- A
- B
- cac master through call application stats
- call application voice through call denial
- call fallback through called-number (dial peer)
- caller-id (dial peer) through ccm-manager switchover-to-backup
- ccs connect (controller) through clear vsp statistics
- clid through credentials (sip-ua)
- default (auto-config application) through direct-inward-dial
- disable-early-media through dualtone
- E
- F
- G
- H
- icpif through irq global-request
- isdn bind-l3 through ixi transport http
- K
- L
- map q850-cause through mgcp package-capability
- mgcp persistent through mmoip aaa send-id secondary
- mode (ATM/T1/E1 controller) through mwi-server
- N
- O
- package through pattern
- periodic-report interval through proxy h323
- Q
- R
- sccp through service-type call-check
- session through sgcp tse payload
- show aal2 profile through show call filter match-list
- show call history fax through show debug condition
- show dial-peer through show gatekeeper zone prefix
- show gateway through show modem relay statistics
- show mrcp client session active through show sip dhcp
- show sip service through show trunk hdlc
- show vdev through show voice statistics memory-usage
- show voice trace through shutdown (voice-port)
- signal through srv version
- ss7 mtp2-variant through switchover method
- target carrier-id through timeout tsmax
- timeouts call-disconnect through timing clear-wait
- timing delay-duration through type (voice)
- U
- vad (dial peer) through voice-class sip encap clear-channel
- voice-class sip error-code-override through vxml version 2.0
- W
- Z
- fax interface-type
- fax protocol (dial peer)
- fax protocol (voice-service)
- fax protocol t38 (dial peer)
- fax protocol t38 (voice-service)
- fax rate (dial peer)
- fax rate (pots)
- fax rate (voice-service)
- fax receive called-subscriber
- fax-relay (dial peer)
- fax send center-header
- fax send coverpage comment
- fax send coverpage e-mail-controllable
- fax send coverpage enable
- fax send coverpage show-detail
- fax send left-header
- fax send max-speed
- fax send right-header
- fax send transmitting-subscriber
- file-acct flush
- file-acct reset
- filter voice
- flush
- fmtp
- forward-alarms
- forward-digits
- frame-relay voice bandwidth
- freq-max-delay
- freq-max-deviation
- freq-max-power
- freq-min-power
- freq-pair
- freq-power-twist
- frequency (cp-dualtone)
Cisco IOS Voice Commands:
F
This chapter contains commands to configure and maintain Cisco IOS voice applications. The commands are presented in alphabetical order. Some commands required for configuring voice may be found in other Cisco IOS command references. Use the command reference master index or search online to find these commands.
For detailed information on how to configure these applications and features, refer to the Cisco IOS Voice Configuration Guide.
fax interface-type
To specify the interface to be used for a fax call, use the fax interface-type command in global configuration mode. To reset to the default fax protocol, use the no form of this command.
fax interface-type {fax-mail | modem | vfc}
no fax interface-type {fax-mail | modem | vfc}
Syntax Description
Command Default
Cisco AS5300: See the "Usage Guidelines" section
All other platforms: fax-mail
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
When using this command to change the interface type for store-and-forward fax, you must reload (reboot or reset) the router.
On the Cisco AS5300 access server, the keyword vfc maps internally to the fax-mail keyword. If you use the vfc keyword with the fax interface-type command, the output from the show running-config command displays fax-mail as the option that was set.
The Cisco AS5300 defaults for the fax interface-type command are as follows:
•If the Cisco AS5300 has voice cards only, the default is the fax-mail keyword. The modem keyword is unavailable.
•If the Cisco AS5300 has modem cards only, the default is the modem keyword.
•If the Cisco AS5300 has both modem and voice cards, the default is the modem keyword.
Examples
The following example specifies the use of voice DSPs to process fax store-and-forward data:
Router(config)# fax interface-type fax-mail
The following example specifies the use of modems to process fax store-and-forward data on a Cisco AS5300:
Router(config)# fax interface-type modem
fax protocol (dial peer)
To specify the fax protocol to be used for a specific VoIP dial peer, use the fax protocol command in dial peer configuration mode. To return to the global default fax protocol, use the system keyword or the no form of this command.
Cisco AS5350, Cisco AS5400, Cisco AS5850
fax protocol {none | system | pass-through {g711ulaw | g711alaw}}
no fax protocol
All Other Platforms
fax protocol {cisco | none | system | pass-through {g711ulaw | g711alaw}}
no fax protocol
Syntax Description
Command Default
system
Command Modes
Dial peer configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
Use the fax protocol command in dial-peer configuration mode to configure the type of fax relay capability for a specific dial peer. Note the following command behavior:
•fax protocol none—Disables all fax handling.
•no fax protocol—Sets the fax protocol for the dial peer to the default, which is system.
If the fax protocol (voice-service) command is used to set fax relay options for all dial peers and the fax protocol (dial peer) command is used on a specific dial peer, the dial-peer configuration takes precedence over the global configuration for that dial peer.
Examples
The following example specifies that the fax stream use fax pass-through for VoIP dial peer 99:
dial-peer voice 99 voip
fax protocol pass-through g711ulaw
Related Commands
fax protocol (voice-service)
To specify the global default fax protocol to be used for all VoIP dial peers, use the fax protocol command in voice-service configuration mode. To return to the default fax protocol, use the no form of this command.
Cisco AS5350, Cisco AS5400, Cisco AS5850
fax protocol {none | pass-through {g711ulaw | g711alaw}}
no fax protocol
All Other Platforms
fax protocol {cisco | none | pass-through {g711ulaw | g711alaw}}
no fax protocol
Syntax Description
Command Default
If no fax protocol is specified, the cisco protocol is the default for all platforms except the Cisco AS5350, Cisco AS5400, and Cisco AS5850. For these three platforms, none is the default, so no fax pass-through is attempted.
Command Modes
Voice-service configuration (config-voi-serv)
Command History
Usage Guidelines
Use the fax protocol command with the voice service voip command to configure the fax relay capability for all VoIP dial peers.
