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CHAPTER 3 & 4 Understanding the Cisco IP Phone Concepts and Registration Getting Familiar with CME Administration
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CHAPTER 3 & 4 Understanding the Cisco IP Phone Concepts and Registration Getting Familiar with CME Administration.

Jan 02, 2016

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Page 1: CHAPTER 3 & 4  Understanding the Cisco IP Phone Concepts and Registration  Getting Familiar with CME Administration.

CHAPTER 3 & 4 Understanding the Cisco IP Phone

Concepts and Registration Getting Familiar with CME

Administration

Page 2: CHAPTER 3 & 4  Understanding the Cisco IP Phone Concepts and Registration  Getting Familiar with CME Administration.

Connecting to the Network:

Page 3: CHAPTER 3 & 4  Understanding the Cisco IP Phone Concepts and Registration  Getting Familiar with CME Administration.

Connecting the Phone to the Network:

Ports:RS232 – Connects to an expansion module

10/100 SW – Connect to the network via a switch or integrated switch

10/100 PC – Connect to a Co-located PC

Page 4: CHAPTER 3 & 4  Understanding the Cisco IP Phone Concepts and Registration  Getting Familiar with CME Administration.

Power over Ethernet (PoE) or Inline Power (Cisco):

• A Cisco phone can be powered by either Power over Ethernet, Inline power or power brick.

• Inline power was Cisco’s pre-standard answer to providing power.

Switch send a Fast link Pulse (FLP) to device. Cisco pre-standard would loop FLP signal back When switch receives FLP back it applies six point three watts (6.3W) to the line Device boots and uses Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) to communicate with Cisco Devices

Page 5: CHAPTER 3 & 4  Understanding the Cisco IP Phone Concepts and Registration  Getting Familiar with CME Administration.

Power over Ethernet (PoE) or Inline Power (Cisco) continued:

• Power over Ethernet (PoE) or IEEE 802.3af Constant small DC current applied to lines When compatible device is connected a precession resistor feeds back current to PoE supply device. When feedback is detected a specific amount of power is supplied to the device. Class 0 0.44 to 12.95 W, allocated 15.4W Class 1 0.44 to 3.84W, allocated 4.0W Class 2 3.84 to 6.49W, allocated 7.0W Class 3 6.49 to 12.95W, allocated 15.4W

Page 6: CHAPTER 3 & 4  Understanding the Cisco IP Phone Concepts and Registration  Getting Familiar with CME Administration.

Power over Ethernet (PoE) or Inline Power (Cisco) continued:

• A power brick or separate power source can be used to supply power by a separate power connection to phone.• Not normally supplied with phone.• Power patch panel may be used to augment non-PoE switches or devices• An in-line coupler may be used for each device to inject power into the Ethernet connection.• A Cisco phone with a sidecar module added to support additional lines will exceed the 802.3af power supplied and need a power brick adapter.

Page 7: CHAPTER 3 & 4  Understanding the Cisco IP Phone Concepts and Registration  Getting Familiar with CME Administration.

Power over Ethernet (PoE) or Inline Power (Cisco) continued:

• Cisco Power Patch Panel:

• Cisco Power Brick:

Page 8: CHAPTER 3 & 4  Understanding the Cisco IP Phone Concepts and Registration  Getting Familiar with CME Administration.

Power over Ethernet (PoE) or Inline Power (Cisco) continued:

• PoE in-line injector:

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Power over Ethernet (PoE) or Inline Power (Cisco) continued:

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Using Virtual LAN’s (VLAN’s) to Subdivide Switch:

• A VLAN = a Broadcast Domain = An IP Subnet• A virtual division of the switch.• Routers are used to interconnect VLAN’s• Benefits:

Increased performance Improved manageability Physical topology independence Increased security

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Switch Trunking:

