; ; Voicemail Configuration ; ; ********* NOTICE ************************************************************ ; ; NOTE: Asterisk has to edit this file to change a user's password, so ; do not use realtime static configuration with this file. ; To avoid requiring config updates on password updates, you could use the ; passwordlocation option to store passwords separately. ; ; If your "source of truth" for voicemail passwords is elsewhere, you should ; use the externpassnotify option to notify whatever stores the passwords ; (e.g. external database) when there are changes, to keep it synchronized. ; ; NOTE: Mailboxes defined by app_voicemail MUST be referenced by the rest ; of the system as mailbox@context. The rest of the system cannot add ; @default to mailbox identifiers for app_voicemail that do not specify a ; context any longer. It is a mailbox identifier format that should only ; be interpreted by app_voicemail. ; ; ********* NOTICE ************************************************************ [general] ; Formats for writing Voicemail. Note that when using IMAP storage for ; voicemail, only the first format specified will be used. ;format=g723sf|wav49|wav format=wav49|gsm|wav ; ; WARNING: ; If you change the list of formats that you record voicemail in ; when you have mailboxes that contain messages, you _MUST_ absolutely ; manually go through those mailboxes and convert/delete/add the ; the message files so that they appear to have been stored using ; your new format list. If you don't do this, very unpleasant ; things may happen to your users while they are retrieving and ; manipulating their voicemail. ; ; In other words: don't change the format list on a production system ; unless you are _VERY_ sure that you know what you are doing and are ; prepared for the consequences. ; ; Who the e-mail notification should appear to come from serveremail=asterisk ;serveremail=asterisk@linux-support.net ; Should the email contain the voicemail as an attachment attach=yes ; Maximum number of messages per folder. If not specified, a default value ; (100) is used. Maximum value for this option is 9999. If set to 0, a ; mailbox will be greetings-only. ;maxmsg=100 ; Maximum length of a voicemail message in seconds ;maxsecs=180 ; Minimum length of a voicemail message in seconds for the message to be kept ; The default is no minimum. ;minsecs=3 ; Maximum length of greetings in seconds ;maxgreet=60 ; How many milliseconds to skip forward/back when rew/ff in message playback skipms=3000 ; How many seconds of silence before we end the recording maxsilence=10 ; Silence threshold (what we consider silence: the lower, the more sensitive) silencethreshold=128 ; Max number of failed login attempts maxlogins=3 ; ; Move heard messages to the 'Old' folder automagically. Defaults to on. ;moveheard=yes ; ; Forward an urgent message as an urgent message. Defaults to no so ; sender can set the urgency on the envelope of the forwarded message. ;forward_urgent_auto=no ; ; User context is where entries from users.conf are registered. The ; default value is 'default' ; ;userscontext=default ; ; Aliases allow a mailbox to be referenced by an alias. The aliases are ; specified in the special context named here. There is no default. ;aliasescontext=myaliases ; ; If you need to have an external program, i.e. /usr/bin/myapp ; called when a voicemail is left, delivered, or your voicemailbox ; is checked, uncomment this. ;externnotify=/usr/bin/myapp ; If you would also like to enable SMDI notification then set smdienable to yes. ; You will also need to make sure smdiport is set to a valid port as specified in ; smdi.conf. ;smdienable=yes ;smdiport=/dev/ttyS0 ; If you need to have an external program, i.e. /usr/bin/myapp ; called when a voicemail password is changed, uncomment this. The ; arguments passed to the application are: ; Note: If this is set, the password will NOT be changed in voicemail.conf ; If you would like to also change the password in voicemail.conf, use ; the externpassnotify option below instead. ;externpass=/usr/bin/myapp ;externpassnotify=/usr/bin/myapp ; If you would like to have an external program called when a user changes the ; voicemail password for the purpose of doing validation on the new password, ; then use this option. The script can decide whether or not the new password ; meets minimum password strength requirements before the Voicemail application ; accepts the password. If the script decides that the password is not acceptable, ; the user will be informed that the new password does not meet minimum password ; requirements, and they will be asked to enter another password. ; ; The arguments passed to this script are . ; ; The script should print "VALID" to stdout to indicate