X-COM Server v2.72.124 serial key or number

X-COM Server v2.72.124 serial key or number

X-COM Server v2.72.124 serial key or number

X-COM Server v2.72.124 serial key or number

manicapital.com

domain name tracing report

The domain tracking summary is machine compiled particularly for manicapital.com

web site RESPONSE STATUS

This domain ID has replied to connection query with a server response code manicapital.com webpage responded with content in (ms).

social differentiation

The social presence is as follows: Alexa rank: , Facebook engagement:

keywords analysis

The number of words analyticly validated within the text of manicapital.com is Alexa rank: , Facebook engagement: This most utilized key string in text body of manicapital.com seems to be Crack. The word Crack is in use 10 times. The second most used keyword put to use is defined as the Serial and is utilized 8 times. Other dominant key string(s) are software, crack, serial, software, number, keygen, cracks, site, v2, editor, edition, autodesk, desktop, license, windows, search, means, v1, pro, serials, land.

The most frequently placed 2-word word combination inside body text of manicapital.com is confirmed to be Cracks serials. The keyword Cracks serials is used 3 times. The second most frequently used two-word key string group employed is the Sound editor and is in use 3 times. Other fundamental dual-word word(s) are serials keygens, cracks serials, sound editor, serials keygens, crack serial, serial number, serial keygen, land development, development desktop, piece software, for land, copy protection, faxmail windows, 32bit faxmail.

IP INFO

This hardware IP tracing statement is electronically collected distinctively for The host has the hardware Internet Protocol Address This Internet Protocol Address conforms to correct specifications of an IPv4 IP (Internet protocol), which has a compressed value of

The IP (hardware Internet protocol) is assigned to a computer IP address range of -

ORGANIZATION AND ISP

An organization that digitally distributes the content for manicapital.com is CloudFlare. An Internet Service Provider (also known as ISP) that digitally hosts the CPU hardware to maintain the query identity is CloudFlare.

IP physical address

The data for this tracking history confirms that the connection to this host has an assigned location in United States. The timezone of the physical location of this host is America/Chicago.

assigned IPS

Other IPs put to use by manicapital.com are as listed: linked to acd1d6, linked to b:b23f, , , linked to b:b33f, ,
Источник: [manicapital.com]
, X-COM Server v2.72.124 serial key or number

Configuring H Gateways

This section contains the following information:

Registration, Admission, and Status (RAS) signaling performs registration, admissions, status, and disengage procedures between the H VoIP gateway and the H VoIP gatekeeper. RAS tells the gatekeeper to translate a E phone number of the session target into an IP address.

In the RAS exchange between a gateway and a gatekeeper, a technology prefix is used to identify the specific gateway when the selected zone contains multiple gateways. The tech-prefixcommand is used to define technology prefixes.

In most cases there is a dynamic protocol exchange between the gateway and the gatekeeper that enables the gateway to inform the gatekeeper about technology prefixes and where to forward calls. If, for some reason, that dynamic registry feature is not in effect, statically configure the gatekeeper to query the gateway for this information.


Note


To configure the gatekeeper to query for prefix and forwarding information, see the "Configuring H Gatekeepers and Proxies" section.

To configure RAS, define specific parameters for the applicable POTS and VoIP dial peers. The POTS dial peer informs the system of which voice port to direct incoming VoIP calls to and (optionally) determines that RAS-initiated calls have a technology prefix prepended to the destination telephone number. The VoIP dial peer determines how to direct calls that originate from a local voice port into the VoIP cloud to the session target. The session target indicates the address of the remote gateway where the call is terminated. There are several different ways to define the destination gateway address:

  • By statically configuring the IP address of the gateway.
  • By defining the Domain Name System (DNS) name of the gateway.
  • By using RAS. If RAS is used, the gateway determines the destination target by querying the RAS gatekeeper.

Configuring Basic RAS

To configure basic RAS, use the following commands beginning in global configuration mode.

SUMMARY STEPS

1.   dial-peervoicetagpots

2.   destination-patternstring[T]

3.   portcontroller:D

4.   exit

5.   dial-peervoicetagvoip

6.   destination-patternstring[T]

7.   tech-prefixnumber

8.   sessiontargetras

9.   exit


DETAILED STEPS
 Command or ActionPurpose
dial-peervoicetagpots


Example:

Router(config)# dial-peer voice pots

 

Enters dial-peer configuration mode for the POTS dial peer designated by tag.

 
destination-patternstring[T]


Example:

Router(config-dial-peer)# destination-pattern

 

Specifies the E address associated with this dial peer. Keywords and arguments are as follows:

