InnoMedia iPBX Administrative Guide
13
Feb 2009 - InnoMedia
© 2001 InnoMedia. All rights reserved.
For example, ext “10” calls ext “30”.
4.2 Making an Outbound Call
Making an outbound call from an IP Phone extension (or an Analog Phone extension) to an external phone
number.
For example, ext. “30” calls “4325400” or “5*4325400”.
4.3 Making an Inbound Call
Making an inbound call to an IP Phone extension (or Analog Phone extension).
For example, “4325400” calls an iPBX trunk line (either VoIP trunk or PSTN trunk). By default, the auto
attendant is enabled. Hence the caller will hear the voice prompt (“Hello, you have entered the Interactive
Voice Response service. If you know the extension number, please dial it now. For directory, please dial 0.”),
and then dial “30”. (You may change the auto attendant IVR later.)
1.3 Note for Remote Tele-commuters & Remote Manamgement
For security reasons, if you would like to have iPBX to serve remote tele-commuters or users working at
home, they need to have VPN (or other method) access to your corporate network, and register their IP
Phone devices (or SIP phone) to iPBX LAN interface. The SIP proxy server IP address (or DNS) should be the
LAN interface of the iPBX.
IPBX WAN port only allows the access of WEB GUI pages, including the administrative and user-self web
pages, via HTTPS protocol. The default configuration of iPBX disables the WAN access of WEB GUI as well as
disable the “PING” services. You may enable WAN port access of GUI & PING via the following steps:
1.
Logon to iPBX Web page via LAN access
2.
Go to the page at “Network
Advanced
Miscellaneous.
3.
Check the box of ‘Enable access to Web Admin via WAN interface’ if you will allow users to logon to self-
care web pages remotely.
4.
Check the box of ‘Forbid administrator to access to Web Admin via WAN interface’ if you do not allow
anyone who knows administrative password to configure iPBX administrative WEB GUI remotely.