• Switches can be interconnected via a single connection• Uses either IEEE 802.1Q (Standard) or Inter-Switch Link protocol (ISL) a Cisco proprietary.• Native VLAN carries all management information• All frames are “Tagged” to cross the trunk link except for the native VLAN frames.• Tagging adds bits onto frame which are removed prior to exiting the switch on any line not a trunk• Tagging adds delay• Tagging saves physical ports• VLAN’s are distributed to all switches via Virtual Trunking Protocol (VTP)

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Virtual Trunking Protocol:

• Switches exchange VLAN information automatically• VTP Domain Names and passwords are case sensitive• VTP Modes are server, client or transparent• VTP Server allows the creation or deletion of VLAN’s throughout system. VLAN information is saved in switch memory• VTP Client allows only the acceptance of VLAN’s from the server. Information is not stored in memory.• VTP Transparent mode allows the creation or deletion of VLAN’s of local significance only. VLAN information is stored in switch memory. Will pass VTP information to other switches within the same domain.

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Vlan Tagging:

• Frames are “Tagged” to identify what vlan they are associated with prior to being trunked. • The “Tag” is removed when the frame exits the switch via an assess port.

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Vlan Tagging:

• When an attached computer or device, sends data to the switch via the Cisco IP Phone it is not tagged and in the vlan associated with the Access Port. • All VoIP traffic entering the port from the Cisco IP Phone is “tagged” with the appropriate Voice Vlan tag.

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Creating VLAN’s on a Switch:

Switch(config)#vlan 10Switch(config-vlan)#name DATASwitch(config-vlan)#vlan 50Switch(config-vlan)#name VOICE Switch(config-vlan)#exitSwitch(config)#int fa0/1Switch(config-if)#switchport trunk encap dot1qSwitch(config-if)#switchport mode trunkSwitch(config-if)#switchport trunk native vlan 1Switch(config-if)#int fa0/2Switch(config-if)#switchport mode accessSwitch(config-if)#switchport access vlan 10Switch(config-if)#switchport voice vlan 50Switch(config-if)#endSwitch#

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Assigning ports to VLAN’s on a Switch:

Switch(config)#interface range fa0/2-24Switch(config-if-range)#switchport mode accessSwitch(config-if-range)#switchport access vlan 50Switch(config-if-range)#switchport voice vlan 10Switch(config-if-range)#spanning-tree portfastSwitch(config-if-range)#endSwitch#

• Note: It is now recommended to configure switch ports as Access ports rather then Trunk ports!

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Switch>enaSwitch#config tEnter configuration commands, one per line. End with CNTL/Z.Switch(config)#vlan 10Switch(config-vlan)#name VOICESwitch(config-vlan)#vlan 50Switch(config-vlan)#name DATASwitch(config-vlan)#int range fa0/2-24Switch(config-if-range)#switchport mode accessSwitch(config-if-range)#switchport access vlan 50Switch(config-if-range)#switchport voice vlan 10Switch(config-if-range)#endSwitch#show vlan brief

VLAN Name Status Ports---- -------------------------------- --------- -------------------------------1 default active Fa0/1, Gi0/1, Gi0/210 VOICE active Fa0/2, Fa0/3, Fa0/4, Fa0/5 Fa0/6, Fa0/7, Fa0/8, Fa0/9 Fa0/10, Fa0/11, Fa0/12, Fa0/13 Fa0/14, Fa0/15, Fa0/16, Fa0/17 Fa0/18, Fa0/19, Fa0/20, Fa0/21 Fa0/22, Fa0/23, Fa0/2450 DATA active Fa0/2, Fa0/3, Fa0/4, Fa0/5 Fa0/6, Fa0/7, Fa0/8, Fa0/9 Fa0/10, Fa0/11, Fa0/12, Fa0/13 Fa0/14, Fa0/15, Fa0/16, Fa0/17 Fa0/18, Fa0/19, Fa0/20, Fa0/21 Fa0/22, Fa0/23, Fa0/241002 fddi-default act/unsup1003 token-ring-default act/unsup1004 fddinet-default act/unsup1005 trnet-default act/unsupSwitch#

