SUBADDRESS = <Party_Type>,<Subaddress_Type>,<Odd/Even>,<Subaddress_info>
The information to the DTE is sent using the ASCII 7-bit code, with the
parity the same as was last used in a command from the DTE.
Subaddress Fields
The Subaddress uses the following syntax with values described below.
<Party_Type>,<Subaddress_Type>,<Odd/Even>,<Subaddress_info>
Subaddress Fields Values
<Party_Type> 1 = Called Party
2 = Calling Party
<Subaddress_Type> 0 = NSAP
Subaddress_info does not contain binary address. Each character is the
ASCII representation of a digit.
1 = Reserved
2 = User-defined
Subaddress_info does not contain binary address. Each character is the
ASCII representation of a digit.
3 = Reserved
4 = NSAP
Subaddress_info contains binary address. Each encoded subaddress octet,
which may mean 2 BCD digits or 1 binary digit, will be displayed with 2
hexadecimal digits (0-9 and A-F).
5 = Reserved
6 = User-defined
Subaddress_info contains binary address. Each encoded subaddress octet,
which may mean 2 BCD digits or 1 binary digit, will be displayed with 2
hexadecimal digits (0-9 and A-F).
7 = Reserved
<Odd/Even> 0 = Even number of digits in subaddress
1 = Odd number of digits in subaddress
<Subaddress_info> Max 40 characters (ASCII digits only) if Subaddress_Type is 0 or 2.
Max 80 characters (0-9 and A-F) if Subaddress_Type is 4 or 6.
Unformatted Call Information
Unformatted means the modem sends all information contained in the caller
ID packet as hex numbers (in ASCII code). The DCE presents all bits of a
packet except leading U characters (55 hex, line seizure information) and
including the checksum bytes. The DCE does not add any formatting characters,
such as <CR>or <LF>, to the information text, except at the
end of the string of hex numbers.
Hayes: MESG =
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