From the course: Cisco CCNP Collaboration 350-801 (CLCOR) Cert Prep: 3 CUCM Call Control, Quality of Service, and Collaboration Applications
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SIP route patterns
- [Narrator] In this video, we want to consider what is referred to as a SIP route pattern, also known as URI dialing. If you remember, when we looked at a trace file that showed a SIP call do you remember what the source and destination looked like in that trace file? It was not just a phone number. It looked sort of like an email address. It was something like 2001@10.3.3.2. Or if we had DNS services available it might look something like kevin@kwtrain.com. And if we have a phone such as a software based phone, like Cisco Jabber that supports it, we can actually address phones and call those phones using what looks sort of like an email address. As an example, instead of dialing the digits of 867-5309 we could use the corresponding URI, the uniform resource identifier which might be something like jenny@cisco.local. Let's go out and take a look at how we can add a URI to one of our existing directory numbers. Let's…
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Contents
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Call control theory31s
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Call flow terminology5m 59s
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The need for digit manipulation12m 9s
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Digit manipulation options15m 5s
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Call control configuration14s
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Standard local route groups16m 44s
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Translation patterns3m 24s
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SIP route patterns1m 59s
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Route pattern wildcards and special characters4m 57s
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Chapter 1 summary35s
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