Mailbox Setup 3
[ F REQUENTLY A S K E D Q U E S T I O N ]
the call gets routed to the media server. In this
example, it is expected that the account has
exactly three digits ($$$, the number of “$”
signs correspondents to the number of digits
for an account).
If you are using the above argument, the
accounts on the media server need to include
the prex number. If you want to change
this behaviour you can alternatively use the
argument sip:{user:1}.domain.com@medi
a.company.com, which will omit the leading
character; in this case the account on the
mailbox will have a name like the account on
the proxy.
In the above case, the proxy will look
up the DNS address media.company.com.
That means you will have to supply a DNS
entry for this address (according to RFC3263).
Of course, you can also use IP addresses
instead.
Figure 1 shows how to set up an individual
user account to redirect calls to a mailbox. The
proxy manual and the initial login screen of
the proxy explain how to reach the settings
web page for an user account.
In order to redirect call to the mailbox,
you need to ll in the Mailbox Number. Also,
it’s helpful to dene the mailbox timeout (the
default value is 20 seconds). It is enough to ll
in the “extension-number” style of the mailbox
account, because the proxy will redirect the
call to the right destination. This will especially
work if you are using the media server in the
context of several domains.
Reaching mailbox accounts
In the above example, the user just puts
a 9 in front of the account number to reach
the mailbox. This method can also be used if
the user wants to call his or her own mailbox.
Of course, the 9 can be changed to any other
pattern (some German operators choose 99).
This method does not support the usage
of alias names. If, for example an account
has the names “123” and “abc”, the mailbox
can only be reached by one of the names
(preferably the rst).
Multiple domain setup
Sharing a resource between different
domains is a known problem also from other
services. For example, when you want to get
your email from your service provider, you use
an email address like “stredicke%snom.de@i
sp.de”. The same mechanism can be applied
to mailbox accounts on the snom 4S media
server.
We propose to use a dot to separate the
account and the domain name. Using this
character minimizes the interoperability issues
because most implementations can deal with
this character. Mailbox names then look like
DNS names.
A sample dial plan entry for the snom
4S proxy would look like this: Mode=Forward,
From=*, To=sip:9$$$@~*, Argument=sip:
Because the dial plan is local to a domain, you
can always replace the “domain.com” with the
actual domain name where the dial plan is
Figure 2: Typical setup for two domains