Difference between revisions of "Voicemail"

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  mail -s "Test Subject" yourmailbox@domain.com < /dev/null
  mail -s "Test Subject" yourmailbox@domain.com < /dev/null


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= Upload prerecorded Voicemail messages =
= Upload prerecorded Voicemail messages =



Revision as of 08:46, 24 November 2022

Description

Voicemail (or voice mail, voice-mail, vmail or VMS, sometimes called messagebank) is a centralized system of managing telephone messages for a large group of people. The term is also used more broadly, to denote any system of conveying voice messages, including the answering machine. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voicemail)


Voicemail is automatically sent to a user's email if the email address is specified in the device details.

An audio recording in WAV format is attached to the email.

One minute of audio takes approx. 100 Kb.



Configuration

This section can be found in ADDONS –> PBX Functions –> External DIDs –> VoiceMail:

Voicemails path.png

Voicemails.png

  • VoiceMail Extension (local) - describes which local extensions a local user can dial to retrieve his voicemail (the system will ask him to enter his voicemail password, which can be set in the device's details).

If you want to setup VoiceMail (VM) on a different server, then the following settings are important:

  • VoiceMail Server active - turns VM server on/off. When on, all VM requests will go to distant VM server; when off, VM will be handled locally on Asterisk.
  • VoiceMail Server connection/device - describes connection to VM server.
  • VoiceMail Retrieve Extension (local) - which extension to dial on a distant VM server to retrieve voicemail for an extension.

Example:

  • Let's say we have our server on IP 23.45.67.89 connected with SIP to our Asterisk.
  • We create a separate user/device (vm_device) to describe this connection. Device's type is SIP, IP = 23.45.67.89; set other settings also (codecs/etc).
  • VoiceMail Retrieve Extension (local) = 999.




First action is when VM is recorded

So now when the VM server is ON and the user with device 201 gets a VM, the call is redirected like this:

Dial(SIP/vm_device/201)

This means that the server on 23.45.67.89 will receive a call to extension 201. The server SHOULD BE configured so that it will process VM correctly when it receives such a call.



Second action - retrieving VM

When user wants to retrieve his VM on a distant machine he dials VoiceMail Extension (local).

He is redirected like this:

Dial(SIP/vm_device/999#201)

Again, the distant server should know how to process such a request.

Let's say we have a distant VM server based on Asterisk.

So in our example its configuration in /etc/asterisk/extensions.conf should look like this:

[incoming]
# to retrieve VM
exten => _999#.,1,VoiceMailMain(${EXTEN:4})
exten => _999#.,2,Hangup
# to record VM exten => _X.,1,VoiceMail(${EXTEN}) exten => _X.,2,Hangup

Retrieve VoiceMail from outside over DID

  • In PBX functions create new function with type: check_voicemail.
  • Assign this PBX Function to a DID by editing the DID number.




FROM string

To change the Voicemail email sending FROM field, edit the /etc/asterisk/voicemail.conf file line:

;fromstring=The Asterisk PBX

to:

fromstring=SOME OTHER LINE

... and reload Asterisk.



Email sending when VM is received

  • Go to Device settings
  • Locate the Voicemail field
  • Fill in Email – where to send received Voicemail.
  • Fill in Password – the digital password the user enters when he calls the Voicemail number to hear his messages.

End User can change email field if User have VoiceMail email edit and Devices permissions enabled.



serveremail

This setting can be used to identify the source of a voicemail notification message.

 ;serveremail=asterisk

to:

 serveremail=SOME OTHER LINE

OR:

 ;serveremail=asterisk@linux-support.net

to

 serveremail=YOUR COMPANY@YOUR COMPANY.net

... and reload Asterisk.

Leave only one of those settings, not both.

Change Email template

Email subject line and body text can be configured only globally in Asterisk configuration file /etc/asterisk/voicemail.conf directly. Open this file with your favorite editor, and find the following lines:

;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

Here you change template of Email subject line and Email body. Just uncomment (delete ; in the beginning of line) option name and change option content to your liking. After this is done reload voicemail settings with the following command:

asterisk -rx 'voicemail reload'

Asterisk variables related to Voicemail are explained here: https://wiki.asterisk.org/wiki/display/AST/VoiceMail+Channel+Variables



Voicemail timezone

To configure specific timezone for Voicemail box, set label in the Timezone field (max 10 characters):

Voicemail tz.png

Then configure this label in /etc/asterisk/voicemail.conf under [zonemessages]:

[zonemessages]
central=America/Chicago|'vm-received' Q 'digits/at' IMp
eastern=America/New_York|'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

Here central, eastern, central24, military, european are default labels. Set your custom label below and configure by these rules:

'filename'    filename of a soundfile (single ticks around the filename required)
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                        
q             "" (for today), "yesterday", weekday, or ABdY                       
R             24 hour time, including minute

After changes, restart Asterisk or execute command asterisk -rx 'voicemail reload'

Default timezone for all Voicemail boxes is central.