Note the following command behavior:
•fax protocol none— Disables all fax handling.
•no fax protocol—Sets the fax protocol to the default.
If the fax protocol (voice-service) command is used to set fax relay options for all dial peers and the fax protocol (dial peer) command is used on a specific dial peer, the dial-peer configuration takes precedence over the global configuration for that dial peer. When the system keyword is used in the dial-peer configuration of the fax protocol command, it specifies that the global default fax protocol set with this command is used by that dial peer.
In Cisco Unified CME 4.0(3) and later, the fax protocol cisco (voice-service) command is the only supported fax protocol option for SCCP-controlled FXS ports. G.711 fax pass-through is not supported for Cisco VG 224 and FXS ports.
Note The modem passthrough protocol and fax protocol commands cannot be configured at the same time. If you enter either one of these commands when the other is already configured, the command-line interface returns an error message.
The error message serves as a confirmation notice because the modem passthrough protocol command is internally treated the same as the fax protocol passthrough command by the Cisco IOS software. For example, no other mode of fax protocol (for example, fax protocol T.38) can operate if the modem passthrough protocol command is configured.
Note Even though the modem passthrough protocol and fax protocol passthrough commands are treated the same internally, be aware that if you change the configuration from the modem passthrough protocol command to the modem passthrough nse command, the configured fax protocol passthrough command is not automatically reset to the default. If default settings are required for the fax protocol command, you have to specifically configure the fax protocol command.
Examples
The following example specifies that the fax stream for all VoIP dial peers use fax pass-through:
voice service voip
fax protocol pass-through g711ulaw
Related Commands
fax protocol t38 (dial peer)
To specify the ITU-T T.38 standard fax protocol to be used for a specific VoIP dial peer, use the fax protocol t38 command in dial-peer configuration mode. To return to the default fax protocol, use the no form of this command.
Cisco AS5350, Cisco AS5400, Cisco AS5850 Platforms
fax protocol t38 [nse [force]] [ls-redundancy value [hs-redundancy value]] [fallback {none | pass-through {g711ulaw | g711alaw}}]
no fax protocol t38
All Other Platforms
fax protocol t38 [nse [force]] [version {0 | 3}] [ls-redundancy value [hs-redundancy value]] [fallback {cisco | none | pass-through {g711ulaw | g711alaw}}]
no fax protocol t38
Syntax Description
Command Default
ls-redundancy 0 hs-redundancy 0 fallback none for the Cisco AS5350, Cisco AS5400, and Cisco AS5850 platforms
ls-redundancy 0 hs-redundancy 0 fallback cisco for all other platforms
Command Modes
Dial-peer configuration (config-dial-peer)
Command History
|
|
---|---|
12.2(13)T |
This command was introduced. |
15.1(1)T |
This command was modified. The version keyword was added with the 0 and 3 keywords to specify fax speed as G3 or SG3. |
Usage Guidelines
Use this command in dial-peer configuration mode to configure the type of fax relay capability for a specific dial peer. If the fax protocol t38 (voice-service) command is used to set fax relay options for all dial peers and the fax protocol t38 (dial peer) command is used on a specific dial peer, the dial-peer configuration takes precedence over the global configuration for that dial peer.
If you specify version 3 in the fax protocol t38 command and negotiate T.38 version 3, the fax rate is automatically set to 33600.
The ls-redundancy and hs-redundancy keywords are used to send redundant T.38 fax packets. Setting the hs-redundancy keyword to a value greater than 0 causes a significant increase in the network bandwidth consumed by the fax call.
Use the nse force option when the H.323 or SIP gateway is interoperating with a Cisco MGCP gateway and the call agent does not support the interworking and negotiation of T.38 fax relay and NSE attributes at the time of call setup. When the corresponding option is configured on the MGCP gateway, the nse force option allows T.38 fax relay to be used between Cisco H.323 or SIP gateways and MGCP gateways.
Examples
The following example show how to configure T.38 fax relay for VoIP:
dial-peer voice 99 voip
fax protocol t38
The following example shows how to use NSEs to enter T.38 fax relay mode:
dial-peer voice 99 voip
fax protocol t38 nse
The following example shows how to specify the T.38 fax protocol for this dial peer, set low-speed redundancy to a value of 1, and set high-speed redundancy to a value of 0:
dial-peer voice 99 voip
fax protocol t38 ls-redundancy 1 hs-redundancy 0
Related Commands
fax protocol t38 (voice-service)
To specify the global default ITU-T T.38 standard fax protocol to be used for all VoIP dial peers, use the fax protocol t38 command in voice-service configuration mode. To return to the default fax protocol, use the no form of this command.
Cisco AS5350, Cisco AS5400, Cisco AS5850 Platforms
fax protocol t38 [nse [force]] [version {0 | 3}] [ls-redundancy value [hs-redundancy value]] [fallback {none | pass-through {g711ulaw | g711alaw}}]
no fax protocol t38
All Other Platforms
fax protocol t38 [nse [force]] [version {0 | 3}] [ls-redundancy value [hs-redundancy value]] [fallback {cisco | none | pass-through {g711ulaw | g711alaw}}]
no fax protocol t38
Syntax Description
Command Default
ls-redundancy 0 hs-redundancy 0 fallback none for the Cisco AS5350, Cisco AS5400, and Cisco AS5850 platforms
ls-redundancy 0 hs-redundancy 0 fallback cisco for all other platforms
Command Modes
Voice-service configuration (config-voi-srv)
Command History
|
|
---|---|
12.2(13)T |
This command was introduced. |
15.1(1)T |
This command was Modified. The version keyword was added with the 0 and 3 keywords to specify fax speed. |
Usage Guidelines
Use the fax protocol t38 command and the voice service voip command to configure T.38 fax relay capability for all VoIP dial peers. If the fax protocol t38 (voice-service) command is used to set fax relay options for all dial peers and the fax protocol t38 (dial-peer) command is used on a specific dial peer, the dial-peer configuration takes precedence over the global configuration for that dial peer.
