
To: "Lelio Fulgenzi" <lelio [at] uoguelph>, "Pat Hayes" <pat-cv [at] wcyv>
Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck
Sent: Wednesday, December 2, 2009 4:45:57 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: RE: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number






Thanks for the help guys. I really want to go with the CSS/Partitions solution for scalability reasons however I’m still having difficulty getting it working.



When you use the Transfer to Alternate Extension option, unity attempts to transfer it back to the phone system, it doesn’t appear to look for the extn locally (be it a CH or user) first regardless of whether I have it in a separate CSS or not.



Straight from the Help menus “ Transfer to Alternate Contact Number-Connection transfers the call to the phone number that you specify in the Extension field, for example to a cell phone or other external number. Connection transfers the call by releasing it to the phone system.”



I can’t see how I can get around this other than to create separate call handlers but I really don’t want to have to do this.



I’ll keep plugging away at it for alternatives but I’d be grateful if you had any further ideas?



Thanks again,


Neil


lelio at uoguelph

Dec 2, 2009, 7:57 AM

Post #15 of 25 (1714 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

OK. The only thing I can think of now is to say "press 0" for switchboard, but not configure the 0 caller input, instead, let the system think they are pressing "0" as the extension. This way, it will match the extension of the voice mail user based on the partition they are in and be transferred to the correct transfer extension.

You may have to modify your restriction tables to allow for single digit entries (or at least "0).

---
Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
(519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt


----- Original Message -----
From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
To: "Lelio Fulgenzi" <lelio [at] uoguelph>, "Pat Hayes" <pat-cv [at] wcyv>
Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck
Sent: Wednesday, December 2, 2009 4:45:57 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: RE: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number






Thanks for the help guys. I really want to go with the CSS/Partitions solution for scalability reasons however I’m still having difficulty getting it working.



When you use the Transfer to Alternate Extension option, unity attempts to transfer it back to the phone system, it doesn’t appear to look for the extn locally (be it a CH or user) first regardless of whether I have it in a separate CSS or not.



Straight from the Help menus “ Transfer to Alternate Contact Number-Connection transfers the call to the phone number that you specify in the Extension field, for example to a cell phone or other external number. Connection transfers the call by releasing it to the phone system.”



I can’t see how I can get around this other than to create separate call handlers but I really don’t want to have to do this.



I’ll keep plugging away at it for alternatives but I’d be grateful if you had any further ideas?



Thanks again,


Neil


nobrien at datapac

Dec 2, 2009, 8:18 AM

Post #16 of 25 (1725 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

Thanks Lelio, That’s pretty much what Pat had said. I did try this but it wouldn’t let me dial single digit extension however I didn’t change any restriction tables.



What exactly to do I need to change?



Thanks,



Neil


lelio at uoguelph

Dec 2, 2009, 8:29 AM

Post #17 of 25 (1718 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

Take a look at the restriction tables, you'll probably want "Default System Transfer" or "Default Transfer" not sure which. Then modify them so the minimum digits is 1, then add a 0 (zero) as an allowed pattern.



---
Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
(519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt


----- Original Message -----
From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
To: "Lelio Fulgenzi" <lelio [at] uoguelph>
Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck, "Pat Hayes" <pat-cv [at] wcyv>
Sent: Wednesday, December 2, 2009 11:18:36 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: RE: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number




Thanks Lelio, That’s pretty much what Pat had said. I did try this but it wouldn’t let me dial single digit extension however I didn’t change any restriction tables.



What exactly to do I need to change?



Thanks,



Neil


nobrien at datapac

Dec 3, 2009, 3:57 AM

Post #18 of 25 (1709 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

Hi Lelio,



I had a look at the restriction tables and they’re already set to minimum digits1 and the only ones that are blocked begin with 9. I added one explicitly for 0 and unchecked the “blocked” box but this didn’t make any difference.



I’ve also put a call into Cisco PDI Helpdesk to see if they have a recommendation. It seems to me that it’s a common configuration to try and achieve.



I’ll post back if they come up with anything useful.



Thanks,



Neil


lelio at uoguelph

Dec 3, 2009, 5:41 AM

Post #19 of 25 (1704 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

PDI or TAC. Either should be able to help.

---
Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
(519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt


----- Original Message -----
From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
To: "Lelio Fulgenzi" <lelio [at] uoguelph>
Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck, "Pat Hayes" <pat-cv [at] wcyv>
Sent: Thursday, December 3, 2009 6:57:41 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: RE: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number




Hi Lelio,



I had a look at the restriction tables and they’re already set to minimum digits1 and the only ones that are blocked begin with 9. I added one explicitly for 0 and unchecked the “blocked” box but this didn’t make any difference.



I’ve also put a call into Cisco PDI Helpdesk to see if they have a recommendation. It seems to me that it’s a common configuration to try and achieve.



I’ll post back if they come up with anything useful.



