Table Of Contents
Quick Start Guide for Cisco Unified Service Monitor 1.1
SUPPLEMENTAL LICENSE AGREEMENT
Cisco Unified Service Monitor Overview
Licensing Your Product During Installation and Upgrade
Adding Licenses to an Installed Service Monitor
Server and Client System Requirements
Cisco Unified Service Monitor Port Usage
Installation and Upgrade Paths
Installing Cisco Unified Service Monitor
Before You Install Service Monitor
Configuring Your System for SNMP Queries
Preparing Information that You Need to Install Service Monitor
Performing the Service Monitor Installation
Upgrading to Cisco Unified Service Monitor 1.1
Starting Cisco Unified Service Monitor
Uninstalling and Reinstalling Service Monitor
Cisco Product Security Overview
Reporting Security Problems in Cisco Products
Obtaining Technical Assistance
Cisco Technical Support & Documentation Website
Definitions of Service Request Severity
Obtaining Additional Publications and Information
Quick Start Guide for Cisco Unified Service Monitor 1.1
1 SUPPLEMENTAL LICENSE AGREEMENT
SUPPLEMENTAL LICENSE AGREEMENT FOR CISCO SYSTEMS NETWORK MANAGEMENT SOFTWARE: CISCO UNIFIED SERVICE MONITOR.
IMPORTANT-READ CAREFULLY: This Supplemental License Agreement ("SLA") contains additional limitations on the license to the Software provided to Customer under the End User License Agreement between Customer and Cisco. Capitalized terms used in this SLA and not otherwise defined herein shall have the meanings assigned to them in the End User License Agreement. To the extent that there is a conflict among any of these terms and conditions applicable to the Software, the terms and conditions in this SLA shall take precedence.
By installing, downloading, accessing or otherwise using the Software, Customer agrees to be bound by the terms of this SLA. If Customer does not agree to the terms of this SLA, Customer may not install, download or otherwise use the Software. When used below, the term "server" refers to central processor unit.
1. ADDITIONAL LICENSE RESTRICTIONS.
•
Installation and Use. The Software components are provided to Customer solely to install, update, supplement, or replace existing functionality of the applicable Network Management Software product. Customer may install and use the following Software components:
–
CiscoWorks Common Services: Contains shared resources used by other components in this bundle. In many cases, all components in this bundle can be installed on a single server.
–
Cisco Unified Service Monitor: May be installed on one (1) server in Customer's network management environment.
•
Reproduction and Distribution. Customer may not reproduce nor distribute the Software.
•
Number of Devices. For each Software license granted and for which Customer has paid the applicable fee, Customer shall not use the Software to support more devices than set forth in the license file provided with the Software or as specified in the User Guide. Customers whose requirements exceed the Software device limit must purchase additional upgrade licenses or additional copies of the Software. The Software device limit is electronically enforced.
2. DESCRIPTION OF OTHER RIGHTS AND LIMITATIONS.
Please refer to the Cisco Systems, Inc. End User License Agreement.
2 Cisco Unified Service Monitor Overview
Cisco Unified Service Monitor (Service Monitor), a product from the Cisco Unified Communications Management Suite, receives and analyzes data from Cisco 1040 Sensors (Cisco 1040s) installed in your network. Service Monitor examines the mean opinion scores (MOS) calculated by Cisco 1040s, comparing MOS against a user-specified threshold value. When MOS drops below the threshold, Service Monitor generates SNMP traps and sends them to up to four recipients. Optionally, Service Monitor archives MOS data in disk files on the server.
Each licensed instance of Service Monitor can act as a primary Service Monitor for multiple Cisco 1040s. If you have more than one licensed instance of Service Monitor, Service Monitors can act as secondary and tertiary backups for each other. Then, when a Service Monitor is unavailable, Cisco 1040s can fail over to secondary or tertiary Service Monitors until the primary Service Monitor is once again available.
Note
A Service Monitor that acts as a backup and the Service Monitor that it backs up must both run the same version of Cisco Unified Service Monitor.