If you specify version 3 in the fax protocol t38 command and negotiate T.38 version 3, the fax rate is automatically set to 33600.
The ls-redundancy and hs-redundancy keywords are used to send redundant T.38 fax packets. Setting the hs-redundancy keyword to a value greater than 0 causes a significant increase in the network bandwidth consumed by the fax call.
Use the nse force option when the H.323 or SIP gateway is interoperating with a Cisco MGCP gateway and the call agent does not support the interworking and negotiation of T.38 fax relay and NSE attributes at the time of call setup. When the corresponding option is configured on the MGCP gateway, the nse force option allows T.38 fax relay to be used between Cisco H.323 or SIP gateways and MGCP gateways.
Note Do not use the cisco keyword for the fallback option if you specified version 3 for SG3 fax transmission.
Examples
The following example shows how to configure the T.38 fax protocol for VoIP:
voice service voip
fax protocol t38
The following example shows how to use NSEs to unconditionally enter T.38 fax relay mode:
voice service voip
fax protocol t38 nse
The following example shows how to specify the T.38 fax protocol for all VoIP dial peers, set low-speed redundancy to a value of 1, and set high-speed redundancy to a value of 0:
voice service voip
fax protocol t38 ls-redundancy 1 hs-redundancy 0
Related Commands
fax rate (dial peer)
To establish the rate at which a fax is sent to a specified dial peer, use the fax rate command in dial-peer configuration mode. To reset the dial peer for voice calls, use the no form of this command.
fax rate {2400 |
4800 | 7200 | 9600 | 12000 | 14400} {disable | voice} [bytes milliseconds]
no fax rate
Syntax Description
Command Default
Voice rate
Command Modes
Dial peer configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
Use this command to specify the fax transmission rate to the specified dial peer.
The values for this command apply only to the fax transmission speed and do not affect the quality of the fax itself. The higher transmission speed values (14,400 bps) provide a faster transmission speed but monopolize a significantly large portion of the available bandwidth. The lower transmission speed values (2400 bps) provide a slower transmission speed and use a relatively smaller portion of the available bandwidth.
Note The fax call is not compressed using the ip rtp header-compression command because User Datagram Protocol (UDP) is being used and not Real-Time Transport Protocol (RTP). For example, a 9600 bps fax call takes approximately 24 kbps.
If the fax rate transmission speed is set higher than the codec rate in the same dial peer, the data sent over the network for fax transmission is above the bandwidth reserved for Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP).
Tip Because a large portion of the available network bandwidth is monopolized by the fax transmission, Cisco does not recommend setting the fax rate value higher than the value of the selected codec. If the fax rate value is set lower than the codec value, faxes take longer to send but use less bandwidth.
The voice keyword specifies the highest possible transmission speed allowed by the voice rate. For example, if the voice codec is G.711, the fax transmission may occur at a rate up to 14,400 bps because 14,400 bps is less than the 64k voice rate. If the voice codec is G.729 (8k), the fax transmission speed is 7200 bps.
Examples
The following example configures a fax rate transmission speed of 9600 bps for faxes sent using a dial peer:
dial-peer voice 100 voip
fax rate 9600 voice
The following example sets a fax rate transmission speed at 12,000 bps and the packetization rate at 20 milliseconds:
fax rate 12000 bytes 20
Related Commands
|
|
---|---|
codec (dial peer) |
Specifies the voice coder rate of speech for a dial peer. |
fax protocol (dial peer) |
Specifies the fax protocol for a specific VoIP dial peer. |
fax rate (pots)
To establish the rate at which a fax is sent to the specified plain old telephone service (POTS) dial peer, use the fax rate command in dial-peer configuration mode. To reset the dial peer to handle only voice calls, use the no form of this command.
fax rate {disable | system | voice}
no fax rate
Syntax Description
Command Default
System
Command Modes
dial peer configuration
Command History
|
|
---|---|
12.2(8)T |
This command was introduced on the following platforms: Cisco 1700 series, Cisco 3600 series, and Cisco ICS 7750. |
Usage Guidelines
This implementation of the fax rate command is only applicable to POTS dial peers.
Examples
The following example shows a fax rate transmission set to voice on POTS dial peer 1:
dial-peer voice 1 pots
fax rate voice
Related Commands
|
|
---|---|
codec (dial peer) |
Specifies the voice coder rate of speech for a dial peer. |
fax rate (voip) |
Establishes the rate at which a fax is sent to the specified VoIP dial peer. |
fax rate (voice-service)
To establish the rate at which a fax is sent for POTS-to-POTS voice calls, use the fax rate command in voice-service configuration mode. To reset for voice only calls, use the no form of this command.
fax rate {disable | voice}
no fax rate
Syntax Description
Command Default
fax rate voice command behavior is enabled by default
Command Modes
Voice-service configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
This implementation of the fax rate command applies only when voice service is set to POTS. Although fax rate voice command behavior is the default setting, you must specify this functionality in voice-service configuration mode in order to establish the rate at which a fax is sent for POTS-to-POTS voice calls. If you do not configure fax rate voice functionality and you do not specify fax rate disable command behavior, fax calls are processed as a regular voice calls and their completion is subject to line quality just like any other form of voice communication.
Note Because the fax rate voice command has been reclassified as a default setting, it will no longer automatically generate an entry in your gateway router's running configuration in NVRAM. If your gateway configuration requires fax rate voice command functionality, you must reconfigure your gateway after loading a Cisco IOS image earlier than Cisco IOS Release 12.3(4)T.
Examples
The following example shows voice service fax rate transmission set to disable:
voice service pots
fax rate disable
Related Commands
|
|
---|---|
fax protocol (voice-service) |
Specifies the global default fax protocol for all VoIP dial peers. |
voice service |
Specifies the voice encapsulation type. |
fax receive called-subscriber
To define the called subscriber identification (CSI), use the fax receive called-subscriber command in global configuration mode. To disable the configured CSI, use the no form of this command.
fax receive called-subscriber {$d$ | telephone-number}
no fax receive called-subscriber {$d$ | telephone-number}
Syntax Description
Command Default
Enabled with a null string
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
Use this command to define the number displayed in the liquid crystal display (LCD) of the sending fax device when you are sending a fax to a recipient. Typically, with a standard Group 3 fax device, this is the telephone number associated with the receiving fax device. The command defines the CSI.