that the new password ; is acceptable. If the password is considered too weak, the script should print ; "INVALID" to stdout. ; ; There is an example script in the contrib/scripts/ directory, voicemailpwcheck.py, ; which implements some basic password checking, and can be used as a starting point ; for use with this option. ; ;externpasscheck=/usr/local/bin/voicemailpwcheck.py ; For the directory, you can override the intro file if you want ;directoryintro=dir-intro ; The character set for voicemail messages can be specified here ; default: ISO-8859-1 ;charset=UTF-8 ; The ADSI feature descriptor number to download to ;adsifdn=0000000F ; The ADSI security lock code ;adsisec=9BDBF7AC ; The ADSI voicemail application version number. ;adsiver=1 ; Skip the "[PBX]:" string from the message title ;pbxskip=yes ; Change the From: string ;fromstring=The Asterisk PBX ; Permit finding entries for forward/compose from the directory ;usedirectory=yes ; ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ; ODBC storage configuration ; ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ; Voicemail can be stored in a database using the ODBC driver. ; ; Storage database: ; The value of odbcstorage is the database connection configured in ; res_odbc.conf. This may be different from the name of the ODBC DSN ; in /etc/odbc.ini which, in turn, may be different from the name of the ; actual database. If you used the voicemail.ini.sample alembic script ; located in contrib/ast-db-manage to create the database, the database ; name is 'voicemail' and the table name is 'voicemail_messages' so you'd ; need to ensure that /etc/odbc.ini has a DSN entry that points to that ; database and res_odbc.conf has an entry that points to that ODBC DSN. ; For historical compatibility, the default value of odbcstorage is ; actually 'asterisk' because originally voicemail messages were stored ; in the same database as the rest of the Asterisk configuration. ;odbcstorage = voicemail ; Storage table: ; The name of the table in which voicemail messages are stored. ; If you used the voicemail.ini.sample alembic script located in ; contrib/ast-db-manage to create the database, the table name ; is 'voicemail_messages'. For historical compatibility however, ; the default value of odbctable is 'voicemessages' because originally ; voicemail messages were stored in that table in the same database ; as the rest of the Asterisk configuration. ;odbctable = voicemail_messages ; Audio storage location: ; By default, voicemail and prompt audio files are stored as BLOBs ; in the database along with the message metadata. If you would ; prefer to store the audio files on disk and only store the message ; metadata in the database, set the following option to 'yes'. ; This can be advantageous in some scenarios, such as when the ; database is on a separate server from the Asterisk server and ; network latency and size is a concern or when the database is ; not well-suited for storing large binary objects. It can also ; be useful when you want to use the same voicemail storage ; configuration for multiple Asterisk servers. In this situation ; you can have all the servers use a single shared network file ; system to store the audio files and use the same database for fast ; access to the message metadata. ; If you set this option to "yes", new messages and greetings will ; have their audio kept on disk but the audio for existing messages ; and greetings will remain in the database until the next time ; they are played. At that time, the audio will be moved to disk ; and erased from the database. ; If you set this option to "no" after you've already stored messages ; or greetings with it set to "yes", new messages and greetings will ; have their audio stored in the database but the audio for existing ; messages and greetings will remain on disk until the next time they ; are played. At that time, the audio will be moved to the database ; and erased from the disk. ; WARNING: Before changing this option from "yes" to "no" or vice ; versa make sure you have complete backups of your voicemail ; database and audio files. ; WARNING: If you set this option to "yes" and then later set it ; to "no", you must ensure that the audio files are not deleted ; from the disk until you are certain that they have been moved ; to the database. If you delete the audio files before they are ; moved to the database, the messages will be lost. ; WARNING: YOU MUST NOT DOWNGRADE ASTERISK TO A VERSION THAT DOESN'T ; UNDERSTAND THIS OPTION if you've set this option to "yes" previously ; and there are audio files stored on disk. If those files are ; accessed by a version of Asterisk that doesn't understand this ; option, the files will be corrupted and the messages