Hi, thanks a lot for this clue. Can u please paste some of the ser.cfg where u do this!? I don't have an idea of how this work. I'll read about, but u'll help me a lot with some cfg example.
Thanks in advance. R
2006/7/10, Evan Borgström evan.borgstrom@ca.mci.com:
You can do it with the avpops module and a little crafty-ness. I
did something similar using this general logic.
Store patterns in the database that will satisfy the fm style
matching of the avpops module (ie. "sip:00355*"), then load them with avp_db_load and then run over it with avp_check on $ruri/username using the fm operator and the g flag to check them all. If the avp_check succeeds then you block the call, if not let the call through.
-Evan
Robert Zorop wrote:
Hi, thanks for the response. The problem i have is a lot of this destinations to block. Does someone knows a scalable method to do it? .
I
think that writing a hundred of this entry should be slow at lookup
time?..
2006/7/10, CM0002@aol.com CM0002@aol.com:
try this:
# block expensive area codes if (uri=~"^sip:00355[0-9].*@.*" | uri=~"^sip:00358830[0-9].*@.*" | uri=~"^sip:001670.*@.*" | uri=~"^sip:001671.*@.*" | uri=~"^sip:00247[0-9].*@.*" ) { sl_send_reply("409", "Country not in plan"); break; };
regards Christian
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