C H A P T E R
2
Preparing to Install the Cisco
Unified IP Phone on Your Network
Cisco Unified IP Phones enable you to communicate using voice over a data
network. To provide this capability, the IP Phones depend upon and interact with
several other key Cisco IP Telephony and network components, including
Cisco Unified CallManager, DNS and DHCP servers, TFTP servers, media
resources, Cisco prestandard PoE, and so on.
This chapter focuses on the interactions between the Cisco Unified IP Phone 7970
Series and Cisco Unified CallManager, DNS and DHCP servers, TFTP servers,
and switches. It also describes options for powering phones.
For related information about voice and IP communications, refer to this URL:
This chapter provides an overview of the interaction between the
Cisco Unified IP Phone 7970 Series and other key components of the Voice over
IP (VoIP) network. It includes these topics:
•
•
•
•
•
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Understanding Interactions with Other Cisco Unified IP Communications Products
For information about configuring Cisco Unified CallManager to work with the
IP devices described in this chapter, refer to Cisco Unified CallManager
Administration Guide, Cisco Unified CallManager System Guide, and to Cisco
Unified CallManager Security Guide.
For an overview of security functionality for the Cisco Unified IP Phone, see the
“Understanding Security Features for Cisco Unified IP Phones” section on
page 1-11.
Note
If the Cisco Unified IP Phone model that you want to configure does not appear
in the Phone Type drop-down list in Cisco Unified CallManager Administration,
go to the following URL and install the latest support patch for your version of
Cisco Unified CallManager:
Related Topic
•
Telephony Features Available for the Phone, page 5-2
Understanding How the Cisco Unified IP Phone Interacts with the
VLAN
The Cisco Unified IP Phone 7970 Series have an internal Ethernet switch,
enabling forwarding of packets to the phone, and to the access port and the
network port on the back of the phone.
If a computer is connected to the access port, the computer and the phone share
the same physical link to the switch and share the same port on the switch. This
shared physical link has the following implications for the VLAN configuration
on the network:
•
The current VLANs might be configured on an IP subnet basis. However,
additional IP address might not be available to assign the phone to the same
subnet as other devices connect to the same port.
•
•
Data traffic present on the data/native VLAN may reduce the quality of
Voice-over-IP traffic.
Network security may indicate a need to isolate the VLAN voice traffic from
the VLAN data traffic.
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Providing Power to the Phone
You can resolve these issues by isolating the voice traffic onto a separate VLAN.
The switch port that the phone is connected to would be configured to have
separate VLANs for carrying:
•
Voice traffic to and from the IP phone (auxiliary VLAN, on the Cisco Catalyst
6000 series, for example)
•
Data traffic to and from the PC connected to the switch through the access
port of the IP phone (native VLAN)
Isolating the phones on a separate, auxiliary VLAN improves the quality of the
voice traffic and allows a large number of phones to be added to an existing
network where there are not enough IP addresses for each phone.
For more information, refer to the documentation included with a Cisco switch.
You can also access related documentation at this URL:
Related Topics
•
•
Network Configuration Menu, page 4-7
Providing Power to the Phone
Models in the Cisco Unified IP Phone 7970 Series can be powered with external
power or with Power over Ethernet (PoE). External power is provided through a
separate power supply. PoE is provided by a switch through the Ethernet cable
attached to a phone.
Note
When you install a phone that is powered with external power, connect the power
supply to the phone and to a power outlet before you connect the Ethernet cable
to the phone. When you remove a phone that is powered with external power,
disconnect the Ethernet cable from the phone before you disconnect the power
supply.
These sections provide more information about powering a phone:
•
•
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Providing Power to the Phone
•
•
Power Guidelines
Table 2-1 provides guidelines that apply to external power and to PoE power for
phones the Cisco Unified IP Phone 7970 Series.
Table 2-1 Guidelines for Pow ering the Cisco Unified IP Phone 7970 Series
Power Type
Guidelines
External power—
•
The Cisco Unified IP Phone 7970G and 7971G-GE use the
Provided through the
CP-PWR-CUBE-3
external power supply
CP-PWR-CUBE-3 power supply.
