I'm new to this, but I'm willing to take a crack at it. 1) dial plans are local to the CM cluster, yes you should have an overall plan.
2) the route patterns work on a longest match basis. you should have a calling search space that includes your local users partition, and the associated dial pattern for RTP should be something like 6xxxx for local, and a longer one for other locations. you may have to fool with your dial timeout. I believe the default is a few seconds wait before the CM decides you have stopped dialing. Either that or train your users to terminate all calls with the # 3) call my employer, who happens to be one of the top AVVID integrators in the country. ( I'm not part of that team, obviously ) We have a good group of CCIE's with extensive voice experience who will get it done for you. Open to correction where necessary. HTH Chuck ""supernet"" wrote in message [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]... > I'm trying to learn callmanager dial plan and got some questions, here > is my scenario: > > 1. Within our Pleasanton campus, our number range is (925) > 426-xxxx. Our RTP campus number range is (919) 685-xxxx. I want users at > Pleasanton dial 6xxxx to reach locally and 685xxxx to reach RTP (because > we have a lot of other offices, so minimum 7-digit is required for all > offices except Pleasanton). The problem is users at RTP have to dial > 685xxxx to reach locally. Apparently, it's cumbersome. Is there anyway > to get around this? > 2. If we have 2 callmanger clusters, are the dial plans in 2 > clusters related? How do I create relationship? > > Thanks. > Yoshi Message Posted at: http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7&i=48302&t=48300 -------------------------------------------------- FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]