If you configure Cisco Unified Operation Manager (Operations Manager) as a trap receiver for Service Monitor, Operations Manager can further analyze, display, and act on the traps that Service Monitor generates. Operations Manager can generate service quality events, display and track these events on a real-time dashboard, and display and store event history. You can configure additional event settings on Operations Manager that alert you to low MOS and to the occurrence of many service quality events during a period of time. In addition, you can configure Operations Manager to send notifications by e-mail, SNMP trap, and syslog message.
Licensing
Service Monitor features software-based product registration and license key activation technologies. The following table provides information about terminology used in the registration process.
Understanding Licensing Terms
Table 1 describes PAK and License file and usage of these terms.
Licensing Your Product During Installation and Upgrade
Before you install the Service Monitor 1.1 product or upgrade to it from an earlier version, you should register the product and obtain a license file.
To license your product, you must:
Step 1
Register the Service Monitor product with Cisco.com using the MAC address of the server on which Cisco Unified Service Monitor 1.1 will reside and the PAK.
The PAK is printed on the software claim certificate. Get your license file from:
http://www.cisco.com/go/license
Note
You will be asked to log in. You must be a registered user of Cisco.com to log in.
Logging in allows your Cisco user profile information to autopopulate many of the product registration fields. Login is case sensitive.
Step 2
Copy the new license file to the Service Monitor server, into a directory with read permissions for the user name casuser or the user group casusers.
Note
Service Monitor uses a local user, casuser, to run processes without having Administrator privileges.
Note
If you copy a folder that contains the license file to the Service Monitor server, be sure to provide read permission for casuser on the folder as well as on the license file.
Step 3
Install or upgrade the product using the Cisco Unified Service Monitor 1.1 product CD; during the installation or upgrade, when prompted for Licensing Information:
a.
Select the first radio button (see Figure 1).
b.
Use the browse window to locate the license file directory.
c.
Click Next to install the license file.
Note
Add any license files for incremental device support after you install or upgrade to Service Monitor 1.1. (See Adding Licenses to an Installed Service Monitor.)
Figure 1 shows the licensing input dialog box that the installer displays during the installation or upgrade process.
Figure 1 Licensing Information Dialog Box
Adding Licenses to an Installed Service Monitor
After you install or upgrade to Service Monitor 1.1, add any incremental licenses that you have purchased to support additional Cisco 1040s. When you purchase an incremental license, you receive a PAK. You must use the PAK to obtain a license file and install the license.
If you installed Service Monitor 1.1 with an evaluation license, you can subsequently install a purchased license. When you purchase Service Monitor, you receive a PAK. Use it to obtain and install a license file.
To add device support to Service Monitor and to upgrade from an evaluation license to a purchased license, you must:
Step 1
Obtain the license file using the MAC address of the server where Service Monitor 1.1 is installed and the PAK that you received when you purchased the product. Get your license file from:
http://www.cisco.com/go/license
Note
You will be asked to log in. You must be a registered user of Cisco.com to log in.
Logging in allows your Cisco user profile information to autopopulate many of the product registration fields. Login is case sensitive.
Step 2
Copy the new license file to the Service Monitor server, into a directory with read permissions for the user name casuser or the user group casusers.
Note
Service Monitor uses a local user, casuser, to run processes without having Administrator privileges.
Step 3
Install the license:
a.
From the CiscoWorks Homepage, select Common Services > Server > Admin > Licensing.
The License Administration page appears.
b.
Click Update.
A file browser popup dialog box appears.
c.
Enter the path to the new license file in the License field, or click Browse to locate the license file you copied to the server in step 2.
d.
Click OK.
The system verifies whether the license file is valid, and updates the license. The updated licensing information appears on the License Information page. If you purchased more than one license, repeat Step 3 to install each additional license.
If you encounter errors, repeat the steps to license your product.
