Instruction manual
Small business communications systems
6-34 Issue 9 May 2003
Magix R1.5: Disallowed lists enhancements
Consider the following when you use wildcard characters in disallowed lists:
■ Disallowed list entries can be from 1 to 12 characters in length.
■ Before a dialed number is compared to an entry in the allowed list, the 
leading “1” is dropped. Thus, an allowed list entry of “p67” (where “p” is the 
wildcard character) matches dialed numbers of “267,” “367,” etc., but not 
“167.”
■ When a dialed number is compared to an entry in the disallowed list, the 
leading “1” is not dropped. Thus, a disallowed list entry of “p67” matches 
dialed numbers of “167” and “267,” “367,” etc.
■ You cannot use a wildcard character to match a * or # in an allowed or 
disallowed list.
■ A wildcard character in any position in a disallowed list entry matches 
dialed number 0–9 when the dialed number is not part of a star code.
NOTE:
A star code is a central office code used to perform a specific function, such 
as 
*70 to disable call waiting.
■ If a star code is an entry in an allowed or disallowed list, that entry should 
only have the star code because anything entered in the list after the star 
code is ignored by the system. The following entries are valid:
—*67
—*69
—*70
—*200
The following are examples of entries that should not be placed in the allowed or 
disallowed list:
— *67201
— *69914
— *702125551212
— *2004319255
■ If a star code is an entry in an allowed or disallowed list and a dialed 
number matches the star code, the allowed/disallowed process is reset 
after the match is done. Any digits dialed after the star code are compared 
to entries in the allowed/disallowed lists for restriction processing.










