Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 9 years ago
There is actually a filter in Settings > Filters rule that allow you to ignore
incoming calls from an account (it could even be based on number that calls).
You can create a simple rule to not answer numbers that match "all".
The application, if it detects that the incoming calls belongs to the account
where filter is, will just drop the call (with a busy here message). If your
sip provider is properly configured it will drop the call to voice mail (there
is no actual way to tell in sip to divert a call to voice mail, that's up to
the sip server configuration to be properly configured to detect that if none
of registered account replies it has to redirect to voice mail).
No need to do more. Then you can put network config as you really expect to be
available. If you expect to be always available or available for wifi just
check it (it will automatically change network settings).
Also, some important point you may not be aware in android. The back and the
home key have different behavior. The home key suspend the ui. The back key
stop the UI. If you are in the configuration you describe, and if you press the
back key (to stop the UI application), csipsimple will automatically unregister
and stop. If you suspend as the dialer is still here and should still be
available for outgoing since the app consider you can still want to dial.
Original comment by r3gis...@gmail.com
on 19 Dec 2011 at 8:31
"filter in Settings > Filters rule that allow you to ignore incoming calls"
which filter would that be. I was looking at
http://code.google.com/p/csipsimple/wiki/UsingFilters#Replacements, it lists
all the filters I have:
Can't Call
Rewrite
Stop processing
Directly call
Auto Answer
I have tried both Stop processing and Can't Call to achieve the desired affect
but both in the end let the call go through.
Perhaps this filter is in an up and coming version of csipsimple?
Original comment by dodts...@gmail.com
on 19 Dec 2011 at 5:04
I downloaded and installed the latest version. It still has the same set of
filters. I do not see a filter I might use to block a call.
Original comment by dodts...@gmail.com
on 21 Dec 2011 at 4:04
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
dodts...@gmail.com
on 19 Dec 2011 at 5:39