CBT Nuggets | What are Dial Peer Wildcards? | Cisco Cube Configuration @cbtnuggets | Uploaded 1 year ago | Updated June 07 2023
CBT Nuggets trainer Lalo Nunez covers wildcards that enable flexibility in a dial plan. Wildcards are highly efficient ways of creating routing rules or configurations that devices implement without you needing to write each route. Lalo defines some of the most commonly used wildcards (., *, +, [] ) and gives examples.
This is one of the videos in Lalo's series on configuring the Cisco Unified Border Element (CUBE), which provides session border control functionality for VoIP networks. If you like what you see in this video about configuring dial peer wildcards, check out the entire course here: https://training.cbt.gg/yim.
The period or dot (.) is the most common wildcard you'll see in most environments. The dot translates to any digit 0-9 or an asterisk (*), which means it can encompass huge ranges of numbers. The plus (+) symbol as a wildcard matches one or more instances of the preceding digit, up to 32 instances. Brackets ([]) as a wildcard translates to any digit within the defined range. The letter T is a wildcard which matches any number (up to 32) of dialed digits. An inter-digit time out is how a server knows dialing has stopped – it's 10 seconds by default on most systems. A pound (#) symbol jumps to the end of that time out.
Watch this entire Cisco Cube Configuration course: https://training.cbt.gg/yim
Not a CBT Nuggets subscriber? Start your free week: https://www.cbtnuggets.com/signup
Check out Lalo's other courses: https://www.cbtnuggets.com/trainers/lalo-nunez
New IT Training releases: https://training.cbt.gg/x85
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#ciscoconfiguration #cube #voip #cubeconfiguration #ittraining #cbtnuggets #itcertifications
CBT Nuggets trainer Lalo Nunez covers wildcards that enable flexibility in a dial plan. Wildcards are highly efficient ways of creating routing rules or configurations that devices implement without you needing to write each route. Lalo defines some of the most commonly used wildcards (., *, +, [] ) and gives examples.
This is one of the videos in Lalo's series on configuring the Cisco Unified Border Element (CUBE), which provides session border control functionality for VoIP networks. If you like what you see in this video about configuring dial peer wildcards, check out the entire course here: https://training.cbt.gg/yim.
The period or dot (.) is the most common wildcard you'll see in most environments. The dot translates to any digit 0-9 or an asterisk (*), which means it can encompass huge ranges of numbers. The plus (+) symbol as a wildcard matches one or more instances of the preceding digit, up to 32 instances. Brackets ([]) as a wildcard translates to any digit within the defined range. The letter T is a wildcard which matches any number (up to 32) of dialed digits. An inter-digit time out is how a server knows dialing has stopped – it's 10 seconds by default on most systems. A pound (#) symbol jumps to the end of that time out.
Watch this entire Cisco Cube Configuration course: https://training.cbt.gg/yim
Not a CBT Nuggets subscriber? Start your free week: https://www.cbtnuggets.com/signup
Check out Lalo's other courses: https://www.cbtnuggets.com/trainers/lalo-nunez
New IT Training releases: https://training.cbt.gg/x85
-----------------
Connect with CBT Nuggets for the latest in IT training:
• Twitter - https://twitter.com/CBTNuggets
• Facebook - http://facebook.com/CBTNuggets
• Instagram - http://instagram.com/CBTNuggets
• LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/cbt-nuggets
#ciscoconfiguration #cube #voip #cubeconfiguration #ittraining #cbtnuggets #itcertifications