  • string--E or private dialing plan telephone number. Valid entries: digits 0 to 9, letters A to D, and the following special characters:
    • Asterisk (*) and pound sign (#)--Keys that appear on standard touchtone dial pads.
    • Comma (,)--Pause between digits.
    • Period (.)--Match to any entered digit (used as a wildcard).
    • Percent sign (%)--The previous digit or pattern zero or multiple times, similar to wildcard usage in the regular expression.
    • Circumflex (^)--Match to the beginning of the string.
    • Dollar sign ($)--Match to the null string at the end of the input string.
    • Backslash (\)--Is followed by a single character matching that character or used with a single character having no other significance (matching that character).
    • Question mark (?)--The previous digit occurred zero or one time.
    • Brackets ([ ])--Range of digits. Digits (0 to 9) are enclosed in brackets. Similar to a regular expression rule.
    • Parentheses (( ))--A pattern. Same as the regular expression rule--for example, (). Use parentheses in conjunction with symbols ? or %.

For more information on applying wildcard symbols to destination patterns and the dial strings that result, see the " Dial Peer Configuration on Voice Gateway Routers" module .

  • T--Control character indicating that the destination-pattern value is a variable-length dial string.
 
portcontroller:D


Example:

Router(config-dial-peer)# port 0:D

 

(Cisco AS only) Associates this POTS dial peer with a specific voice port. Keywords and arguments are platform dependent.

 
exit


Example:

Router(config-dial-peer)# exit

 

Exits the current mode.

 
dial-peervoicetagvoip


Example:

Router(config)# dial-peer voice voip

 

Enters dial-peer configuration mode for the VoIP peer designated by tag.

 
destination-patternstring[T]


Example:

Router(config-dial-peer)# destination-pattern

 

See Step 2 above.

 
tech-prefixnumber


Example:

Router (config-dial-peer)# tech-prefix 9#

 

Defines the numbers used as the technology prefix that the gateway registers with the gatekeeper. Can contain up to 11 characters. Although not strictly necessary, a pound symbol (#) is frequently used as the last digit in a prefix. Valid characters: 0 to 9, #, and *.

 
sessiontargetras


Example:

Router (config-dial-peer)# session target ras

 

Specifies that the RAS protocol is being used to determine the IP address of the session target--meaning that a gatekeeper translates the E address to an IP address.

 
exit


Example:

Router (config-dial-peer)# exit

 

Exits the current mode.

 

Verifying Basic RAS Configuration

To verify RAS configuration, perform the following step.

SUMMARY STEPS

1.   showdial-peervoice


DETAILED STEPS
showdial-peervoice

Use this command to verify the POTS and VoIP dial-peer configuration.

The following example shows output for a VoIP dial peer using RAS on a Cisco AS



Example: Router# show dial-peer voice VoiceOverIpPeer tag = , destination-pattern = ', answer-address = ', group = , Admin state is up, Operation state is up, incoming called-number = ', connections/maximum = 0/unlimited, application associated: type = voip, session-target = ras', technology prefix: 8# ip precedence = 0, UDP checksum = disabled, session-protocol = cisco, req-qos = controlled-load, acc-qos = best-effort, fax-rate = voice, codec = gr8, Expect factor = 10, Icpif = 30, VAD = enabled, Poor QOV Trap = disabled,

Troubleshooting Tips for Basic RAS Configuration

  • To display the types and addressing of RAS messages sent and received, use the debugrascommand. The debug output lists the message type using mnemonics defined in ITU-T specification H
  • To display additional information about the actual contents of the H RAS messages, use the debughasn1 command.

Configuring RAS Retries and Timers

You can configure RAS message timeout values, message retry counter values, and registration request (RRQ) message time-to-live and early transmit time margins on Cisco gateways. This provides greater flexibility in configuring gateways in different network environments.

The rastimeout command configures the number of seconds for the gateway to wait before resending a RAS message to a gatekeeper. The rasretry command configures the number of times to resend the RAS message after the timeout period expires. The default values for timeouts and retries are acceptable in most networks. You can use these commands if you are experiencing problems in RAS message transmission between gateways and gatekeepers. For example, if you have gatekeepers that are slow to respond to a type of RAS request, increasing the timeout value and the number of retries increases the call success rate, preventing lost billing information and unnecessary switchover to an alternate gatekeeper.

The rasrrqttl command configures the number of seconds that the gateway should be considered active by the gatekeeper. The gateway transmits this value in the RRQ message to the gatekeeper. The margintime keyword and argument allow the gateway to transmit an early RRQ to the gatekeeper before the time-to-live value advertised to the gatekeeper.

To configure RAS message timeout values and retry counters, use the following commands beginning in global configuration mode.