This command applies to on-ramp store-and-forward fax functions.
Examples
The following example configures the number 555-0134 as the called subscriber number:
fax receive called-subscriber 5550134
fax-relay (dial peer)
To allow for the suppression of tones from the fax machine side so that Super Group 3 (SG3) fax machines can negotiate down to G3 speeds using fax relay or to disable fax-relay Error Correction Mode (ECM) on a VoIP dial peer, use the fax-relay command in dial peer configuration mode. To disable these functions, use the no form of this command.
fax-relay {ans-disable | ecm-disable | sg3-to-g3 [system]}
no fax-relay {ans-disable | ecm-disable | sg3-to-g3 [system]}
Syntax Description
Command Default
If this command is not enabled, modem upspeed can occur when ANS tones are detected, fax-relay ECM is enabled, and SG3-to-SG3 fax relay communication is not supported and probably will fail.
Command Modes
Dial peer configuration (config-dial-peer)
Command History
Usage Guidelines
The ans-disable keyword was added to ensure that modem upspeed does not occur when an ANS tone is detected. When the fax-relay ans-disable command is entered, the modem-related sessions fail because the ANS tones are squelched at the digital signal processor (DSP) level by the TI C5510 DSP.
When the fax-relay ecm-disable command is entered, the DSP fax-relay firmware disables ECM by modifying the Digital Information Signal (DIS) T.30 message. This is performed on DIS signals in both directions so that ECM is disabled in both directions even if only one gateway is configured with ECM disabled. This setting is provisioned when the DSP channel starts fax relay and cannot be changed during the fax relay session.
When the fax-relay sg3-to-g3 command is entered, the DSP fax-relay firmware suppresses the V.8 call menu (CM) tone and the fax machines negotiate down to G3 speeds for the fax stream. Modem communication is impacted if the session does not negotiate either modem passthrough or relay. Use this command for H.323 and Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) signaling types.
The fax-relay command is also available in voice-service configuration mode, but the ecm-disable keyword and system argument are not available.
Examples
The following dial-peer configuration disables ECM on the voice dial peer:
Router(config)# dial-peer voice 25 voip
Router(config-dial-peer)# fax-relay ecm-disable
The following dial-peer configuration shows SG3 V.8 fax CM message suppression being enabled on the voice dial peer for H.323 and SIP signaling types:
Router(config)# dial-peer voice 25 voip
Router(config-dial-peer)# fax-relay sg3-to-g3
The following dial-peer configuration shows how to enable ANS tone squelching at the DSP level for all VoIP dial peers:
Router(config)# dial-peer voice 25 voip
Router(config-dial-peer)# fax-relay ans-disable
Related Commands
fax send center-header
To specify the data that appears in the center position of the fax header information, use the fax send center-header command in global configuration mode. To remove the selected options, use the no form of this command.
fax send center-header {$a$ | $d$ | $p$ | $s$ | $t$ | string}
no fax send center-header {$a$ | $d$ | $p$ | $s$ | $t$ | string}
Syntax Description
Command Default
Disabled
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
Mail messages that contain only text or contain text attachments (text of the MIME media type) can be converted by the off-ramp gateway into a format understood by a fax machine's text-to-fax converter. When this conversion is performed, this command indicates what header information is added to the center top position of those pages.
Mail messages with TIFF attachments (MIME media image type and TIFF subtype) are expected to include their own per-page headers.
Note Faxed header information cannot be converted from TIFF files to standard fax transmissions.
This command lets you configure several options by combining one or more wildcards with text string information to customize your fax header information.
Note If the information you have selected for the fax send center-header command exceeds the space allocated for the center fax header, the information is truncated.
This command applies to off-ramp store-and-forward fax functions.
Examples
The following example selects the fax transmission time as the centered fax header:
fax send center-header $t$
The following example configures the company name "Widget" and its address as the centered fax header:
fax send center-header widget $s$
Related Commands
|
|
fax send left-header |
Specifies the data that appears on the left in the fax header. |
fax send right-header |
Specifies the data that appears on the right in the fax header. |
fax send coverpage comment
To define customized text for the title field of a fax cover sheet, use the fax send coverpage comment command in global configuration mode. To disable the defined comment, use the no form of this command.
fax send coverpage comment string
no fax send coverpage comment string
Syntax Description
string |
Text string that adds customized text in the title field of the fax cover sheet. Valid characters are any ASCII characters. |
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
This command can be overridden by the fax send coverpage e-mail-controllable command.
This command applies to off-ramp store-and-forward fax functions.
Examples
The following example configures an individualized title comment of "XYZ Fax Services" for generated fax cover sheets:
fax send coverpage enable
fax send coverpage comment XYZ Fax Services
Related Commands
fax send coverpage e-mail-controllable
To defer to the cover page setting in the e-mail header to generate a standard fax cover sheet, use the fax send coverpage e-mail-controllable command in global configuration mode. To disable standard fax sheet generation, use the no form of this command.
fax send coverpage e-mail-controllable
no fax send coverpage e-mail-controllable
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Default
Disabled
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
You can also use the destination address of an e-mail message to control the cover page generation on a per-recipient basis. Use this command to configure the router to defer to the cover page setting in the e-mail header.
In essence, the off-ramp router defers to the setting configured in the e-mail address itself. For example, if the address has a parameter set to cover=no, this parameter overrides the setting for the fax send coverpage enable command, and the off-ramp gateway does not generate and send a fax cover page. If the address has a parameter set to cover=yes, the off-ramp gateway defers to this parameter setting to generate and send a fax cover page.
Table 24 shows examples of what the user would enter in the To: field of the e-mail message.
Note This command applies to off-ramp store-and-forward fax functions.
