492
A
PPENDIX
D: C
ONNE
X
TIONS
H.323 G
ATEWAY
■
Calls work in one direction, but not in the reverse direction. Place a
call to determine which firewall is blocking TCP traffic. Once you
determine this, it is the
remote
firewall that is blocking the traffic.
Placing Calls
You can place an outgoing H.323 call from a system in one of several
ways, as discussed in this section.
See
Chapter 11
for information about how to use the dial plan to set up
the system to use H.323 ports.
IP Address Entry
Depending on how you set up the dial plan, the most convenient way to
place a call to a new number is to dial a ConneXtions extension list
(configured within the dial plan), which provides a connection to an
available H.323 port. If a port is available (not busy), enter the extension
and IP address from the telephone key pad. Use the
*
key to separate
the four “octets” in the IP address, and then press the # key to “dial
now.”
You must configure the dial plan to use ConneXtions. You must have
Super User Group CoS privileges to perform this test.
These examples show key pad sequences that request an extension list
connection and a specific port connection:
8192
*
168
*
1
*
15#
where extension list access is used
OR
754 192
*
168
*
1
*
15#
if there is no extension list access, or if you want to test specific ports.
The first example begins with an 8 to request any available H.323 port.
The second example begins with the 3-digit extension (754) of a specific
H.323 port. The remaining digits in both examples represent the IP
address of the remote H.323 gateway (192.168.1.15). Note that IP
addresses are always four octets long. In this case, 15 is the last octet.
Extension Lists
You can configure H.323 ports for single-digit access (usually 8) instead of
a specific 3-digit line extension. The single-digit access allows the system
to select an available line port when you place an external call.
Summary of Contents for 3C10402B
Page 18: ...18 ...
Page 22: ...22 ABOUT THIS GUIDE ...
Page 26: ...26 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION ...
Page 74: ...74 CHAPTER 3 FEATURE SETTINGS ...
Page 130: ...130 CHAPTER 5 TELEPHONE CONFIGURATION ...
Page 156: ...156 CHAPTER 7 CALL DISTRIBUTION GROUPS ...
Page 194: ...194 CHAPTER 8 PSTN GATEWAY CONFIGURATION ...
Page 256: ...256 CHAPTER 10 SIP MODE OPERATIONS ...
Page 328: ...328 CHAPTER 11 DIAL PLAN ...
Page 360: ...360 CHAPTER 13 DOWNLOADS ...
Page 370: ...370 CHAPTER 14 LICENSING AND UPGRADES ...
Page 406: ...406 CHAPTER 16 NETWORK MANAGEMENT ...
Page 412: ...412 CHAPTER 17 COUNTRY SETTINGS ...
Page 450: ...450 APPENDIX A INTEGRATING THIRD PARTY MESSAGING ...
Page 456: ...456 APPENDIX B ISDN COMPLETION CAUSE CODES ...
Page 510: ...510 APPENDIX F OUTBOUND CALLER ID AND 911 SERVICE ...
Page 546: ...546 APPENDIX G NBX ENTERPRISE MIB ...
Page 566: ...566 GLOSSARY ...
Page 578: ...578 INDEX ...
Page 582: ......