PoE power—Provided by
a switch through the
Ethernet cable attached to
the phone
•
•
•
The inline power patch panel WS-PWR-PANEL is not compatible
with the Cisco Unified IP Phone.
To ensure uninterruptible operation of the phone, make sure that the
switch has a backup power supply.
Make sure that the CatOS or IOS version running on your switch
supports your intended phone deployment. Refer to the documentation
for your switch for operating system version information.
Phone Power Consumption and Display Brightness
The power consumed by a phone depends on its power configuration. See
power consumed by a phone for each configuration option and the correlating
phone screen brightness level.
Note
Power consumption values shown in the table include power losses in the cable
that connects the phone to the switch.
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Providing Power to the Phone
Table 2-2 Power Consum ption and Display Brightness for Power Configurations
Max. Power
Consumed
Phone
Screen
Phone Model
Power Configuration
from a Switch Brightness
Cisco Unified Cisco prestandard PoE from a switch that supports a
6.3 W
6.3 W
6.3 W
Approx. 1/2
Approx. 1/2
IP Phone
7970G
maximum of 7 W power per port, with bidirectional
power negotiation enabled
Cisco prestandard PoE from a Cisco Switch that
supports 7 W or 15.4 W power per port, without
bidirectional power negotiation
IEEE 802.3af Class 3 power from a Cisco switch,
without bidirectional power negotiation
Approx. 1/2
Approx. 1/2
IEEE 802.3af Class 3 power from a third-party switch 6.3 W
1
IEEE 802.3af Class 3 power from a Cisco switch, with 10.25 W
bidirectional power negotiation enabled
Full
Cisco prestandard PoE from a Cisco Switch that
supports 15.4 W power per port, with bidirectional
power negotiation enabled
10.25 W
Full
External power
—
Full
Cisco Unified IEEE 802.3af Class 3 power from a Cisco switch (with 15.4 W
Near full
IP Phone
7971G-GE
or without bidirectional power negotiation enabled) or
from a third-party switch
External power
—
Full
1. Starts at approximately 1/2 brightness, changes to full brightness when the phone negotiates additional power.
Note
When a phone is powered with a method that does not support full brightness for
the phone screen, the phone Brightness control (Settings > User Preferences >
Brightness) will not allow you to set the brightness to the maximum value.
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Providing Power to the Phone
Power Outage
Your accessibility to emergency service through the phone is dependent on the
phone being powered. If there is an interruption in the power supply, Service and
Emergency Calling Service dialing will not function until power is restored. In the
case of a power failure or disruption, you may need to reset or reconfigure
equipment before using the Service or Emergency Calling Service dialing.
Obtaining Additional Information about Power
These documents provide information about these topics:
•
•
•
Cisco switches that work with the Cisco Unified IP Phone 7970 Series
The Cisco IOS releases that support bidirectional power negotiation
Other requirements and restrictions regarding power
Table 2-3 Related Docum entation for Power
Document Topics
URL
PoE Solutions
Cisco Catalyst Switches
Integrated Service Routers
Cisco IOS Software
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Understanding Phone Configuration Files
Understanding Phone Configuration Files
Configuration files for a phone are stored on the TFTP server and define
parameters for connecting to Cisco Unified CallManager. In general, any time you
make a change in Cisco Unified CallManager that requires the phone to be reset,
a change is made to the phone’s configuration file automatically.
Configuration files also contain information about which image load the phone
should be running. If this image load differs from the one currently loaded on a
phone, the phone contacts the TFTP server to request the required load files.
(These files are digitally signed to ensure the authenticity of the files’ source.)
In addition, if the device security mode in the configuration file is set to
Authenticated and the CTL file on the phone has a valid certificate for Cisco
Unified CallManager, the phone establishes a TLS connection to Cisco
Unified CallManager. Otherwise, the phone establishes a TCP connection.
Note
If the device security mode in the configuration file is set to Authenticated or
Encrypted, but the phone has not received a CTL file, the phone will continuously
try to obtain a CTL file so that it can register securely.
If you configure security-related settings in Cisco Unified CallManager
Administration, the phone configuration file will contain sensitive information.
To ensure the privacy of a configuration file, you must configure it for encryption.
