Cisco Systems OL-18611-01 Work Light User Manual


 
40-7
Cisco Unified Communications Manager Administration Guide
OL-18611-01
Chapter 40 SIP Dial Rules Configuration
Deleting a SIP Dial Rule
Table 40-3 provides some example SIP dial rules for the 7940_7960_OTHER dial rules.
Deleting a SIP Dial Rule
Perform the following procedure to delete a SIP dial rule.
Procedure
Step 1 From Cisco Unified Communications Manager Administration, choose Call Routing > Dial Rules >
SIP Dial Rules.
Step 2 Locate the SIP dial rule that you want to delete. See the “Finding a SIP Dial Rule” section on page 40-3.
Step 3 Check the check box next to the SIP dial rule that you want to delete and click Delete Selected.
A dialog box displays to warn you that you cannot undo deletion of SIP dial rules.
Step 4 To delete the SIP dial rule, click OK or, to cancel the action, click Cancel. If you click OK, Cisco
Unified Communications Manager removes the SIP dial rule from the SIP dial rules list.
Note You can delete multiple dial rules from the Find and List SIP Dial Rules window by checking
the check boxes next to the appropriate dial rules and clicking Delete Selected. You can delete
all the SIP dial rules in the window by clicking Select All and then clicking Delete Selected.
Additional Information
See the “Related Topics” section on page 40-9.
Table 40-3 SIP Dial Rule Examples for 7940_7960_OTHER Dial Rules
Pattern String Effect
123#45#6 The 123#45#6 string gets matched if the user dials 123#45#6. Pressing
the pound sign (#) does not cause the phone to dial immediately because
# is explicitly specified. For Cisco SIP IP Phones 7940 and 7960, dialing
1# or 123#4# causes the phone to dial immediately.
911 and 9911 Send immediately. Configure a SIP dial rule for each of these strings,
with the timeout dial parameter set to 0, to ensure that no delay occurs in
sending the call. The user does not have to press the Dial softkey to
initiate the call, even if the phone does not support Key Press Markup
Language (KPML).
12\*345 This example uses the backward slash (\) and asterisk (*) to indicate that
the asterisk (*) is a dialed digit. If you omit the backslash (\), the
asterisk(*) gets treated as a wildcard pattern match. If you use the
backslash (\) with a character other than the asterisk (*), the \ gets
ignored, and the \\ character gets matched. If you need to explicitly
specify the \ character in a dial plan, use \\. The \ does not get sent out as
part of the dialed digit string because the phone removes it before it sends
the dial string.