callerid.conf man page on SuSE

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callerid.conf(5)	  Linux System Administration	      callerid.conf(5)

NAME
       /etc/isdn/callerid.conf - config file for isdnlog numbers and scripts

FORMAT
       This  file  has the format described in isdnformat(5). It must be owned
       by root, and only root may have write access. Every user can create his
       private telephone book as ~/.isdn with the same file format.

VARIABLES SECTION
       Like  in	 isdn.conf, this file has an optional [VARIABLES] section. All
       variable names must be uppercase. Warning: variables  in	 callerid.conf
       will  override  variables  in  isdn.conf, and variables in ~/.isdn will
       override variables in both files. First all variables  are  read,  then
       they  are  substituted, so a variable defined in ~/.isdn can be used in
       isdn.conf.  This might be a security hole. However, if programs are  to
       be  run	as root, these files (and the program) cannot be writeable for
       non-root users.

       Using variables: if a reference to a non	 existing  variable  is	 used,
       isdnrep	and  isdnlog  will give warning messages, and use the variable
       name (e.g if $FRED isn't set, isdnlog will  use	"$FRED").  The	dollar
       sign  can  be  backslashed  if  a real dollar sign is needed instead of
       variable substitution (e.g. \$PATH will be "$PATH").

NUMBER and MSN
       In [NUMBER] sections, you can supply information for the	 outer	world,
       in [MSN] sections; you can supply information about your msns. The for‐
       mat is the same:

       NUMBER=xxxx
	   Set the telephone number. This should be your msn or the  telephone
	   number  with	 area code (with or without areprefix, countrycode and
	   countryprefix)

       SI=x
	   Service indicator. Isdnlog knows these service indicators:
	   1   speech (telephone, fax g3, modem etc.)
	   2   restricted digital information
	   3   unrestricted digital information with tones/announcements
	   4   video
	   7   unrestricted digital information (hdlc, x.75 etc.)

       Alias=xxxx
	   Supply a name as alias (e.g. ALIAS=Fred's Number)

       ZONE=xxx
	   Only useful with remote numbers: billing zone  for  connections  to
	   this number:
	   0   internal connection in your s0 bus (no charge)
	   1   city area
	   2   region 50
	   3   region 200
	   4   far region
	   5   the same as 1

       INTERFACE=xxx
	   Isdn network interface. This information is required with the "-hx"
	   / hangup="value" option.

       START
	   You can define a subsection here.  The  whole  section  is  ignored
	   unless you gave the "-S" / start=yes option. Each subsection should
	   have the name [FLAG]. It may hold these values:

	   FLAGS=x|y|z
	       Combine these flags (with or without the pipe "|" char; with is
	       preferred) to get the combination you want:

	       Part 1: Incoming and Outgoing
	       I   Incoming call
	       O   Outgoing call

	       Part 2: Signals from isdn system
	       C   Connect (can be used with interval, see below)
	       B   Busy
	       E   Error
	       R   Ring (can be used with interval, see below)
	       A   AOCD (advice of charge signal)
	       H   Hangup

	       Part 3: Modifiers
	       L   Start the program again and again every time it terminates.
	       U   Start  the  program	only  once  within a interval. Without
		   this, several instances of a program can run	 in  parallel.
		   (Interval required.)
	       K   Kill program at the end of the interval.

	   USER=xxx
	       Isdnlog	will  not  run	programs as root, and will switch to a
	       different user id for security. You must give the name  or  uid
	       of the user isdnlog has to use here.

	   GROUP=xxx
	       Isdnlog will not run programs as group root, and will switch to
	       a different group id for security. You must give	 the  name  or
	       gid of the groups isdnlog has to use here.

	   TIME=xx
	       Restrict this flag to a special time. Pleas read isdntime(5).

	   INTERVAL=xx
	       With  connect (C) or ring (R) flag you can specify an interval,
	       so isdnlog will start the program  after	 every	interval.  The
	       interval is in seconds and should be at least 2 seconds. If the
	       flags do not include C or R, this option is ignored.

	   PROGRAM=xxx
	       The program you want to start, with the required arguments. You
	       may use the following special tokens:

	       \$1    flags  that caused execution, e.g. "IR", "OC". There are
		      always exactly two characters.
	       \$2    Caller number (complete with area code).
	       \$3    Called number (complete with area code).
	       \$4    Time the connection started. Example:
		      "Wed May 28 23:07:44 1997".
		      Contains "?" if there is no connection yet  (e.g.	 still
		      at RING phase).
	       \$5    Duration of connection up to now (in seconds).
	       \$6    Time the connection ended. Same format as \$4.
	       \$7    Number of input bytes.
	       \$8    Number of output bytes.
	       \$9    Input bytes per second.
	       \$10   Output bytes per second.
	       \$11   Service indicator.
	       \$12   Charges.
	       \$13   Caller country code.
	       \$14   Called country code.
	       \$15   Caller area code.
	       \$16   Called area code.
	       \$17   Caller town (derived from area code).
	       \$18   Called town
	       \$19   Caller alias.
	       \$20   Called alias.

	       Note: within a string you must use \${1} \${2} ...

FILES
       /etc/isdn/callerid.conf
	      This file.

       ~/.isdn
	      Per user telephone book.

SEE ALSO
       isdnlog(8) isdnformat(5) isdntime(5)
AUTHOR
       This   manual   page   was  written  by	Andreas	 Jellinghaus  <aj@dun‐
       geon.inka.de>, for Debian GNU/Linux and isdn4linux.

ISDN 4 Linux 3.13		  2000/09/15		      callerid.conf(5)
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