will be lost. ; If you do need to downgrade in this situation, you'll have to write ; your own script to move the audio files back into the 'recording' ; column of the database table. If you record multiple formats, ; the file to write to the 'recording' column will be the first format ; listed in the 'format' option in this config file. If the first ; format is 'wav49', the file to add to the database will be the one ; with the 'WAV' extension. ; odbc_audio_on_disk = no ; ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ; ; Change the from, body and/or subject, variables: ; VM_NAME, VM_DUR, VM_MSGNUM, VM_MAILBOX, VM_CALLERID, VM_CIDNUM, ; VM_CIDNAME, VM_DATE ; Additionally, on forwarded messages, you have the variables: ; ORIG_VM_CALLERID, ORIG_VM_CIDNUM, ORIG_VM_CIDNAME, ORIG_VM_DATE ; You can select between two variables by using dialplan functions, e.g. ; ${IF(${ISNULL(${ORIG_VM_DATE})}?${VM_DATE}:${ORIG_VM_DATE})} ; ; Note: The emailbody config row can only be up to 8190 characters due to a ; limitation in the Asterisk configuration subsystem. If compiled with ; LOW_MEMORY the limit is 510 characters. ;emailsubject=[PBX]: New message ${VM_MSGNUM} in mailbox ${VM_MAILBOX} ; The following definition is very close to the default, but the default shows ; just the CIDNAME, if it is not null, otherwise just the CIDNUM, or "an unknown ; caller", if they are both null. ;emailbody=Dear ${VM_NAME}:\n\n\tjust wanted to let you know you were just left a ${VM_DUR} long message (number ${VM_MSGNUM})\nin mailbox ${VM_MAILBOX} from ${VM_CALLERID}, on ${VM_DATE}, so you might\nwant to check it when you get a chance. Thanks!\n\n\t\t\t\t--Asterisk\n ; ; Note: ${IF()} strips spacing at the beginning and end of its true and false ; values, so a newline cannot be placed at either location. The word 'so' is ; therefore duplicated, in order for the newline to be interpreted correctly. ;emailbody=Dear ${VM_NAME}:\n\n\tjust wanted to let you know you were just ${IF($["${VM_CIDNUM}" = "${ORIG_VM_CIDNUM}"]?left:forwarded)} a ${VM_DUR} long message (number ${VM_MSGNUM})\nin mailbox ${VM_MAILBOX} from ${VM_CALLERID}, on ${VM_DATE},\n${IF($["${VM_CIDNUM}" = "${ORIG_VM_CIDNUM}"]?so:(originally sent by ${ORIG_VM_CALLERID} on ${ORIG_VM_DATE})\nso)} you might want to check it when you get a chance. Thanks!\n\n\t\t\t\t--Asterisk\n ; ; You can also change the Pager From: string, the pager body and/or subject. ; The above defined variables also can be used here ;pagerfromstring=The Asterisk PBX ;pagersubject=New VM ;pagerbody=New ${VM_DUR} long msg in box ${VM_MAILBOX}\nfrom ${VM_CALLERID}, on ${VM_DATE} ; ; Set the date format on outgoing mails. Valid arguments can be found on the ; strftime(3) man page ; ; Default emaildateformat=%A, %B %d, %Y at %r ; 24h date format ;emaildateformat=%A, %d %B %Y at %H:%M:%S ; ; Default for pager use pagerdateformat=%A, %B %d, %Y at %r ; Short 24h date format for pager use ;pagerdateformat=%T %D ; ; Using the mailcmd option, you can specify what command is called for ; outbound E-mail. The default is shown below. ; ;mailcmd=/usr/sbin/sendmail -t ; ;pollmailboxes=no ; If mailboxes are changed anywhere outside of app_voicemail, ; ; then this option must be enabled for MWI to work. This ; ; enables polling mailboxes for changes. Normally, it will ; ; expect that changes are only made when someone called in ; ; to one of the voicemail applications. ; ; Examples of situations that would require this option are ; ; web interfaces to voicemail or an email client in the case ; ; of using IMAP storage. ; ; Default: no ;pollfreq=30 ; If the "pollmailboxes" option is enabled, this option ; ; sets the polling frequency. The default is once every ; ; 30 seconds. ; ; ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ; IMAP configuration settings only ; These settings are only applicable when Asterisk is compiled with IMAP support. ; ;imapgreetings=no ; If using IMAP storage, specify whether voicemail greetings ; should be stored via IMAP. If no, then greetings are stored ; as if IMAP storage were not enabled. ;greetingsfolder=INBOX ; If imapgreetings=yes, then specify which folder to store ; your greetings in. If you do not specify a folder, then INBOX ; will be used ;imapparentfolder=INBOX ; Some IMAP server implementations store folders under INBOX ; instead of using a top level folder (ex. INBOX/Friends). In ; this case, user imapparentfolder to set the parent folder. For ; example, Cyrus IMAP does NOT use INBOX as the parent. Default ; is to have no parent folder set. ;imapserver=localhost ; The address of the IMAP server ;imapport=143 ; The port of the IMAP server ;imapflags=ssl ; Optional flags to pass to the IMAP server in the IMAP mailbox ; name. For example, setting this