Step 4
Stop and start the daemon manager at the command line by issuing the following commands:
Net stop crmdmgtdNet start crmdmgtd
3 Server and Client System Requirements
Table 2 lists minimum server requirements for Service Monitor. Table 3 lists minimum client requirements for Service Monitor. Table 4 lists browser requirements for Service Monitor.
Table 2 Minimum Server Requirements
Component Minimum RequirementHardware
•
Server platform with Pentium IV processor, 2.0 GHz or greater
•
Color monitor with video card capable of 256 colors or more
•
CD-ROM drive
Software for Windows
Windows 2003 Server
Note
•
The system that you use for your Service Monitor server should meet all the security guidelines that Microsoft recommends for Windows 2003 Server. See the Microsoft website for security guidance:
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/prodtech/WindowsServer2003.mspx
This website is Copyright © 2008, Microsoft Corporation.•
It is recommended that Service Monitor not share a platform with other I/O or disk-intensive applications.
Available memory (RAM)
•
2 GB
Available disk space
•
40 GB minimum.
•
4 GB virtual memory.
•
NTFS file system1 required.
We recommend that you set virtual memory to twice the size of RAM.
1 Install Service Monitor on an NTFS file system. Do not install Service Monitor on a FAT file system. To verify the file system, open My Computer on the Windows desktop, right-click the drive and select Properties from the popup menu. The file system field appears in the General tab of the Properties dialog box.
Note
If you want to use a third-party SNMP management tool to make SNMP queries against the server where Service Monitor is installed, Windows SNMP service must be installed. See Configuring Your System for SNMP Queries.
Table 4 Browser Requirements
Browser Version PlatformInternet Explorer
6.0.28
Any one of the following:
•
Windows 2000
•
Windows XP
6.0 (6.0.3790.0)
Windows Server 2003
Cisco Unified Service Monitor Port Usage
This section provides a list of ports used by Cisco Unified Service Monitor.
4 Installation and Upgrade Paths
Table 6 lists the supported installation paths. Table 7 lists the supported upgrade paths.
Table 6 Supported Installation Paths
If you are installing Cisco Unified Service Monitor on a system that.. Then do thisHas Operations Manager 1.1 (which includes Service Monitor 1.1) installed and Service Monitor 1.1 is not yet licensed
Service Monitor 1.1 is already installed. To activate Service Monitor 1.1:
1.
Purchase Service Monitor 1.1 and obtain a PAK.
2.
Use the PAK and the MAC address of the system where Operations Manager is installed to register your product on Cisco.com and obtain a license file.
3.
Install the license file on the system where Service Monitor 1.1 is installed. See Adding Licenses to an Installed Service Monitor.
Has any product other than Operations Manager 1.1 installed
1.
Uninstall other products; for example, uninstall all CiscoWorks and Network Management System (NMS) products.
2.
After you complete the uninstallation, verify that NMSROOT, if it exists, does not contain any files. NMSROOT is the directory where Service Monitor will be installed; its default location is C:\Program Files\CSCOpx. If NMSROOT exists, delete any files from it.
3.
Use the instructions in this table for Does not have Operations Manager 1.1 installed.
Does not have Operations Manager 1.1 installed
1.
If you want to manage Service Monitor using a third-party SNMP management tool, install Windows SNMP service.
2.
Use the PAK and the MAC address of the Service Monitor server to register your product on Cisco.com and obtain a license file.
3.
Copy the license file to the server where you will install Cisco Unified Service Monitor. See Licensing Your Product During Installation and Upgrade.
4.
Install Cisco Unified Service Monitor 1.1.
5.
Install any license files for incremental device support. See Adding Licenses to an Installed Service Monitor.
Table 7 lists the supported upgrade paths.
Table 7 Supported Upgrade Paths
If you are upgrading to Cisco Unified Service Monitor 1.1 on a system that... Then do thisHas a licensed version of Service Monitor 1.0 installed
The recommended procedure is to obtain a license file (steps 2 and 3) prior to the upgrade and to supply the license file location during the upgrade process. However, it is permissible to select the Evaluation Only license during the upgrade; if you do so, you can perform steps 2 and 3 after the upgrade.