More info on Asterisk Voicemails: https://www.voip-info.org/asterisk-config-voicemailconf



Change UNAVAILABLE message

Dial Voicemail access number (default *97) and press 01; then, after the signal, dictate your UNAVAILABLE message. UNAVAILABLE message is played when call to your device is forwarded to Voicemail by "Failed" or "No Answer" Call states in Call Flow.

UNAVAILABLE message can be only set by using method mentioned above.

If default UNAVAILABLE message is changed, it is recommended to turn off intro message (http://wiki.kolmisoft.com/index.php/Call_Flow#Voicemail)

Change BUSY message

Dial Voicemail access number (default *97) and press 02; then, after the signal, dictate your BUSY message. BUSY message is played when call to your device is forwarded to Voicemail by "Busy" Call state in Call Flow.

BUSY message can be only set by using method mentioned above.

If default BUSY message is changed, it is recommended to turn off intro message (http://wiki.kolmisoft.com/index.php/Call_Flow#Voicemail)

MWI - Message Waiting Indication

This option is available starting from MOR 9


In telephony, a Message Waiting Indicator (MWI) is a telephone calling feature that illuminates a LED on selected telephones to notify a user of waiting voicemail messages. It works on most telephone networks and PBXs. (Wikipedia)

MWI is supported automatically starting from MOR 9.

Most phones support this feature.





Change encoding on voicemail emails

If you use, for e.g. Greek language in Voicemail text or in Users details in MOR you need to enable the UTF-8 Encoding.

To do so, first of all enable it on Ast.Voicemail side. Edit /etc/asterisk/voicemail.conf, uncomment charset and make it UTF-8 :

charset=UTF-8

To apply changes reload the Voicemail in Asterisk CLI:

VM*CLI> voicemail reload

This will lead to send Voicemail emails in UTF-8 Encoding. However, if you have User with details which are in, for e.g. Greek language, Asterisk should read the data from DB using UTF-8 Encoding.

For this, edit the /etc/asterisk/res_config_mysql.conf, uncomment dbcharset and set it to UTF-8:

dbcharset = utf8

Once changes are applied, reload Asterisk:

VM*CLI> reload

Now, Asterisk will correctly send text in UTF-8 Encoding even if, for e.g., Greek text is used in Voicemail email text or in DB.



Change Voicemail language

Set language in Device Edit window.



Delete Voicemail in mass

You can delete unwanted voicemails directly from the server.

The main directory where voicemails are saved is:

/var/spool/asterisk/voicemail



Maximum length of a voicemail message

Uncomment variable maxsecs in /etc/asterisk/voicemail.conf This defines the maximum amount of time in seconds of an incoming message.

For example, this will set max duration to 5 minutes

maxsecs = 300

For changes to take effect, reload voicemail configuration

asterisk -rx 'voicemail reload'



Custom email server for Voicemail emails

By default, a local email relay is used. If some other email server needs to be used, then:

Install additional packages:

yum install cyrus-sasl cyrus-sasl-lib cyrus-sasl-plain

Add these lines to the bottom of /etc/postfix/main.cf

relayhost = smtp.yourmailserver.com:587
smtp_use_tls = yes
smtp_sasl_auth_enable = yes
smtp_sasl_security_options = noanonymous
smtp_sasl_password_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/sasl_passwd
smtp_tls_CAfile = /etc/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt
smtp_generic_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/generic
smtp_tls_security_level = secure
smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols = TLSv1
smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers = high
smtp_tls_secure_cert_match = nexthop

Create /etc/postfix/sasl_passwd with content

smtp.yourmailserver.com	user@yourmailserver.com:passwordofuser

run

postmap /etc/postfix/sasl_passwd

secure file

chown root:root /etc/postfix/sasl_passwd /etc/postfix/sasl_passwd.db
chmod 0600 /etc/postfix/sasl_passwd /etc/postfix/sasl_passwd.db

Add this line to the bottom of /etc/postfix/generic

root@CentOS-68-64-minimal.localdomain sender@yourmailserver.com

replace "CentOS-68-64-minimal.localdomai" with your servers hostname; replace sender@yourmailserver.com with suitable sender address.

Run

postmap /etc/postfix/generic
service postfix restart



Testing Voicemail emails

This command sends email same way as Asterisk does:

mail -s "Test Subject" yourmailbox@domain.com < /dev/null



Upload prerecorded Voicemail messages

The location of the WAV file: /var/spool/asterisk/voicemail/default/1234/en

where 1234 is an extension number.

2 files can be replaced: busy.wav and unavail.wav (names must be the same)

Should be changed on all asterisk servers if there are several of them.

Make sure to: Convert WAV file to Asterisk playable format before uploading.



See also