For detailed information, refer to the “Configuring Encrypted Phone
Configuration Files” chapter in Cisco Unified CallManager Security Guide.
A phone accesses a default configuration file named XmlDefault.cnf.xml from the
TFTP server when these conditions exist:
•
•
•
You have enabled auto-registration in Cisco Unified CallManager
The phone has not been added to the Cisco Unified CallManager Database
The phone is registering for the first time
If auto registration is not enabled and the phone has not been added to the Cisco
Unified CallManager Database, the phone registration request will be rejected. In
this case, the phone will reset and attempt to register repeatedly.
If the phone has registered before, the phone will access the configuration file
named SEPmac_address.cnf.xml, where mac_address is the MAC address of the
phone.
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Understanding the Phone Startup Process
Understanding the Phone Startup Process
When connecting to the VoIP network, the Cisco Unified IP Phone goes through
network configuration, not all of these process steps may occur on your Cisco
Unified IP Phone.
Table 2-4 Cisco Unified IP Phone Startup Process
Process Step
Description
Related Topics
1. Obtaining Power
from the Switch
attached to the phone.
See the “Resolving
Startup Problems”
section on page 9-2.
2. Loading the Stored
The Cisco Unified IP Phone has non-volatile Flash See the “Resolving
Phone Image
memory in which it stores firmware images and
user-defined preferences. At startup, the phone
runs a bootstrap loader that loads a phone image
stored in Flash memory. Using this image, the
phone initializes its software and hardware.
Startup Problems”
section on page 9-2.
3. Configuring VLAN
If the Cisco Unified IP Phone is connected to a
See the “Network
Cisco switch, the switch next informs the phone of Configuration Menu”
the voice VLAN defined on the switch port. The section on page 4-7.
phone needs to know its VLAN membership
See the “Resolving
before it can proceed with the Dynamic Host
Startup Problems”
Configuration Protocol (DHCP) request for an IP
section on page 9-2.
address.
4. Obtaining an IP
If the Cisco Unified IP Phone is using DHCP to
See the “Network
Address
obtain an IP address, the phone queries the DHCP Configuration Menu”
server to obtain one. If you are not using DHCP in section on page 4-7.
your network, you must assign static IP addresses
to each phone locally.
Startup Problems”
See the “Resolving
section on page 9-2.
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Understanding the Phone Startup Process
Table 2-4 Cisco Unified IP Phone Startup Process (continued)
Process Step
Description
In addition to assigning an IP address, the DHCP See the “Network
server directs the Cisco Unified IP Phone to a Configuration Menu”
Related Topics
5. Accessing a TFTP
Server
TFTP Server. If the phone has a statically-defined section on page 4-7.
IP address, you must configure the TFTP server
See the “Resolving
locally on the phone; the phone then contacts the
Startup Problems”
TFTP server directly.
section on page 9-2.
Note
You can also assign an alternative TFTP
server to use instead of the one assigned by
DHCP.
6. Requesting the CTL The TFTP server stores the certificate trust list
Refer to the Cisco
file
(CTL) file. This file contains a list of Cisco
Unified CallManager
Unified CallManagers and TFTP servers that the Security Guide,
phone is authorized to connect to. It also contains “Configuring the Cisco
the certificates necessary for establishing a secure CTL Client” chapter.
connection between the phone and Cisco
Unified CallManager.
7. Requesting the
The TFTP server has configuration files, which
define parameters for connecting to Cisco
Unified CallManager and other information for
the phone.
See the “Understanding
Configuration File
See the “Resolving
Startup Problems”
section on page 9-2.
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Adding Phones to the Cisco Unified CallManager Database
Table 2-4 Cisco Unified IP Phone Startup Process (continued)
Process Step
Description
Related Topics
8. Contacting Cisco
Unified CallManager
The configuration file defines how the Cisco
Unified IP Phone communicates with Cisco
See the “Resolving
Startup Problems”
Unified CallManager and provides a phone with section on page 9-2.
its load ID. After obtaining the file from the TFTP
server, the phone attempts to make a connection to
the highest priority Cisco Unified CallManager on
the list. If security is implemented, the phone
makes a TLS connection. Otherwise, it makes a
non-secure TCP connection.
