You need to see the interesting traffic that is triggering the call. This can be broadcast traffic such as various windows "stuff", normal broadcast such as ARPs, DNS, IPX and the list goes on. Normally speaking there is (should be) an access list that limits what the interesting traffic should be and to ignore everything else. This way a simple ICMP ping to see if the router is alive will not cause the IDSN to call out.
dialer-list 1 protocol ip permit ; basic ACL
OR
dialer-list 1 protocol ip list 101 ; better extended ACL
For a fun explanation of ISDN, RouterGod has been up to his tricks again with an "interview" with Alicia Silverstone (Blue Crush fame) at
If happen to be on the router when this happens all you have to do is do a "show dialer interface Brx/x and this will tell you what ip address triggered the call , this assumes you are using dialer interfaces .
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