to 'ssl' will enable OpenSSL ; encryption, assuming the IMAP libraries were compiled with ; OpenSSL support. ;imapfolder=INBOX ; The folder in which to store voicemail messages on the IMAP ; server. By default, they are stored in INBOX. ;authuser=user ; The master user to use for connecting to the IMAP server, if ; the server is configured with a single user that has access to ; all mailboxes ;authpassword=password ; The password for the authuser, if used ;imapopentimeout=60 ; The TCP open timeout (in seconds) ;imapclosetimeout=60 ; The TCP close timeout (in seconds) ;imapreadtimeout=60 ; The TCP read timeout (in seconds) ;imapwritetimeout=60 ; The TCP write timeout (in seconds) ;imap_poll_logout=no ; If pollmailboxes=yes, then specify whether need to ; disconnect from the IMAP server after polling. ; Default: no ; ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ; Each mailbox is listed in the form =,,,, ; If email is specified, a message will be sent when a voicemail is received, to ; the given mailbox, for each address listed (separated by |, ex. alice@foo.com|bob@foo.com). ; If pager is specified, a message will be sent there as well. If the password ; is prefixed by '-', then it is considered to be unchangeable. ; ; Advanced options example is extension 4069 ; NOTE: All options can be expressed globally in the general section, and ; overridden in the per-mailbox settings, unless listed otherwise. ; ; tz=central ; Timezone from zonemessages below. Irrelevant if envelope=no. ; locale=de_DE.UTF-8 ; set the locale for generation of the date/time strings (make ; sure the locales are installed in your operating system; e.g ; on Debian Linux you can use "dpkg-reconfigure locales"). ; If you use UTF-8 locales, make sure to set the "charset" option ; to UTF-8 too. If you mix different locales for different users ; you should avoid words in the emaildateformat specification, e.g.: ; emaildateformat=%A, %d %B %Y, %H:%M:%S ; attach=yes ; Attach the voicemail to the notification email *NOT* the pager email ; attachfmt=wav49 ; Which format to attach to the email. Normally this is the ; first format specified in the format parameter above, but this ; option lets you customize the format sent to particular mailboxes. ; Useful if Windows users want wav49, but Linux users want gsm. ; [per-mailbox only] ; attachextrecs=no ; Whether to attach recordings that are externally added to mailboxes, ; such as through MixMonitor. Default is no. ; saycid=yes ; Say the caller id information before the message. If not described, ; or set to no, it will be in the envelope. When enabled, if a recorded file ; with the same name as the caller id exists in ; /recordings/callerids, then that file will be played as a name ; rather than saying each digit as a phone number. ; cidinternalcontexts=intern ; Internal Context for Name Playback instead of ; extension digits when saying caller id. ; sayduration=no ; Turn on/off the duration information before the message. [ON by default] ; saydurationm=2 ; Specify the minimum duration to say. Default is 2 minutes ; dialout=fromvm ; Context to dial out from [option 4 from mailbox's advanced menu]. ; If not specified, option 4 will not be listed and dialing out ; from within VoiceMailMain() will not be permitted. sendvoicemail=yes ; Allow the user to compose and send a voicemail while inside ; VoiceMailMain() [option 5 from mailbox's advanced menu]. ; If set to 'no', option 5 will not be listed. ; searchcontexts=yes ; Current default behavior is to search only the default context ; if one is not specified. The older behavior was to search all contexts. ; This option restores the old behavior [DEFAULT=no] ; Note: If you have this option enabled, then you will be required to have ; unique mailbox names across all contexts. Otherwise, an ambiguity is created ; since it is impossible to know which mailbox to retrieve when one is requested. ; callback=fromvm ; Context to call back from ; if not listed, calling the sender back will not be permitted ; exitcontext=fromvm ; Context to go to on user exit such as * or 0 ; The default is the current context. ; review=yes ; Allow sender to review/rerecord their message before saving it [OFF by default] ; leaveurgent=yes ; Allow senders to leave messages that are marked as 'Urgent' [ON by default] ; operator=yes ; Allow sender to hit 0 before/after/during leaving a voicemail to ; reach an operator. This option REQUIRES an 'o' extension in the ; same context (or in exitcontext, if set), as that is where the ; 0 key will send you. [OFF by default] ; envelope=no ; Turn on/off envelope playback before message playback. [ON by default] ; This does NOT affect option 3,3 from the advanced options menu ; delete=yes ; After notification, the