Examples
The following example enables standard generated fax cover sheets:
fax send coverpage enable
fax send coverpage e-mail-controllable
Related Commands
fax send coverpage enable
To generate fax cover sheets for faxes that were converted into e-mail messages, use the fax send coverpage enable command in global configuration mode. To disable fax cover sheet generation, use the no form of this command.
fax send coverpage enable
no fax send coverpage enable
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Default
Disabled
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
This command applies to off-ramp store-and-forward fax functions.
Note This command is applicable only to faxes that were converted to e-mail messages. The Cisco AS5300 universal access server does not alter fax TIFF attachments. Therefore you cannot use this command to enable the Cisco AS5300 to generate fax cover pages for faxes that are converted from TIFF files to standard fax transmissions.
Examples
The following example enables the generation of fax cover sheets:
fax send coverpage enable
Related Commands
fax send coverpage show-detail
To display all e-mail header information as part of the fax cover sheet, use the fax send coverpage show-detail command in global configuration mode. To prevent the e-mail header information from being displayed, use the no form of this command.
fax send coverpage show-detail
no fax send coverpage show-detail
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Default
Disabled
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Usage Guideliness
This command applies to off-ramp store-and-forward fax functions.
Note This command is applicable only to faxes that are converted to e-mail messages. The Cisco AS5300 universal access server does not alter fax TIFF attachments. Therefore, you cannot use this command to enable the Cisco AS5300 to display additional fax cover page information for faxes that are converted from TIFF files to standard fax transmissions.
Examples
The following example configures an individualized generated fax cover sheet that contains the e-mail header text:
fax send coverpage enable
no fax send coverpage e-mail-controllable
fax send coverpage show-detail
Related Commands
fax send left-header
To specify the data that appears on the left in the fax header, use the fax send left-header command in global configuration mode. To disable the selected options, use the no form of this command.
fax send left-header {$a$ | $d$ | $p$ | $s$ | $t$ | string}
no fax send left-header {$a$ | $d$ | $p$ | $s$ | $t$ | string}
Syntax Description
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
Mail messages that contain only text or text attachments (text of MIME media type) can be converted by the off-ramp device into a format understood by fax machines using a text-to-fax converter. When this conversion is performed, the fax send left-header command is used to indicate what header information should be added to the top left of those pages.
Mail messages with TIFF attachments (MIME media image type and TIFF subtype) are expected to include their own per-page headers, and the Cisco IOS software does not modify TIFF attachments.
This command lets you configure several options at once by combining one or more wildcards with text string information to customize your fax header information.
If the information you select for the fax send left-header command exceeds the space allocated for the left fax header, the information is truncated.
This command applies to off-ramp store-and-forward fax functions.
Examples
The following example puts the fax transmission time on the left side of the fax header:
fax send left-header $t$
The following example puts the company name "widget" and its address on the left side of the fax header:
fax send left-header widget $s$
Related Commands
|
|
fax send center-header |
Specifies the data that appears in the center of the fax header. |
fax send right-header |
Specifies the data that appears on the right in the fax header. |
fax send max-speed
To specify the maximum speed at which an outbound fax is transmitted, use the fax send max-speed command in global configuration mode. To disable the selected speed, use the no form of this command.
fax send max-speed {2400 | 4800 | 7200 | 9600 | 12000 | 14400}
no fax send max-speed {2400 | 4800 | 7200 | 9600 | 12000 | 14400}
Syntax Description
Command Default
14,400 bps
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
This command applies to off-ramp store-and-forward fax functions.
Examples
The following example sets the outbound fax transmission rate at 2400 bps:
fax send max-speed 2400
fax send right-header
To specify the data that appears on the right in the fax header information, use the fax send right-header command in global configuration mode. To disable the selected options, use the no form of this command.
fax send right-header {$a$ | $d$ | $p$ | $s$ | $t$ | string}
no fax send right-header {$a$ | $d$ | $p$ | $s$ | $t$ | string}
Syntax Description
Command Default
No default behavior or values
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
Mail messages that contain only text or text attachments (text of MIME media type) can be converted by the off-ramp device into a format understood by fax machines using the text-to-fax converter. When this conversion is performed, this command is used to indicate what header information should be added to top right of those pages.
Mail messages with TIFF attachments (MIME media image type and TIFF subtype) are expected to include their own per-page headers, and the Cisco IOS software does not modify TIFF attachments.
This command lets you configure several options at once by combining one or more wildcards with text string information to customize your fax header information.
Note If the information you select for the fax send right-header command exceeds the space allocated for the right fax header, the information is truncated.
This command applies to off-ramp store-and-forward fax functions.
Examples
The following example puts the fax date in the right-hand side of the fax header:
fax send right-header $a$
The following example puts the company name "XYZ" and its address in the right-hand side of the fax header:
fax send right-header XYZ $s$
Related Commands
|
|
fax send center-header |
Specifies the data that appears in the center in the fax header. |
fax send left-header |
Specifies the data that appears on the left in the fax header. |
fax send transmitting-subscriber
To define the transmitting subscriber information (TSI), use the fax send transmitting-subscriber command in global configuration mode. To disable the configured value, use the no form of this command.
fax send transmitting-subscriber {$s$ | string}
no fax send transmitting-subscriber {$s$ | string}
Syntax Description
Command Default
Disabled
Command Modes
Global configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
The transmitting subscriber number is the number of the originating fax and is displayed in the LCD of the receiving fax device. Typically, with a standard Group 3 fax device, this number is the telephone number associated with the transmitting or sending fax device. This command defines the TSI.
This command applies to off-ramp store-and-forward fax functions.