1.
Order Service Monitor 1.1 and obtain a PAK.
2.
Use the PAK and the MAC address of the server where Service Monitor 1.0 is installed to register your product on Cisco.com and obtain a license file.
3.
Copy the license file to the server where Service Monitor 1.0 is installed. You will be prompted to supply the license file location during the upgrade procedure.
4.
Upgrade to Cisco Unified Service Monitor 1.1. CiscoWorks Common Services 3.0 will also be upgraded to Service Pack 3 (SP3).
5.
Install any license files for incremental device support. See Adding Licenses to an Installed Service Monitor. (You can do this if the status of your license is "Purchased." For information about verifying your license, see User Guide for Cisco Unified Service Monitor.)
Note
If you selected an Evaluation Only license, the status of your license is "Evaluation" until you install a valid license file. An evaluation license expires at the end of the evaluation period. You can reactivate an expired license by installing a valid license file.
5 Installing Cisco Unified Service Monitor
This section includes both of the following:
•
Before You Install Service Monitor
•
Performing the Service Monitor Installation
Before You Install Service Monitor
Service Monitor is already installed on a server when you install Operations Manager. To activate Service Monitor on such a server, register your PAK on Cisco.com and install the license file for Cisco Unified Service Monitor.
If you want to monitor Service Monitor using a third-party SNMP management tool, see Configuring Your System for SNMP Queries.
To get ready for performing the installation, see Preparing Information that You Need to Install Service Monitor.
Configuring Your System for SNMP Queries
Service Monitor implements the system application MIB. If you want to use a third-party SNMP management tool to make SNMP queries against the server where Service Monitor is installed, Windows SNMP service must be installed.
Note
To improve security, the SNMP set operation is not allowed on any object ID (OID) in the system application MIB. After installation of Service Monitor, you should modify the credentials for Windows SNMP service to not use a default or well-known community string.
You can install Windows SNMP service before or after you install Service Monitor. Use this procedure to determine whether Windows SNMP service is installed.
Step 1
Verify that Windows SNMP service is installed on the server where you will install Service Monitor. To do so:
a.
Open the Windows administrative tool Services window.
b.
Verify the following:
–
SNMP Service is displayed on the Windows administrative tool Services window; if so, Windows SNMP service is installed.
–
SNMP service status is Started; if so, SNMP service is running.
Step 2
If Windows SNMP service is not installed, install it.
Note
Windows online help provides instructions for adding and removing Windows components, such as Windows SNMP service. To locate the instructions, try selecting the Index tab in Windows online help and entering a keyword or phrase, such as install SNMP service.
Preparing Information that You Need to Install Service Monitor
To install Service Monitor on a server without Operations Manager, you will need to supply the following information during the installation:
•
Licensing information—License file location. See Understanding Licensing Terms.
Note
If you are installing Service Monitor for evaluation purposes, you do not need to enter licensing information.
•
Passwords for the admin user and the system identity user—Passwords must contain at least 5 characters.
Note
The system identity user enables communication between servers through a trust model and is used, for example, if you want to configure authentication and authorization for Service Monitor using Cisco Secure ACS. For information about configuring Service Monitor with ACS, see User Guide for Cisco Unified Service Monitor. For information about the system identity account, see User Guide for CiscoWorks Common Services 3.0.
Note
If you choose a Typical installation, the program generates passwords randomly for the guest and casuser users, and for the database. If you choose a Custom installation, you will be prompted for these passwords also.
•
Directory name on the server to use for storing binary image files and configuration files for Cisco 1040s. (Installation will create the directory for you.)
Note
You will copy the Cisco 1040 image files from this directory to a TFTP server when you start to use Service Monitor. See User Guide for Cisco Unified Service Monitor.
•
Directory name on the server to use for archiving call metric records from Cisco 1040s if you choose to enable call metric archiving. (Installation will create the directory for you.)
Note
Call metrics archiving is disabled by default. You can enable it.