voicemail is deleted from the server. [per-mailbox only] ; This is intended for use with users who wish to receive their ; voicemail ONLY by email. Note: "deletevoicemail" is provided as an ; equivalent option for Realtime configuration. ; alias=Bongo ; Use this additional string for comparison while looking ; for a match in the Directory application. This option ; may be specified multiple times to specify additional ; strings [per-mailbox only] ; volgain=0.0 ; Emails bearing the voicemail may arrive in a volume too ; quiet to be heard. This parameter allows you to specify how ; much gain to add to the message when sending a voicemail. ; NOTE: sox must be installed for this option to work. ; nextaftercmd=yes ; Skips to the next message after hitting 7 or 9 to delete/save current message. ; forcename=yes ; Forces a new user to record their name. A new user is ; determined by the password being the same as ; the mailbox number. The default is "no". ; forcegreetings=no ; This is the same as forcename, except for recording ; greetings. The default is "no". ; hidefromdir=yes ; Hide this mailbox from the directory produced by app_directory ; The default is "no". ; tempgreetwarn=yes ; Remind the user that their temporary greeting is set ; passwordlocation=spooldir ; Usually the voicemail password (vmsecret) is stored in ; this configuration file. By setting this option you can ; specify where Asterisk should read/write the vmsecret. ; Supported options: ; voicemail.conf: ; This is the default option. The secret is read from ; and written to voicemail.conf (or users.conf). ; spooldir: ; The secret is stored in a separate file in the user's ; voicemail spool directory in a file named secret.conf. ; Please ensure that normal Linux users are not ; permitted to access Asterisk's spool directory as the ; secret is stored in plain text. If a secret is not ; found in this directory, the password in ; voicemail.conf (or users.conf) will be used. ; Note that this option does not affect password storage for ; realtime users, which are still stored in the realtime ; backend. ; messagewrap=no ; Enable next/last message to wrap around to ; first (from last) and last (from first) message ; The default is "no". ; minpassword=0 ; Enforce minimum password length ; vm-login=custom_sound ; Customize which sound file is used instead of the default ; prompt that says: "Comedian Mail. Mailbox?" ; vm-newuser=custom_sound ; Customize which sound file is used instead of the default ; prompt that says: "Welcome to Comedian Mail. First, I will ; guide you through a short setup process." ; vm-password=custom_sound ; Customize which sound file is used instead of the default ; prompt that says: "password" ; vm-newpassword=custom_sound ; Customize which sound file is used instead of the default ; prompt that says: "Please enter your new password followed by ; the pound key." ; vm-passchanged=custom_sound ; Customize which sound file is used instead of the default ; prompt that says: "Your password has been changed." ; vm-reenterpassword=custom_sound ; Customize which sound file is used instead of the default ; prompt that says: "Please re-enter your password followed by ; the pound key" ; vm-mismatch=custom_sound ; Customize which sound file is used instead of the default ; prompt that says: "The passwords you entered and re-entered ; did not match." ; vm-invalid-password=custom_sound ; Customize which sound file is used instead of the default ; prompt that says: ... ; vm-pls-try-again=custom_sound ; Customize which sound file is used instead of the ; default prompt that says "Please try again." ; vm-prepend-timeout=custom_sound ; Customize which sound file is used when the user ; times out while recording a prepend message instead ; of the default prompt that says "then press pound" ; note that this will currently follow vm-pls-try-again. ; this behavior is subject to change in the near future. ; listen-control-forward-key=# ; Customize the key that fast-forwards message playback ; listen-control-reverse-key=* ; Customize the key that rewinds message playback ; listen-control-pause-key=0 ; Customize the key that pauses/unpauses message playback ; listen-control-restart-key=2 ; Customize the key that restarts message playback ; listen-control-stop-key=13456789 ; Customize the keys that interrupt message playback, probably all keys not set above ; Maximum number of messages allowed in the 'Deleted' folder. If set to 0 ; or no then no deleted messages will be moved. If non-zero (max 9999) then up ; to this number of messages will be automagically saved when they are ; 'deleted' on a FIFO basis. ; defaults to being off ; backupdeleted=100 ; Asterisk Task Processor Queue Size ; On heavy loaded system you may