Thanks,



Neil


pat-cv at wcyv

Dec 3, 2009, 9:49 AM

Post #20 of 25 (1698 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

I finally got a chance to try this in the lab. This is where that "I
haven't tried this" caveat mentioned before comes in :-)You're right,
a single digit won't work with this, UC (and Unity) match single
digits to caller-input only, they don't try to look up the extension,
which is what you would need for this to work. If you can live with
dialing two digits (00?), that works.

Other than that, I can't think of any more solutions for you outside
of separate call handlers. You might want to ping your account team
for a feature request. Adding something to caller-input like 'route to
this extension based on search space' probably wouldn't be too
difficult to add.

On Wed, Dec 2, 2009 at 6:53 AM, O'Brien, Neil <nobrien [at] datapac> wrote:
> Hi Pat,
>
> I tried your second suggestion below however the system won't allow you
> to dial a "single digit extension". It keeps thinking it's a caller
> input which I have set to ignore but it won't transfer.
>
> I did play with the prepend digit for extensions but that didn't work
> either.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Neil
>
>
_______________________________________________
cisco-voip mailing list
cisco-voip [at] puck
https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip


nobrien at datapac

Dec 3, 2009, 11:20 AM

Post #21 of 25 (1687 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

Thanks for your time Pat, I've put a request into the PDI helpdesk to
see if there's a recommended way of doing what I need, it doesn't sound
so out of the ordinary to be able to. I'm working on getting the
SmartNets activated for this customer so I'll bring TAC in on it when I
can.

I'll post back with the results from PDI/TAC

Thanks again guys,

Neil

_______________________________________________
cisco-voip mailing list
cisco-voip [at] puck
https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-voip


lelio at uoguelph

Dec 3, 2009, 12:25 PM

Post #22 of 25 (1698 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

not one to take no for an answer, i also tried this in the lab. i am surprised i could not get this working either. i used extension 6 with no luck. 62 would work. restriction tables all set up properly.

i was looking for a service parameter or something that had minimum extension length but couldn't find it.

funny thing is, i could have sworn when reading about partitions and search spaces, it had an example of switchboard and 0 and sending it to different targets. i will have to review the documentation.



---
Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
(519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt


----- Original Message -----
From: "Pat Hayes" <pat-cv [at] wcyv>
To: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
Cc: "Lelio Fulgenzi" <lelio [at] uoguelph>, cisco-voip [at] puck
Sent: Thursday, December 3, 2009 12:49:50 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number

I finally got a chance to try this in the lab. This is where that "I
haven't tried this" caveat mentioned before comes in :-)You're right,
a single digit won't work with this, UC (and Unity) match single
digits to caller-input only, they don't try to look up the extension,
which is what you would need for this to work. If you can live with
dialing two digits (00?), that works.

Other than that, I can't think of any more solutions for you outside
of separate call handlers. You might want to ping your account team
for a feature request. Adding something to caller-input like 'route to
this extension based on search space' probably wouldn't be too
difficult to add.

On Wed, Dec 2, 2009 at 6:53 AM, O'Brien, Neil <nobrien [at] datapac> wrote:
> Hi Pat,
>
> I tried your second suggestion below however the system won't allow you
> to dial a "single digit extension". It keeps thinking it's a caller
> input which I have set to ignore but it won't transfer.
>
> I did play with the prepend digit for extensions but that didn't work
> either.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Neil
>
>


nobrien at datapac

Dec 4, 2009, 12:16 PM

Post #23 of 25 (1655 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

Hey Guys – I managed to get TAC on the case but I’m afraid we’re no better off. See comments below..... PDI haven’t come back yet but I doubt they’ll have anything different from TAC.



After doing several research and checking with different sources seems to be like the only possibility to accomplish what you are looking for is indeed creating a Call Handler for each specific site, this as Unity is not able to manipulate where to send the call in the caller input option depending of the calling number. Please remember that if you want to create the same Call Handler you can export the greetings from one to another by going to the Greetings section and saving the file and then opening it in the new Call Handler.



There seems to be another possibility but with a total different product that is IPCC as with it you are able to route according to the digits but if you want more information I would recommend you to open a different case with the IPCC team so they can assist you in a better way.







From: Lelio Fulgenzi [mailto:lelio [at] uoguelph]
Sent: 03 December 2009 20:25
To: Pat Hayes
Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck; O'Brien, Neil
Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number



not one to take no for an answer, i also tried this in the lab. i am surprised i could not get this working either. i used extension 6 with no luck. 62 would work. restriction tables all set up properly.

i was looking for a service parameter or something that had minimum extension length but couldn't find it.

funny thing is, i could have sworn when reading about partitions and search spaces, it had an example of switchboard and 0 and sending it to different targets. i will have to review the documentation.