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Creating Dynamic Host Control Protocol (DHCP) on a Router:

Router(config)#ip dhcp pool DATARouter(dhcp-config)#network 1.10.0.0 255.255.255.0Router(dhcp-config)#default-router 1.10.0.1Router(dhcp-config)#dns-server 4.2.2.2Router(dhcp-config)#ip dhcp pool VOICERouter(dhcp-config)#network 1.50.0.0 255.255.255.0Router(dhcp-config)#default-router 1.50.0.1Router(dhcp-config)#dns-server 4.2.2.2Router(dhcp-config)#option 150 ip 1.50.0.1Router(dhcp-config)#exitRouter(config)#ip dhcp excluded-address 1.10.0.1 Router(config)#ip dhcp excluded-address 1.50.0.1Router(config)#endRouter#

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NTP (Network Time Protocol):

• Synchronize all devices to an atomic clock• Will display time and date on Cisco Phones• Will date e-mail and messages etc…• Can use router clock as a time source (not accurate)• Router#clock set 14:32:27 23 September 2011

Router(config)#ntp server 64.209.210.20Router(config)#clock timezone WARWICK -5Router(config)#clock summer-time EST recurring 2 Sunday March 02:00 1 Sunday November 02:00Router(config)#endRouter#

• Stratum 1: Atomic clock directly attached• Stratum 2: Receives it’s time from a Stratum 1 NTP server• Stratum 3: Receives it’s time from a Stratum 2 device

Page 24: CHAPTER 3 & 4  Understanding the Cisco IP Phone Concepts and Registration  Getting Familiar with CME Administration.

NTP (Network Time Protocol) continued:

Router#show ntp associations

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IP Phone Boot:

1. IP Phone connects to switchport2. Switchport senses and supplies PoE3. Via CDP phone receives voice VLAN information4. Phone sends DHCP request on voice VLAN and receives IP address, Mask and default-Gateway5. Once addressed the phone contacts TFTP server (Option 150) and downloads configuration files6. Phone contacts first call processing center (CME Router) and registers. If unable to contact will contact additional centers as listed in configuration• Phone will use either the SIP (Session Initiation Protocol) or SCCP (Skinny Client Control Protocol)• SIP will replace SCCP

Page 27: CHAPTER 3 & 4  Understanding the Cisco IP Phone Concepts and Registration  Getting Familiar with CME Administration.

IP Phone Protocol:

•Phone will use either the SIP (Session Initiation Protocol) or SCCP (Skinny Client Control Protocol)

• SIP will replace SCCP

•Phone protocol and CUCME manager protocol must match

•Once loaded, the CUCME protocol cannot be changed

•Phone operating systems can be changed with firmware from Cisco (Must have a CCO account)

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Voice_HM(config)#ip http serverVoice_HM(config)#ip http secure-serverVoice_HM(config)#*Sep 23 17:35:30.149: %PKI-4-NOAUTOSAVE: Configuration was modified. Issue "write memory" to save new certificateVoice_HM(config)#username Admin privilege 15 secret ciscoVoice_HM(config)#ip http authentication localVoice_HM(config)#line vty 0 4Voice_HM(config-line)#login localVoice_HM(config-line)#transport input telnet sshVoice_HM(config-line)#int fa0/0Voice_HM(config-if)#ip address 200.0.0.1 255.255.255.0Voice_HM(config-if)#ip dhcp excluded-address 200.0.0.1Voice_HM(config)#ip dhcp pool OUTSIDEVoice_HM(dhcp-config)#network 200.0.0.0 255.255.255.0Voice_HM(dhcp-config)#default-router 200.0.0.1Voice_HM(dhcp-config)#exitVoice_HM(config)#

Setting up HTTP/HTTPS access for Cisco Configuration Professional:

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End of Chapter 3 & 4