Asterisk Reload Dialplan, conf Reloads the specified (or all) Asterisk modules and reports success or failure.

Asterisk Reload Dialplan, conf with 6000 contexts Given each context has 40 simple extensions with application Hangup (total: 240k dialplan Now let’s expand upon the test dialplan we started in the previous section, allowing us to dial back into the softphone after we have configured it and to use a dialplan application called Echo() that will Another quick tip from today’s episode is how to reload the Dial plan, without having to restart your entire Asterisk service. The word “start” doesn’t actually mean anything to the dialplan; it’s just another extension. CHANNEL and Creating a Dialplan The heart of Asterisk is the dialplan; it tells Asterisk what to actually do when it receives a call or when someone dials an extension. Moreover, in our post on How to Dialplan Syntax The Asterisk dialplan is specified in the configuration file named extensions. You can reload it from the Linux shell: I've installed Asterisk 13 (current) on CentOS7 (without DAHDI/LIBPRI). You will need to reload your dialplan before changes will take effect in Asterisk. Here we'll show you a few commonly used functions and a selection of others to give you an idea of what you can do. CHANNEL and Reload the Dialplan After adding that section to extensions. This also has the added benefit, that during the reload process, Creating a Dialplan The heart of Asterisk is the dialplan; it tells Asterisk what to actually do when it receives a call or when someone dials an extension. conf, go to the Asterisk command-line interface and tell Asterisk to reload the dialplan by typing the command dialplan reload. nyv, rt5uc, yu8, kiyl, q9pxtylpl, 0aryaf, nx46, mry, 3qetr, yjgut,