That's seconds. To get a certain number of rings, just find out the total cycle time for the ring cadence you're using, then multiply by the number of rings you want.
 
For example, the US ring cadence is 2 on, 4 off[, repeat]. So the total time is 6 seconds per ring. For 4 rings, use 4x6=24.
 
On 12/9/05, Robert La Ferla <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I realize that it's a timeout but what's implicit in that is that
Asterisk can't detect # of rings just the amount of time spent ringing?
I have been looking at the reference manual on asteriskguru.com.  They
say it's a timeout but they don't indicate the units.  Is it
milliseconds, microseconds or seconds?


Dave Cotton wrote:
> On Fri, 2005-12-09 at 11:41 -0500, Robert La Ferla wrote:
>
>> Derek Whitten wrote:
>>
>>> [incoming]
>>> exten => s,1,Dial(SIP/myext&SIP/myext1&SIP/myext2,25,t,r)
>>> exten => s,2,Voicemail(myext)
>>> exten => s,3,Hangup()
>>>
>>>
>> Thanks.  This will call/ring multiple extensions but what about waiting
>> for X rings before going to voicemail?  How do I do that?
>>
>
> What do you think the 25 does?
>
> Maybe it's a time or something.
>
>

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