If the phone was manually added to the database,
Cisco Unified CallManager identifies the phone.
If the phone was not manually added to the
database and auto-registration is enabled in Cisco
Unified CallManager, the phone attempts to
auto-register itself in the Cisco
Unified CallManager database.
Note
Auto-registration is disabled when
security is enabled on Cisco
Unified CallManager. In this case, the
phone must be manually added to the
Cisco Unified CallManager database.
Adding Phones to the Cisco Unified CallManager
Database
Before installing the Cisco Unified IP phone, you must choose a method for
adding phones to the Cisco Unified CallManager database. These sections
describe the methods:
•
•
•
•
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Adding Phones to the Cisco Unified CallManager Database
Table 2-5 provides an overview of these methods for adding phones to the
Cisco Unified CallManager database.
Table 2-5 Methods for Adding Phones to the Cisco Unified CallManager
Database
Requires MAC
Method
Address?
Notes
Auto-registration
No
Provides no control over directory
number assignment to phone.
Not available when security or
encryption is enabled.
Auto-registration
with TAPS
No
Requires auto-registration and the Bulk
Administration Tool (BAT); updates the
Cisco Unified CallManager database
with the MAC address and DNs for the
device when user calls TAPS from the
phone.
Using the Cisco
Unified
CallManager
Administration
Yes
Yes
Must add phones individually.
Using BAT
Can add groups of same model of phone.
Can schedule when phones are added to
the Cisco Unified CallManager
database.
Adding Phones with Auto-Registration
By enabling auto-registration before you begin installing phones, you can:
•
Automatically add a Cisco Unified IP Phone to the Cisco Unified
CallManager database when you physically connect the phone to your IP
telephony network. During auto-registration, Cisco Unified CallManager
assigns the next available sequential directory number to the phone.
•
Add phones without first gathering MAC addresses from the phones.
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Adding Phones to the Cisco Unified CallManager Database
•
•
Quickly enter phones into the Cisco Unified CallManager database and
modify any settings, such as the directory numbers, from
Cisco Unified CallManager.
Move auto-registered phones to new locations and assign them to different
device pools without affecting their directory numbers.
Note
You should use auto-registration to add less than 100 phones to your network. To
add more than 100 phones to your network, use the Bulk Administration Tool
In some cases, you might not want to use auto-registration: for example, if you
want to assign a specific directory number to the phone or if you plan to
implement authentication or encryption, as described in Cisco Unified
CallManager Security Guide. For information about enabling auto-registration,
refer to “Enabling Auto-Registration” in the Cisco Unified CallManager
Administration Guide.
Note
Cisco Unified CallManager automatically disables auto-registration if you
configure the cluster-wide security mode for authentication and encryption
through the Cisco CTL client.
Related Topics
•
•
•
Adding Phones with Auto-Registration and TAPS
TAPS, the Tool for Auto-Registered Phones Support, works with the Bulk
Administration Tool (BAT) to update a batch of phones that were already added
to the Cisco Unified CallManager database with dummy MAC addresses. You use
TAPS to update MAC addresses and download pre-defined configurations for
phones.
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Adding Phones to the Cisco Unified CallManager Database
You can add phones with auto-registration and TAPS without first gathering
MAC addresses from phones.
Note
You should use auto-registration and TAPS to add less than 100 phones to your
network. To add more than 100 phones to your network, use the Bulk
To implement TAPS, you or the end-user dial a TAPS directory number and follow
voice prompts. When the process is complete, the phone will have downloaded its
directory number and other settings, and the phone will be updated in
Cisco Unified CallManager Administration with the correct MAC address.
Auto-registration must be enabled in Cisco Unified CallManager Administration
(System > Cisco CallManager) for TAPS to function.
Note
Cisco Unified CallManager automatically disables auto-registration if you
configure the cluster-wide security mode for authentication and encryption
through the Cisco CTL client.
Refer to Cisco Unified CallManager Bulk Administration Guide for detailed
instructions about BAT and about TAPS.
Related Topics
•
•
•
Adding Phones with Cisco Unified CallManager Administration
You can add phones individually to the Cisco Unified CallManager database
using Cisco Unified CallManager Administration. To do so, you first need to
obtain the MAC address for each phone.
