Norbert Zawodsky skrev: > SIP schrieb: > >>> Yes... you would have to register (and possibly pay for, dependent on >>> the ENUM registrar) each individual number. The idea behind ENUM is that >>> it's an E164 number that is already yours that maps to whatever you want >>> it to map to (email, SIP, etc). The key point here is that you already >>> own the E164 number. If you do, then you could register them all at >>> e164.org for free. If you don't own the individual numbers, you >>> shouldn't be allowed to register them as your own. That sort of breaks >>> the ENUM concept of a number you take with you as a personal identifier. >>> >>> N. >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> -- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com -- >>> >>> asterisk-users mailing list >>> To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: >>> http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users >>> >>> >>> >>> > > Hi N. ! > > Thanks for your answer. > > Either I don't understand what you want to tell me or this thread slowly > drifts away from my original question. > > My original question was: > > If you "own" a telephone number which connects to your company and you > have a PBX (like asterisk) and some extesniosn behind that, how/where do > you enum-register each extension so that each extension can be reached > "from outside" by a SIP uri? > > Meanwhile I managed to speak to a technician at my-enum.at, which is my > registrar at e164.arpa. He *comfirmed* my original assumption: > > If you have a telephone number and want to paticipate in enum, you have > to register that number at - for example - e164.arpa. > > If you operate extensions "behind" that number and you want them to be > reachable too, you have to run your own DNS server and register this > server at e164.arpa. This server is naturally under your responsibility > and you "manage" all your extension yourself. > > It is works exactly like any other DNS resolution. > But then you create phonenumbers in enum, which doesn't exist as pstn-numbers.
Not the idea behind enum. On the other hand, if you owned 10 or 100 pstn-numbers in series, you could get the last one or two digits delegated to your dns-server. Leif _______________________________________________ -- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com -- asterisk-users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users