What is the reason that an outgoing call succeeds when there is no COR list that is applied to the incoming dial peer and a COR list is applied to the outgoing dial peer?

What is the reason that an outgoing call succeeds when there is no COR list that is applied to the
incoming dial peer and a COR list is applied to the outgoing dial peer?

What is the reason that an outgoing call succeeds when there is no COR list that is applied to the
incoming dial peer and a COR list is applied to the outgoing dial peer?

A.
The COR list for incoming calls on the incoming dial peer is a superset of COR lists for outgoing
calls on the outgoing dial peer.

B.
COR lists for incoming calls on the incoming dial peer are not a superset of COR lists for
outgoing calls on the outgoing dial peer.

C.
The outgoing dial peer, by default, has the lowest priority.

D.
The incoming dial peer, by default, has the highest COR priority when no COR is applied.

Explanation:
By default, an incoming call leg has the highest COR priority and the outgoing COR
list has the lowest COR priority. This means that if there is no COR configuration for incoming calls
on a dial-peer, then you can make a call from this dial-peer (a phone attached to this dial-peer)
going out of any other dial-peer, irrespective of the COR configuration on that dial-peer.
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