For information about determining a MAC address, see the “Determining the
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Adding Phones to the Cisco Unified CallManager Database
After you have collected MAC addresses, in Cisco Unified CallManager
Administration, choose Device > Phone and click Add New to begin.
For complete instructions and conceptual information about Cisco Unified
CallManager, refer to Cisco Unified CallManager Administration Guide and to
Cisco Unified CallManager System Guide.
Related Topics
•
•
•
Adding Phones with BAT
The Cisco Bulk Administration Tool (BAT) is a plug-in application for
Cisco Unified CallManager that enables you to perform batch operations,
including registration, on multiple phones.
Before you can add phones using BAT only (not in conjunction with TAPS), you
must obtain the MAC address for each phone.
For information about determining a MAC address, see the “Determining the
For detailed instructions about using BAT, refer to Cisco Unified CallManager
Administration Guide and to Cisco Unified CallManager Bulk Administration
Guide.
Related Topics
•
•
•
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Using Cisco Unified IP Phones with Different Protocols
Using Cisco Unified IP Phones with Different
Protocols
The Cisco Unified IP Phone can operate with SCCP (Skinny Client Control
Protocol) or SIP (Session Initiation Protocol). You can convert a phone that is
using one protocol for use with the other protocol.
This section includes these topics:
•
•
•
•
Converting a New Phone from SCCP to SIP
A new, unused phone is set for SCCP by default. To convert this phone to SIP,
perform these steps:
Procedure
Step 1
Take one of these actions:
•
•
•
To auto-register the phone, set the Auto Registration Phone Protocol
parameter in Cisco Unified CallManager Administration to SIP.
To provision the phone using the Bulk Administration Tool (BAT), choose the
appropriate phone model and choose SIP from the BAT.
To provision the phone manually, make the appropriate changes for SIP on
the Phone Configuration page in Cisco Unified CallManager Administration.
Refer to Cisco Unified CallManager Administration Guide for detailed
information about Cisco Unified CallManager configuration. Refer to Cisco
Unified CallManager Bulk Administration Guide for detailed information about
using the BAT.
Step 2
If you are not using DHCP in your network, configure the network parameters for
the phone.
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Using Cisco Unified IP Phones with Different Protocols
See the “Configuring Startup Network Settings” section on page 3-14.
Power cycle the phone.
Step 3
Converting an In-Use Phone from SCCP to SIP
You can use the Bulk Administration Tool (BAT) to convert a phone that is in use
in your network from SCCP to SIP. To access BAT from Cisco Unified
CallManager Administration, choose Bulk Administration > Phones > Migrate
Phones > SCCP to SIP. For detailed information, refer to Cisco Unified
CallManager Bulk Administration Guide.
Converting an In-Use Phone from SIP to SCCP
To convert a phone that is in use in your network from SIP to SCCP, perform these
steps. For more information, Cisco Unified CallManager Administration Guide.
Procedure
Step 1
Step 2
Step 3
In Cisco Unified CallManager Administration, delete the existing SIP phone from
the Cisco Unified CallManager database.
In Cisco Unified CallManager Administration, create the phone as an SCCP
phone.
Power cycle the phone.
Deploying a Phone in an SCCP and SIP Environment
To deploy Cisco Unified IP Phones in an environment that includes SCCP and SIP
and in which the Cisco Unified CallManager Auto-Registration parameter is
SCCP, perform these general steps:
1. Set the Cisco Unified CallManager auto_registration_protocol parameter to
SCCP.
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Determining the MAC Address of a Cisco Unified IP Phone
To do so, from Cisco Unified CallManager Administration, choose System >
Enterprise Parameters.
2. Install the phones.
3. Change the auto_registration_protocol parameter to SIP.
4. Auto-register the SIP phones.
Determining the MAC Address of a Cisco
Unified IP Phone
You can determine the MAC address for a phone in any of these ways:
•
From the phone, choose Settings > Model Information and look at the
MAC Address field.
•
•
Look at the MAC label on the back of the phone.
Display the web page for the phone and click the Device Information
hyperlink.
For information about accessing the web page, see the “Accessing the Web
Page for a Phone” section on page 8-2.
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