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263 lines
11 KiB
263 lines
11 KiB
\subsection{Introduction}
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Asterisk Channel Driver to allow Bluetooth Cell/Mobile Phones to be used as FXO devices, and Headsets as FXS devices.
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\subsection{Features}
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\begin{itemize}
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\item Multiple Bluetooth Adapters supported.
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\item Multiple phones can be connected.
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\item Multiple headsets can be connected.
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\item Asterisk automatically connects to each configured mobile phone / headset when it comes in range.
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\item CLI command to discover bluetooth devices.
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\item Inbound calls on the mobile network to the mobile phones are handled by Asterisk, just like inbound calls on a Zap channel.
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\item CLI passed through on inbound calls.
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\item Dial outbound on a mobile phone using Dial(Mobile/device/nnnnnnn) in the dialplan.
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\item Dial a headset using Dial(Mobile/device) in the dialplan.
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\item Application MobileStatus can be used in the dialplan to see if a mobile phone / headset is connected.
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\item Supports devicestate for dialplan hinting.
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\item Supports Inbound and Outbound SMS.
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\item Supports 'channel' groups for implementing 'GSM Gateways'
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\end{itemize}
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\subsection{Requirements}
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In order to use chan\_mobile, you must have a working bluetooth subsystem on your Asterisk box.
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This means one or more working bluetooth adapters, and the BlueZ packages.
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Any bluetooth adapter supported by the Linux kernel will do, including usb bluetooth dongles.
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The BlueZ package you need is bluez-utils. If you are using a GUI then you might want to install bluez-pin also.
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You also need libbluetooth, and libbluetooth-dev if you are compiling Asterisk from source.
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You need to get bluetooth working with your phone before attempting to use chan\_mobile.
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This means 'pairing' your phone or headset with your Asterisk box. I dont describe how to do this here as the process
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differs from distro to distro. You only need to pair once per adapter.
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See www.bluez.org for details about setting up Bluetooth under Linux.
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\subsection{Concepts}
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chan\_mobile deals with both bluetooth adapters and bluetooth devices. This means you need to tell chan\_mobile about the
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bluetooth adapters installed in your server as well as the devices (phones / headsets) you wish to use.
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chan\_mobile currently only allows one device (phone or headset) to be connected to an adapter at a time. This means you need
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one adapter for each device you wish to use simultaneously. Much effort has gone into trying to make multiple devices per adapter
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work, but in short it doesnt.
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Periodically chan\_mobile looks at each configured adapter, and if it is not in use (i.e. no device connected) will initiate a
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search for devices configured to use this adapater that may be in range. If it finds one it will connect the device and it
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will be available for Asterisk to use. When the device goes out of range, chan\_mobile will disconnect the device and the adapter
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will become available for other devices.
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\subsection{Configuring chan\_mobile}
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The configuration file for chan\_mobile is /etc/asterisk/mobile.conf. It is a normal Asterisk config file consisting of sections and key=value pairs.
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See configs/mobile.conf.sample for an example and an explanation of the configuration.
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\subsection{Using chan\_mobile}
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chan\_mobile.so must be loaded either by loading it using the Asterisk CLI, or by adding it to /etc/asterisk/modules.conf
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Search for your bluetooth devices using the CLI command 'mobile search'. Be patient with this command as
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it will take 8 - 10 seconds to do the discovery. This requires a free adapter.
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Headsets will generally have to be put into 'pairing' mode before they will show up here.
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This will return something like the following :-
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\begin{verbatim}
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*CLI> mobile search
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Address Name Usable Type Port
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00:12:56:90:6E:00 LG TU500 Yes Phone 4
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00:80:C8:35:52:78 Toaster No Headset 0
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00:0B:9E:11:74:A5 Hello II Plus Yes Headset 1
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00:0F:86:0E:AE:42 Daves Blackberry Yes Phone 7
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\end{verbatim}
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This is a list of all bluetooth devices seen and whether or not they are usable with chan\_mobile.
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The Address field contains the 'bd address' of the device. This is like an ethernet mac address.
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The Name field is whatever is configured into the device as its name.
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The Usable field tells you whether or not the device supports the Bluetooth Handsfree Profile or Headset profile.
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The Type field tells you whether the device is usable as a Phone line (FXO) or a headset (FXS)
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The Port field is the number to put in the configuration file.
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Choose which device(s) you want to use and edit /etc/asterisk/mobile.conf. There is a sample included
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with the Asterisk-addons source under configs/mobile.conf.sample.
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Be sure to configure the right bd address and port number from the search. If you want inbound
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calls on a device to go to a specific context, add a context= line, otherwise the default will
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be used. The 'id' of the device [bitinbrackets] can be anything you like, just make it unique.
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If you are configuring a Headset be sure to include the type=headset line, if left out it defaults
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to phone.
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The CLI command 'mobile show devices' can be used at any time to show the status of configured devices,
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and whether or not the device is capable of sending / receiving SMS via bluetooth.
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\begin{verbatim}
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*CLI> mobile show devices
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ID Address Group Adapter Connected State SMS
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headset 00:0B:9E:11:AE:C6 0 blue No Init No
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LGTU550 00:E0:91:7F:46:44 1 dlink No Init No
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\end{verbatim}
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As each phone is connected you will see a message on the Asterisk console :-
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\begin{verbatim}
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Loaded chan_mobile.so => (Bluetooth Mobile Device Channel Driver)
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-- Bluetooth Device blackberry has connected.
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-- Bluetooth Device dave has connected.