Performing the Service Monitor Installation
Do not install Service Monitor on:
•
A Primary Domain Controller (PDC) or Backup Domain Controller (BDC).
•
A FAT file system.
•
An Advanced Server with terminal services enabled in application server mode.
•
A system with Internet Information Services (IIS) enabled.
•
A system that does not have name lookup.
Before You Begin
Make sure your system meets the prerequisites:
•
Required (or desired) operating system upgrades have been performed.
•
Required Windows service packs are installed.
Close all open or active programs. Do not run other programs during the installation process.
Installing Service Monitor
Step 1
As the local administrator, log in to the machine on which you will install the Service Monitor software, and insert the Service Monitor CD-ROM into the CD-ROM drive. The Cisco Unified Service Monitor 1.1 Setup Program window opens.
If the CD-ROM is already in the CD-ROM drive and you stopped the installation process to close programs or if Autostart is disabled, click Setup.exe to restart the process.
Step 2
Click Install. The Welcome window appears.
Step 3
Click Next. The Software License Agreement window appears.
Step 4
Click Accept. The Licensing Information window appears.
Step 5
Select a radio button, enter any required information for licensing, and click Next. The Setup Type window appears.
Note
For instructions on obtaining a license file, see Licensing.
Step 6
Select one of the following radio buttons:
•
Typical—To install the complete Service Monitor package, which contains Common Services 3.0 with Service Pack 3 and Service Monitor 1.1.
•
Custom—To install the complete Service Monitor package, select a destination directory, and enter passwords for user and database.
If you choose the Typical installation mode, the following information will be supplied for you for the Common Services installation: guest password, Common Services database password, Web Server information, and self-signed certificate information. The remainder of this procedure is written for a Typical installation.
If you choose the Custom installation mode, you will be prompted to enter the above information during the installation process.
Step 7
Click Next. The Select Components window appears.
Step 8
Select all radio buttons. Click Next.
The installation program checks dependencies and system requirements.
The System Requirements window displays the results of the requirements check and advises whether the installation can continue. One of the following might occur:
•
If there is not enough disk space for the installation, the installation program displays an error message and stops.
•
If the minimum recommended requirements are not met, the installation program displays an error message and continues installing.
Step 9
Click Next. The Change Admin Password window appears:
a.
Enter an admin password, confirm, and click Next. The Change System Identity Account Password window appears
b.
Enter a System Identity Account password (and confirm), and click Next. The Create casuser dialog box appears.
c.
Click Yes to continue with the installation.
Note
If you selected the Custom installation mode, during this part of the installation you will be asked to enter the following information: guest password, causer password, Common Services database password, Web server information, and self-signed certificate information.
A window appears, allowing you to specify a location for the call metrics data.
Step 10
Enter or browse to the location where you want the Service Monitor call metrics data stored, and click Next.
Note
Call metrics archiving is disabled by default.
A window appears, allowing you to specify a location for the Cisco 1040 Sensor image and config files.
Step 11
Enter or browse to the location where you want to store the image file and configuration file for Cisco 1040s, and click Next.
Step 12
The Summary window appears, displaying the current settings. Click Next. The installation proceeds.
Step 13
Click OK on additional messages if they are displayed:
If Windows SNMP service is not installed on your system, you will see this message:
Windows SNMP service is not installed on your system. This installation will continue. To install support for system application and host resources MIBs, you must install the Windows SNMP service, using Add/Remove Programs from the Control Panel.Step 14
After the installation completes, verify that Service Monitor was installed correctly by starting Service Monitor. See Starting Cisco Unified Service Monitor.
6 Upgrading to Cisco Unified Service Monitor 1.1
The existing database is preserved when you upgrade to Service Monitor 1.1. As a precaution, the upgrade procedure performs a backup prior to copying and installing new files on your system.
Step 1
As the local administrator, log in to the machine on which Service Monitor 1.0 is installed, and insert the Service Monitor 1.1 CD-ROM into the CD-ROM drive. The Cisco Unified Service Monitor 1.1 Setup Program window opens.