Examples
The following example configures the company number as captured by the on-ramp device from the sending fax machine:
fax send transmitting-subscriber +14085550134
file-acct flush
To manually flush call detail records (CDRs) from the buffer to the accounting file, use the file-acct flush command in privileged EXEC mode.
file-acct flush {with-close | without-close}
Syntax Description
with-close |
Call records are appended to the accounting file and the file is closed. |
without-close |
Call records are appended to the accounting file and the file remains open. |
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
|
|
---|---|
12.4(15)XY |
This command was introduced. |
12.4(20)T |
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.4(20)T. |
Usage Guidelines
Use this command if you need to manually flush the buffer, for example, if flash becomes full or you do not want to wait until the buffer is automatically flushed. This command immediately flushes the buffer and appends all CDRs in the buffer to the current accounting file. CDRs are automatically flushed from the buffer and written to the file whenever there is enough data based on the maximum buffer-size command or after the timer set with the maximum cdrflush-timer command expires.
Using the with-close keyword closes the current file and opens a new file after appending the records. Using the without-close keyword leaves the current file open after appending the records.
Examples
The following example appends the records to the accounting file and closes the file:
file-acct flush with-close
Related Commands
file-acct reset
To manually switch back to the primary device for file accounting, use the file-acct reset command in privileged EXEC mode.
file-acct reset
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
|
|
---|---|
12.4(15)XY |
This command was introduced. |
12.4(20)T |
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.4(20)T. |
Usage Guidelines
This command allows you to switch back to the primary device when it becomes available if the backup device is currently being used because the primary device failed.
If the file transfer to the primary device fails, the file accounting process retries the primary device up to the number of times defined by the maximum retry-count command and then switches to the secondary device defined with the secondary command. This command flushes the buffer and writes the call detail records (CDRs) to the currently active file before resetting to the primary device and opening a new file.
If the secondary device also fails, the accounting process ends and the system logs an error. New CDRs are dropped until one device comes back online and you use this command. The system then immediately resets to the primary device, if available.
Examples
The following example shows how to switch back to the primary device:
Router# file-acct reset
Related Commands
filter voice
To specify that voice calls bypass authentication, authorization, and accounting (AAA) preauthentication, use the filter voice command in AAA preauthentication configuration mode. To disable AAA bypass, use the no form of this command.
filter voice
no filter voice
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Default
Disabled
Command Modes
AAA preauthentication configuration
Command History
|
|
---|---|
12.2(11)T |
This command was introduced. |
Examples
The following example specifies that voice calls bypass AAA preauthentication:
Router(config)# aaa preauth
Router(config-preauth)# filter voice
Related Commands
|
|
---|---|
aaa preauth |
Enters AAA preauthentication configuration mode. |
flush
To enable file mode accounting flush options, use the flush command in privileged EXEC mode.
flush {with-close | without-close}
Syntax Description
with-close |
Enables file accounting flush pending accounting to the file, and closes the file when the process is complete. |
without-close |
Enables file accounting flush pending accounting to file. |
Command Default
File mode accounting flush options are not enabled.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
|
|
---|---|
15.0(1)M |
This command was introduced in a release earlier than Cisco IOS Release 15.0(1)M. |
Usage Guidelines
The flush command flushes pending accounting records to the file.
Examples
In the following example, the flush with-close command enables file accounting flush pending accounting to the file, and closes the file when the process is complete:
Router# flush with-close
Related Commands
|
|
---|---|
maximum cdrflush-timer |
Sets the maximum time to hold call records in the buffer before appending the records to the accounting file. |
fmtp
To set a format-specific string for a codec, use the fmtp command in codec-profile configuration mode. To disable the format string, use the no form of this command.
fmtp string
no fmtp
Syntax Description
string |
fmtp:payload type name1= val1; name2 = val2... |
For Cisco Unified Customer Voice Portal (Cisco Unified CVP), the dynamic payload number is in the range of 96 to 127 for H.263+. For H263, it is always 34. For H.263+, this number must be entered but it is not used. Cisco Unified CVP uses either the default value for H.263+ (118) or the value defined for the VoIP dial peer using the command rtp payload-type cisco-codec-video-h263+, a number in the range 96 to 127.
Other parameters can be the following:
•SQCIF = 1 - 32
•QCIF = 1 - 32
•CIF = 1 - 32
•4CIF = 1 - 32
•16CIF = 1 - 32
•MAXBR (max bitrate) = Value in 100 bits per second (500 = 50000 bits per second). This value is another that is not used. Always set H.324 to 50K.
•D—1 (Enable H.263 Annex D)
•F—1 (Enable H.263 Annex F)
•I—1 (Enable H.263 Annex I)
•J—1 (Enable H.263 Annex J)
•K—1 to 4 (Enable H.263 Annex K) (Annex K is Slice Structured Mode)
–1—Slices In Order, Nonrectangular
–2—Slices In Order, Rectangular
–3—Slices Not Ordered, Nonrectangular
–4—Slices Not Ordered, Rectangular
•N=[1,4] (Enable H.263 Annex N) (Annex N is Reference Picture Selection Mode)
–1—NEITHER: No back-channel data is returned from the decoder to the encoder.
–2—ACK: The decoder returns only acknowledgment messages.
–3—NACK: The decoder returns only nonacknowledgment messages.
–4—ACK+NACK: The decoder returns both acknowledgment and nonacknowledgment messages.
•P=[x,y] (Enable H.263 Annex P) (Annex P is Reference Picture Resampling). Annex P can have either one or two parameters, depending on the values selected. There are four options, and six valid combinations.
–1—dynamicPictureResizingByFour
–2—dynamicPictureResizingBySixteenthPel
–3—dynamicWarpingHalfPel
–4—dynamicWarpingSixteenthPel.
The valid combinations are:
–1
–1,3
–2
–2, 3
–2, 4
–3
•T=1 (Enable H.263 Annex T)
•CUSTOM = x, y, MPI — Defines a custom picture format, where X is the X-axis size in pixels, Y is the Y-axis size in pixels, and MPI is the frame rate (30/(1.001*MPI)). X and Y must be divisible by 4, and MPI has a value of 1to 32.
Command Default
No string is configured.
Command Modes
Codec-profile configuration (config-codec-profile)
Command History
|
|
---|---|
12.4(22)T |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
The profile is selected by entering the command:
video codec h263/h263+ profile 1000
The video codec h263/h263+ profile can be used in a voip dial peer or as a voice class codec entry.