need to increase 'app_voicemail' taskprocessor queue. ; If the taskprocessor queue size reached high water level, the alert is triggered. ; If the alert is set then some modules (for example pjsip) slow down its production ; until the alert is cleared. ; The alert is cleared when taskprocessor queue size drops to the low water clear level. ; The next options set taskprocessor queue levels for this module. ; tps_queue_high=500 ; Taskprocessor high water alert trigger level. ; tps_queue_low=450 ; Taskprocessor low water clear alert level. ; The default is -1 for 90% of high water level. [zonemessages] ; Users may be located in different timezones, or may have different ; message announcements for their introductory message when they enter ; the voicemail system. Set the message and the timezone each user ; hears here. Set the user into one of these zones with the tz= attribute ; in the options field of the mailbox. Of course, language substitution ; still applies here so you may have several directory trees that have ; alternate language choices. ; ; Look in /usr/share/zoneinfo/ for names of timezones. ; Look at the manual page for strftime for a quick tutorial on how the ; variable substitution is done on the values below. ; ; Supported values: ; 'filename' filename of a soundfile (single ticks around the filename ; required) ; ${VAR} variable substitution ; A or a Day of week (Saturday, Sunday, ...) ; B or b or h Month name (January, February, ...) ; d or e numeric day of month (first, second, ..., thirty-first) ; Y Year ; I or l Hour, 12 hour clock ; H Hour, 24 hour clock (single digit hours preceded by "oh") ; k Hour, 24 hour clock (single digit hours NOT preceded by "oh") ; M Minute, with 00 pronounced as "o'clock" ; N Minute, with 00 pronounced as "hundred" (US military time) ; P or p AM or PM ; Q "today", "yesterday" or ABdY ; (*note: not standard strftime value) ; q "" (for today), "yesterday", weekday, or ABdY ; (*note: not standard strftime value) ; R 24 hour time, including minute ; eastern=America/New_York|'vm-received' Q 'digits/at' IMp central=America/Chicago|'vm-received' Q 'digits/at' IMp central24=America/Chicago|'vm-received' q 'digits/at' H N 'hours' military=Zulu|'vm-received' q 'digits/at' H N 'hours' 'phonetic/z_p' european=Europe/Copenhagen|'vm-received' a d b 'digits/at' HM [default] ; Note: The rest of the system must reference mailboxes defined here as mailbox@default. ; 1234 => 4242,Example Mailbox,root@localhost ;4200 => 9855,Mark Spencer,markster@linux-support.net,mypager@digium.com,attach=no|serveremail=myaddy@digium.com|fromstring=MySystem|tz=central|maxmsg=10 ;4300 => 3456,Ben Rigas,ben@american-computer.net ;4310 => -5432,Sales,sales@marko.net ;4069 => 6522,Matt Brooks,matt@marko.net,,|tz=central|attach=yes|saycid=yes|dialout=fromvm|callback=fromvm|review=yes|operator=yes|envelope=yes|moveheard=yes|sayduration=yes|saydurationm=1 ;4073 => 1099,Bianca Paige,bianca@biancapaige.com,,delete=1|emailsubject=You have a new voicemail.|emailbody=Click on the attachment to listen.|rip=2010-06-04 ;4110 => 3443,Rob Flynn,rflynn@blueridge.net ;4235 => 1234,Jim Holmes,jim@astricon.ips,,Tz=european ; ; Aliases allow alternate references to mailboxes. See the "aliasescontext" ; parameter in the "general" section. ; [myaliases] ; 1234@devices => 1234@default ;6200@devices => 4200@default ; ; Mailboxes may be organized into multiple contexts for ; voicemail virtualhosting ; [other] ;The intro can be customized on a per-context basis ;directoryintro=dir-company2 ; 1234 => 5678,Company2 User,root@localhost ; example for our acme compartmentalized company ; ; Pete telecommutes from Chicago, so we'll customize timestamps for him. ; ;[acme] ;111 => 7383,Pete,pete@acme-widgets.com,,tz=central ;112 => 6262,Nancy,nancy@acme-widgets.com ; ; --------------------------------------------------------------------------- ; IMAP user settings and overrides. These are only applicable when Asterisk is ; compiled with IMAP support. ; ; imapuser=username ; The IMAP username of the mailbox to access ; imappassword=password ; The IMAP password of the user ; imapvmshareid=xxxx ; A shared mailbox ID to use for the IMAP mailbox ; login, as opposed to the mailbox dialed ; imapfolder ; Overrides the global imapfolder setting ; imapserver ; Overrides the global imapserver setting ; imapport ; Overrides the global imapport setting ; imapflags ; Overrides the global imapflags setting ; ;[imapvm] ;4324 => 7764,Ellis Redding,red@buxton.us,,imapuser=eredding|imappassword=g3tbusy|imapfolder=notinbox ;4325 => 2392,Andrew Dufresne,andy@dufresne.info,,imapuser=adufresne|imappassword=rockh@mmer [sailmaker] ; Primary home mailbox 436 => 436,Weidner Household, ; User mailboxes 100 => 100,Correl Roush,