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\end{verbatim}
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To make outbound calls, add something to you Dialplan like the following :- (modify to suit)
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; Calls via LGTU5500
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\begin{verbatim}
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exten => _9X.,1,Dial(Mobile/LGTU550/${EXTEN:1},45)
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exten => _9X.,n,Hangup
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\end{verbatim}
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To use channel groups, add an entry to each phones definition in mobile.conf like group=n
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where n is a number.
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Then if you do something like Dial(Mobile/g1/123456) Asterisk will dial 123456 on the first
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connected free phone in group 1.
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Phones which do not have a specific 'group=n' will be in group 0.
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To dial out on a headset, you need to use some other mechanism, because the headset is not likely
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to have all the needed buttons on it. res\_clioriginate is good for this :-
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\begin{verbatim}
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*CLI> originate Mobile/headset extension NNNNN@context
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\end{verbatim}
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This will call your headset, once you answer, Asterisk will call NNNNN at context context
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\subsection{Dialplan hints}
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chan\_mobile supports 'device status' so you can do somthing like
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\begin{verbatim}
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exten => 1234,hint,SIP/30&Mobile/dave&Mobile/blackberry
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\end{verbatim}
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\subsection{MobileStatus Application}
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chan\_mobile also registers an application named MobileStatus. You can use this in your Dialplan
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to determine the 'state' of a device.
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For example, suppose you wanted to call dave's extension, but only if he was in the office. You could
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test to see if his mobile phone was attached to Asterisk, if it is dial his extension, otherwise dial his
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mobile phone.
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\begin{verbatim}
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exten => 40,1,MobileStatus(dave,DAVECELL)
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exten => 40,2,GotoIf($["${DAVECELL}" = "1"]?3:5)
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exten => 40,3,Dial(ZAP/g1/0427466412,45,tT)
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exten => 40,4,Hangup
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exten => 40,5,Dial(SIP/40,45,tT)
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exten => 40,6,Hangup
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\end{verbatim}
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MobileStatus sets the value of the given variable to :-
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\begin{verbatim}
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1 = Disconnected. i.e. Device not in range of Asterisk, or turned off etc etc
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2 = Connected and Not on a call. i.e. Free
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3 = Connected and on a call. i.e. Busy
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\end{verbatim}
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\subsection{SMS Sending / Receiving}
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If Asterisk has detected your mobile phone is capable of SMS via bluetooth, you will be able to send and
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receive SMS.
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Incoming SMS's cause Asterisk to create an inbound call to the context you defined in mobile.conf or the default
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context if you did not define one. The call will start at extension 'sms'. Two channel variables will be available,
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SMSSRC = the number of the originator of the SMS and SMSTXT which is the text of the SMS.
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This is not a voice call, so grab the values of the variables and hang the call up.
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So, to handle incoming SMS's, do something like the following in your dialplan
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\begin{astlisting}
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\begin{verbatim}
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[incoming-mobile]
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exten => sms,1,Verbose(Incoming SMS from ${SMSSRC} ${SMSTXT})
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exten => sms,n,Hangup()
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\end{verbatim}
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\end{astlisting}
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The above will just print the message on the console.
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If you use res\_jabber, you could do something like this :-
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\begin{astlisting}
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\begin{verbatim}
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[incoming-mobile]
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exten => sms,1,JabberSend(transport,user@jabber.somewhere.com,SMS from ${SMSRC} ${SMSTXT})
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exten => sms,2,Hangup()
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\end{verbatim}
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\end{astlisting}
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To send an SMS, use the application MobileSendSMS like the following :-
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\begin{verbatim}
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exten => 99,1,MobileSendSMS(dave,0427123456,Hello World)
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\end{verbatim}
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This will send 'Hello World' via device 'dave' to '0427123456'
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\subsection{DTMF Debouncing}
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DTMF detection varies from phone to phone. There is a configuration variable that allows you to tune
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this to your needs. e.g. in mobile.conf
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\begin{verbatim}
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[LGTU550]
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address=00:12:56:90:6E:00
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port=4
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context=incoming-mobile
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dtmfskip=50
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\end{verbatim}
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change dtmfskip to suit your phone. The default is 200. The larger the number, the more chance of missed DTMF.
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The smaller the number the more chance of multiple digits being detected.
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\subsection{Debugging}
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Different phone manufacturers have different interpretations of the Bluetooth Handsfree Profile Spec.
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This means that not all phones work the same way, particularly in the connection setup / initialisation
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sequence. I've tried to make chan\_mobile as general as possible, but it may need modification to
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support some phone i've never tested.
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Some phones, most notably Sony Ericsson 'T' series, dont quite conform to the Bluetooth HFP spec.
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chan\_mobile will detect these and adapt accordingly. The T-610 and T-630 have been tested and
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work fine.
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If your phone doesnt behave has expected, turn on Asterisk debugging with 'core set debug 1'.
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This will log a bunch of debug messages indicating what the phone is doing, importantly the rfcomm
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conversation between Asterisk and the phone. This can be used to sort out what your phone is doing
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and make chan\_mobile support it.
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Be aware also, that just about all mobile phones behave differently. For example my LG TU500 wont dial unless
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the phone is a the 'idle' screen. i.e. if the phone is showing a 'menu' on the display, when you dial via
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Asterisk, the call will not work. chan\_mobile handles this, but there may be other phones that do
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other things too...
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Important: Watch what your mobile phone is doing the first few times. Asterisk wont make random calls but
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if chan\_mobile fails to hangup for some reason and you get a huge bill from your telco, dont blame me ;)
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