SUMMARY STEPS

1.   voiceservicevoip

2.   h

3.   rastimeout{all | arq | brq | drq| grq | rai | rrq} value

4.   rasretry{all | arq | brq | drq| grq | rai | rrq} value

5.   exit


DETAILED STEPS
 Command or ActionPurpose
voiceservicevoip


Example:

Router(config)# voice service voip

 

Enters voice-service configuration mode for VoIP.

 
h


Example:

Router(conf-voi-serv)# h

 

Enters voice-service-h configuration mode.

 
rastimeout{all | arq | brq | drq| grq | rai | rrq} value


Example:

Router(conf-serv-h)# ras timeout all 10

 

Sets RAS timeout conditions. Keywords and argument are as follows:

  • all--All RAS message counters that do not have explicit values configured individually. If the norastimeoutall command is entered, all values are set to the default except the individual values that were configured separately.
  • arq--Admission request (ARQ) message counter.
  • brq--Bandwidth request (BRQ) message counter.
  • drq--Disengage request (DRQ) message counter.
  • grq--Gatekeeper request (GRQ) message counter.
  • rai--Resource availability indication (RAI) message counter.
  • rrq--Registration request (RRQ) message counter.
  • value--How long the gateway waits for a message from the gatekeeper before timing out, in seconds. Range: 1 to
 
rasretry{all | arq | brq | drq| grq | rai | rrq} value


Example:

Router(conf-serv-h)# ras retry grq 5

 

Sets RAS retry conditions. Keywords are as in step 3. The argument is as follows:

  • value--Number of times that the gateway resends messages to the gatekeeper after timeout. Range: 1 to
 
exit


Example:

Router(conf-serv-h)# exit

 

Exits the current mode.

 

Configuring RRQ Time-to-Live Value

To configure the RRQ time-to-live value, use the following commands beginning in global configuration mode.

SUMMARY STEPS

1.   voiceservicevoip

2.   h

3.   rasrrqttltime-to-live [margintime]

4.   exit


DETAILED STEPS
 Command or ActionPurpose
voiceservicevoip


Example:

Router(config)# voice service voip

 

Enters voice-service configuration mode for VoIP.

 
h


Example:

Router(conf-voi-serv)# h

 

Enters voice-service-h configuration mode.

 
rasrrqttltime-to-live [margintime]


Example:

Router(conf-serv-h)# ras rrq ttl 90 margin 30

 

Sets time-to-live parameters. Argument and keyword are as follows:

  • time-to-live--How long, in seconds, the gatekeeper considers the gateway active. Range: 15 to (must be greater than the margin time value).
  • margintime--How long, in seconds, an RRQ message can be transmitted from the gateway before the time-to-live value advertised to the gatekeeper. Range: 1 to 60 (this value times two must be less than or equal to the time-to-live value).
 
exit


Example:

Router(conf-serv-h)# exit

 

Exits the current mode.

 

Verifying RAS Retries and Timers

To verify RAS retries and timers, perform the following step.

SUMMARY STEPS

1.   showrunningconfig


DETAILED STEPS
showrunningconfig

Use this command to verify RAS message retry counters, timeout values, and time-to-live values.



Example: Router# show running-config Current configuration : bytes ! version . . . voice service voip h ras rrq ttl 90 margin 30 ras timeout all 7 ras timeout grq 10 ras timeout drq 30 ras retry all 10 ras retry grq 5 . . .

Examples for RAS Retries and Timers

The following example shows the GRQ message timeout value set to 10 seconds and all other RAS message timeout values set to 7 seconds:

Router(conf-serv-h)# ras timeout grq 10 Router(conf-serv-h)# ras timeout all 7

The following example shows the GRQ message counter set to 5 and all other RAS message counters set to

Router(conf-serv-h)# ras retry all 10 Router(conf-serv-h)# ras retry grq 5

The following example shows the time-to-live value configured to 90 seconds and the margin time value configured to 30 seconds:

Router(conf-serv-h)# ras rrq ttl 90 margin 30

Configuring Gateway-Resource-Availability Reporting

To allow gatekeepers to make intelligent call-routing decisions, the gateway reports the status of its resource availability to its gatekeeper. Resources that are monitored are digital-signal-level 0 (DS0) channels and digital-signal-processor (DSP) channels.

The gateway reports its resource status to the gatekeeper using the RAS Resource Availability Indication (RAI). When a monitored resource falls below a configurable threshold, the gateway sends a RAI to the gatekeeper indicating that the gateway is almost out of resources. When the available resources then cross over another configurable threshold, the gateway sends an RAI indicating that the resource depletion condition no longer exists.

You can configure resource-reporting thresholds by using the resourcethreshold command. Upper and lower thresholds are separately configurable to prevent the gateway from operating sporadically because of the availability or lack of resources.

Источник: [manicapital.com]
X-COM Server v2.72.124 serial key or number

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