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Signaling groups allow telephony channels to be grouped together for the purposes of routing and shared configuration. They are the entity to which calls are routed, as well as the location from which Call Routes are selected. They are also the location from which Tone Tables and Action Sets are selected. In the case of SIP, they specify protocol settings and link to server, media, and mapping tables.
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Call Routing allows calls to be carried between signaling groups, which allows calls to be carried between ports and between protocols (for example, ISDN to SIP). Routes are defined by Call Routing Tables, which allow for flexible configuration of which calls are carried and how they are translated. These tables are one of the central connection points of the system, linking Transformation Tables, Message Translations, Cause Code Reroute Tables, Media Lists and the three types of Signaling Groups (ISDN, SIP and CAS).
To create or modify an existing Call Routing Table:
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Signaling groups allow telephony channels to be grouped together for the purposes of routing and shared configuration. They are the entity to which calls are routed, as well as the location from which Call Routes are selected. They are also the location from which Tone Tables and Action Sets are selected. In the case of SIP, they specify protocol settings and link to server, media, and mapping tables.
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Call Routing allows calls to be carried between signaling groups, which allows calls to be carried between ports and between protocols (for example, ISDN to SIP). Routes are defined by Call Routing Tables, which allow for flexible configuration of which calls are carried and how they are translated. These tables are one of the central connection points of the system, linking Transformation Tables, Message Translations, Cause Code Reroute Tables, Media Lists and the three types of Signaling Groups (ISDN, SIP and CAS).
To create or modify an existing Call Routing Table:
...