Examples
The following example shows an fmtp string for video codec profile 116:
codec profile 116 H263
clockrate 90000
fmtp "fmtp:120 SQCIF=1;QCIF=1;CIF=1;CIF4=2;MAXBR=3840;I=1"
Related Commands
|
|
---|---|
clock-rate |
Sets the clock rate for the codec. |
forward-alarms
To turn on alarm forwarding so that alarms that arrive on one T1/E1 port are sent to the other port on dual-mode multiflex trunk interface cards, use the forward-alarms command in controller configuration mode on the one port. To reset to the default so that no alarms are forwarded, use the no form of this command.
forward-alarms
no forward-alarms
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Default
Alarm forwarding is disabled
Command Modes
Controller configuration
Command History
|
|
---|---|
12.0(7)XR |
This command was introduced. |
12.1(1)T |
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.1(1)T. |
Usage Guidelines
When you enter this command, physical-layer alarms on the configured port are forwarded to the other port on dual-port cards, simulating a one-way repeater operations. The system forwards RAIs (remote alarm indications, or Yellow Alarms), alarm indication signals (AIS, or Blue Alarms), losses of frame (LOF alarms, or Red Alarms), and losses of signaling (LOS alarms, or Red Alarms).
Examples
The following example turns on alarm forwarding on controller E1 0/0:
controller e1 0/0
forward-alarms
forward-digits
To specify which digits to forward for voice calls, use the forward-digits command in dial peer configuration mode. To specify that any digits not matching the destination-pattern are not to be forwarded, use the no form of this command. To reset to the default, use the default form of this command.
forward-digits {num-digit | all | extra}
no forward-digits
default forward-digits
Syntax Description
Command Default
Dialed digits not matching the destination pattern are forwarded
Command Modes
Dial peer configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
This command applies only to POTS dial peers. Forwarded digits are always right justified so that extra leading digits are stripped. The destination pattern includes both explicit digits and wildcards if present. Use the default form of this command if a nondefault digit-forwarding scheme was entered previously and you wish to restore the default.
For QSIG ISDN connections, entering the forward-digits all command implies that all the digits of the called party number are sent to the ISDN connection. When the forward-digits num-digit command and a number from 1 to 32 are entered, the number of digits of the called party number specified (right justified) are sent to the ISDN connection.
Examples
The following example shows that all digits in the destination pattern of a POTS dial peer are forwarded:
dial-peer voice 1 pots destination-pattern 8... forward-digits all
The following example shows that four of the digits in the destination pattern of a POTS dial peer are forwarded:
dial-peer voice 1 pots destination-pattern 555.... forward-digits 4
The following example shows that the extra right-justified digits that exceed the length of the destination pattern of a POTS dial peer are forwarded:
dial-peer voice 1 pots destination-pattern 555.... forward-digits extra
Related Commands
|
|
destination-pattern |
Defines the prefix or the full E.164 telephone number to be used for a dial peer. |
show dial-peer voice |
Displays configuration information for dial peers. |
frame-relay voice bandwidth
To specify how much bandwidth should be reserved for voice traffic on a specific data-link connection identifier (DLCI), use the frame-relay voice bandwidth command in map-class configuration mode. To release the bandwidth previously reserved for voice traffic, use the no form of this command.
frame-relay voice bandwidth bps-reserved
no frame-relay voice bandwidth bps-reserved
Syntax Description
bps-reserved |
Bandwidth, in bits per second (bps), reserved for voice traffic for the specified map class. Range is from 8000 to 45000000. Default is 0, which disables voice calls. |
Command Default
Disabled (zero)
Command Modes
Map-class configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
To use this command, you must first associate a Frame Relay map class with a specific DLCI and then enter map-class configuration mode and set the amount of bandwidth to be reserved for voice traffic for that map class.
If a call is attempted and there is not enough remaining bandwidth reserved for voice to handle the additional call, the call is rejected. For example, if 64 kbps is reserved for voice traffic and a codec and payload size is being used that requires 10 kbps of bandwidth for each call, the first six calls attempted are accepted, but the seventh call is rejected.
Reserve queues are not required for Voice over Frame Relay (VoFR).
Note Cisco strongly recommends that you set voice bandwidth to a value less than the committed information rate (CIR) if Frame Relay traffic shaping is configured. Cisco also strongly recommends that you set the minimum CIR (using the frame-relay mincir command) to be at least equal to or greater than the voice bandwidth.
Calculating Required Bandwidth
The bandwidth required for a voice call depends on the bandwidth of the codec, the voice packetization overhead, and the voice frame payload size. The smaller the voice frame payload size, the higher the bandwidth required for the call. To make the calculation, use the following formula:
required_bandwidth = codec_bandwidth x (1 + overhead / payload_size)
As an example, the overhead for a VoFR voice packet is between 6 and 8 bytes: a 2-byte Frame Relay header, a 1- or 2-byte FRF.11 header (depending on the CID value), a 2-byte cyclic redundancy check (CRC), and a 1-byte trailing flag. If voice sequence numbers are enabled in the voice packets, there is an additional 1-byte sequence number. Table 25 shows the required voice bandwidth for the G.729 8000-bps speech coder for various payload sizes.
To configure the payload size for the voice frames, use the codec command from dial peer configuration mode.
Examples
The following example shows how to reserve 64 kbps for voice traffic for the "vofr" Frame Relay map class:
interface serial 1/1
frame-relay interface-dlci 100
class vofr
exit
map-class frame-relay vofr
frame-relay voice bandwidth 64000
Related Commands
freq-max-delay
To specify the maximum timing difference allowed between the two frequencies for detection of a tone, use the freq-max-delay command in voice-class configuration mode. To reset to the default allowed timing difference, use the no form of this command.
freq-max-delay time
no freq-max-delay
Syntax Description
Command Default
10 (100 milliseconds)
Command Modes
Voice-class configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
This command creates a detection limit for one parameter within a voice class that you can apply to any voice port.