---
Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
(519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt


----- Original Message -----
From: "Pat Hayes" <pat-cv [at] wcyv>
To: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
Cc: "Lelio Fulgenzi" <lelio [at] uoguelph>, cisco-voip [at] puck
Sent: Thursday, December 3, 2009 12:49:50 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number

I finally got a chance to try this in the lab. This is where that "I
haven't tried this" caveat mentioned before comes in :-)You're right,
a single digit won't work with this, UC (and Unity) match single
digits to caller-input only, they don't try to look up the extension,
which is what you would need for this to work. If you can live with
dialing two digits (00?), that works.

Other than that, I can't think of any more solutions for you outside
of separate call handlers. You might want to ping your account team
for a feature request. Adding something to caller-input like 'route to
this extension based on search space' probably wouldn't be too
difficult to add.

On Wed, Dec 2, 2009 at 6:53 AM, O'Brien, Neil <nobrien [at] datapac> wrote:
> Hi Pat,
>
> I tried your second suggestion below however the system won't allow you
> to dial a "single digit extension". It keeps thinking it's a caller
> input which I have set to ignore but it won't transfer.
>
> I did play with the prepend digit for extensions but that didn't work
> either.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Neil
>
>


lelio at uoguelph

Dec 4, 2009, 12:18 PM

Post #24 of 25 (1644 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

Can you ask them whether or not single digit extensions will be supported in some future version of Unity and/or Connection?



---
Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
(519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt


----- Original Message -----
From: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
To: "Lelio Fulgenzi" <lelio [at] uoguelph>, "Pat Hayes" <pat-cv [at] wcyv>
Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck
Sent: Friday, December 4, 2009 3:16:42 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: RE: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number




Hey Guys – I managed to get TAC on the case but I’m afraid we’re no better off. See comments below..... PDI haven’t come back yet but I doubt they’ll have anything different from TAC.



After doing several research and checking with different sources seems to be like the only possibility to accomplish what you are looking for is indeed creating a Call Handler for each specific site, this as Unity is not able to manipulate where to send the call in the caller input option depending of the calling number. Please remember that if you want to create the same Call Handler you can export the greetings from one to another by going to the Greetings section and saving the file and then opening it in the new Call Handler.



There seems to be another possibility but with a total different product that is IPCC as with it you are able to route according to the digits but if you want more information I would recommend you to open a different case with the IPCC team so they can assist you in a better way.









From: Lelio Fulgenzi [mailto:lelio [at] uoguelph]
Sent: 03 December 2009 20:25
To: Pat Hayes
Cc: cisco-voip [at] puck; O'Brien, Neil
Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number




not one to take no for an answer, i also tried this in the lab. i am surprised i could not get this working either. i used extension 6 with no luck. 62 would work. restriction tables all set up properly.

i was looking for a service parameter or something that had minimum extension length but couldn't find it.

funny thing is, i could have sworn when reading about partitions and search spaces, it had an example of switchboard and 0 and sending it to different targets. i will have to review the documentation.



---
Lelio Fulgenzi, B.A.
Senior Analyst (CCS) * University of Guelph * Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1
(519) 824-4120 x56354 (519) 767-1060 FAX (JNHN)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"Bad grammar makes me [sic]" - Tshirt


----- Original Message -----
From: "Pat Hayes" <pat-cv [at] wcyv>
To: "Neil O'Brien" <nobrien [at] datapac>
Cc: "Lelio Fulgenzi" <lelio [at] uoguelph>, cisco-voip [at] puck
Sent: Thursday, December 3, 2009 12:49:50 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: Re: [cisco-voip] Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number

I finally got a chance to try this in the lab. This is where that "I
haven't tried this" caveat mentioned before comes in :-)You're right,
a single digit won't work with this, UC (and Unity) match single
digits to caller-input only, they don't try to look up the extension,
which is what you would need for this to work. If you can live with
dialing two digits (00?), that works.

Other than that, I can't think of any more solutions for you outside
of separate call handlers. You might want to ping your account team
for a feature request. Adding something to caller-input like 'route to
this extension based on search space' probably wouldn't be too
difficult to add.

On Wed, Dec 2, 2009 at 6:53 AM, O'Brien, Neil <nobrien [at] datapac> wrote:
> Hi Pat,
>
> I tried your second suggestion below however the system won't allow you
> to dial a "single digit extension". It keeps thinking it's a caller
> input which I have set to ignore but it won't transfer.
>
> I did play with the prepend digit for extensions but that didn't work
> either.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Neil
>
>


nobrien at datapac

Dec 7, 2009, 7:08 AM

Post #25 of 25 (1565 views)
Permalink
Re: Unity Connection 7 Call Handlers based on Called Number [In reply to]

From TAC: - I didn’t correct him on the 2 digit extension, I didn’t see the point!!



I hope you had a great weekend and unfortunately Unity has the limitation to only work with extension higher or equal to 3 digits not even 2-digit extension. At this moment I do not have any report that this feature will be available in further Unity Connection versions, what I would recommend you to do is to contact your account manager or reseller to file a Feature Request (PER), this request will get directly to the developers so they can know users needs.

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