You must specify a time value greater than the timing difference expected in the tone to be detected.
Examples
The following example configures a maximum timing difference of 200 milliseconds for voice class 100:
voice class dualtone 100
freq-max-delay 20
The following example configures a maximum timing difference of 160 milliseconds for voice class 70:
voice class dualtone-detect-params 70
freq-max-delay 1
Related Commands
freq-max-deviation
To specify the maximum frequency deviation allowed in a tone, use the freq-max-deviation command in voice-class configuration mode. To reset to the default maximum frequency deviation, use the no form of this command.
freq-max-deviation frequency
no freq-max-deviation
Syntax Description
Command Default
10 Hz
Command Modes
Voice-class configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
This command creates a detection limit for one parameter within a voice class that you can apply to any voice port.
Be sure that the frequency deviation is less than the smallest frequency difference between any two call-progress tones to prevent overlapping of detectable frequencies. If detectable frequencies overlap, one of the call-progress tones is not detected.
You must specify a time value greater than the expected frequency deviation in the tone to be detected.
Examples
The following example configures a maximum frequency deviation of 20 Hz for voice class 100:
voice class dualtone 100
freq-max-deviation 20
The following example configures a maximum frequency deviation of 20 Hz for voice class 70:
voice class dualtone-detect-params 70
freq-max-deviation 20
Related Commands
freq-max-power
To specify the upper limit of tone power allowed in a tone, use the freq-max-power command in voice-class configuration mode. To reset to the default maximum tone power, use the no form of this command.
freq-max-power dBm0
no freq-max-power
Syntax Description
Command Default
10 dBm0
Command Modes
Voice-class configuration
Command History
|
|
---|---|
12.1(5)XM |
This command was introduced. |
12.2(2)T |
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(2)T and implemented on the Cisco 1750. |
Usage Guidelines
This command creates a detection limit for one parameter within a voice class that you can apply to any voice port.
You must specify a power value greater than the expected maximum power of a tone to be detected.
Examples
The following example configures a maximum tone power of -20 dBm0 for voice class 100:
voice class dualtone 100
freq-max-power 20
The following example configures a maximum tone power of -6 dBm0 for voice class 70:
voice class dualtone-detect-params 70
freq-max-power 6
Related Commands
freq-min-power
To specify the lower limit of tone power allowed in a tone, use the freq-min-power command in voice-class configuration mode. To reset to the default minimum tone power, use the no form of this command.
freq-min-power dBm0
no freq-min-power
Syntax Description
Command Default
30 dBm0
Command Modes
Voice-class configuration
Command History
|
|
---|---|
12.1(5)XM |
This command was introduced. |
12.2(2)T |
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(2)T and implemented on the Cisco 1750. |
Usage Guidelines
This command creates a detection limit for one parameter within a voice class that you can apply to any voice port.
You must specify a power value less than the expected minimum power of a tone to be detected.
Examples
The following example configures a tone-power lower limit of -15 dBm0 for voice class 100:
voice class dualtone 100
freq-min-power 15
The following example configures a tone-power lower limit of -25 dBm0 for voice class 70:
voice class dualtone-detect-params 70
freq-min-power 25
Related Commands
freq-pair
To specify the frequency components of a tone to be detected, use the freq-pair command in voice-class configuration mode. To cancel detection of a tone, use the no form of this command.
freq-pair tone-id frequency-1 frequency-2
no freq-pair tone-id
Syntax Description
Command Default
No tone is specified for detection
Command Modes
Voice-class configuration
Command History
|
|
---|---|
12.1(3)T |
This command was introduced on the following platforms: Cisco 2600 series, Cisco 3600 series, and Cisco MC3810. |
Usage Guidelines
To detect a tone with two frequency components (a dualtone), configure frequencies for frequency-1 and frequency-2.
To detect a tone with only one frequency component, configure a frequency for frequency-1 and enter 0 for frequency-2.
You can configure a router to detect up to 16 tones.
Examples
The following example configures tone number 1 (tone-id 1) with frequency components of 480 Hz and 2400 Hz:
voice class dualtone 100
freq-pair 1 480 2400
exit
The following example configures tone number 1 (tone-id 1) with frequency components of 480 Hz and 2400 Hz and tone number 2 (tone-id 2) with frequency components of 560 Hz and 880 Hz:
voice class dualtone 50
freq-pair 1 480 2400
freq-pair 2 560 880
exit
Related Commands
freq-power-twist
To specify the power difference allowed between the two frequencies of a tone, use the freq-power-twist command in voice-class configuration mode. To reset to the default power difference allowed, use the no form of this command.
freq-power-twist dBm0
no freq-power-twist
Syntax Description
Command Default
6 dBm0
Command Modes
Voice-class configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
This command creates a detection limit for one parameter within a voice class that you can apply to any voice port.
You must specify a power value greater than the expected maximum power difference of the two frequencies in the tone to be detected.
Examples
The following example configures a maximum allowed power difference of 3 dBm0 between the two tone frequencies for voice class 100:
voice class dualtone 100
freq-power-twist 3
The following example configures a maximum allowed power difference of 15 dBm0 between the two tone frequencies in voice class 70:
voice class dualtone-detect-params 70
freq-power-twist 15
Related Commands
frequency (cp-dualtone)
To define the frequency components for a call-progress tone, use the frequency command in cp-dualtone configuration mode. To reset to the default frequency components, use the no form of this command.
frequency frequency-1 [frequency-2]
no frequency
Syntax Description
Command Default
300-Hz single tone
Command Modes
cp-dualtone configuration
Command History
Usage Guidelines
This command specifies the frequency component for a class of custom call-progress tones.
You need to define the frequency that you want a voice port to detect. Reenter the command for each additional frequency to be detected.
You need to associate the class of custom call-progress tones with a voice port for this command to affect tone detection.
Examples
The following example defines the frequency components for the busy tone in custom-cptone voice class country-x.
voice class custom-cptone country-x
dualtone busy frequency 480 620