If the CD-ROM is already in the CD-ROM drive and you stopped the installation process to close programs or if Autostart is disabled, click Setup.exe to restart the process.
Step 2
Click Install. The Welcome window appears.
Step 3
Click Next. The Software License Agreement window appears.
Step 4
Click Accept. The Licensing Information window appears.
Step 5
Select one of the following, and then click Next:
•
Evaluation Only—You can complete the upgrade and then register the license file later; see Adding Licenses to an Installed Service Monitor.
•
License File Location—Browse to enter the location. For instructions on obtaining a license file, see Licensing.
The Setup Type window appears.
Step 6
Select one of the following radio buttons:
•
Typical—To install the complete Service Monitor package, which contains Common Services 3.0 with Service Pack 3 and Service Monitor 1.1.
•
Custom—To install the complete Service Monitor package and enter passwords for user and database.
If you choose the Typical installation mode, the following information will be supplied for you for the Common Services installation: guest password, Common Services database password, Web Server information, and self-signed certificate information.
If you choose the Custom installation mode, you will be prompted to enter the above information during the installation process.
Step 7
Click Next. The Backup Data window appears.
Step 8
Enter or browse to a directory where you want to store data and click Next. The backup starts and a message is displayed while it is in progress. The Select Components window appears.
Step 9
Select all radio buttons and click Next. The installation program checks dependencies and system requirements. The System Requirements window displays the results of the requirements check and advises whether the installation can continue. One of the following might occur:
•
If there is not enough disk space for the installation, the installation program displays an error message and stops.
•
If the minimum recommended requirements are not met, the installation program displays an error message and continues installing.
Step 10
Click Next. A window appears, displaying the current location for storing call metrics data.
Step 11
Click Next to keep the current location, or browse to a new location and click Next. A window appears, displaying the current location for storing Cisco 1040 Sensor image and configuration files.
Step 12
Click Next to keep the current location, or browse to a new location and click Next.
Step 13
The Summary window appears, displaying the current settings. Click Next. The upgrade proceeds and completes.
Step 14
From Windows Explorer, delete any files in the folder NMSROOT\MDC\tomcat\work.
Note
It is not necessary to delete any folders within NMSROOT\MDC\tomcat\work. NMSROOT is the directory where Service Monitor is installed. Its default location is C:\Program Files\CSCOpx.
Step 15
Verify the upgrade by starting Service Monitor and reviewing the information on the Cisco 1040 Sensor Details page.
Note
After upgrade, logging settings are returned to their default values. As a result, only error messages are written to Service Monitor log files. If you need additional information in your log files to help you debug a problem, update your logging settings. See the Service Monitor online help for instructions.
7 Starting Cisco Unified Service Monitor
Step 1
In your browser, type http://servername:1741 where servername is the IP address or DNS name of the server where Service Monitor resides. The CiscoWorks home page appears.
Step 2
From the CiscoWorks home page, in the Cisco Unified Service Monitor pane, select Service Monitor > Service Monitor Operations. A new window opens, displaying the Service Monitor home page.
8 Uninstalling and Reinstalling Service Monitor
This section contains the following:
Uninstalling Service Monitor
CautionYou must use the Cisco Unified Service Monitor uninstallation program to remove Service Monitor from your system. If you try to remove the files and programs manually, you can seriously damage your system.
Step 1
As the local administrator, log in to the system on which Service Monitor is installed, and select Start > All Programs > Cisco Unified Service Monitor 1.1 > Uninstall Cisco Unified Service Monitor 1.1 to start the uninstallation process. A window appears, listing the components available for uninstallation.
Step 2
Select all check boxes. Click Next. A window appears, displaying the components you have selected to uninstall.
Step 3
Click Next.
Messages showing the progress of the uninstallation appear. The Uninstallation Complete dialog box displays this message:
Before you install Service Monitor product, you must restart your computer.Step 4
Click OK and restart your system.
Reinstalling Service Monitor
The existing database is preserved when you reinstall Service Monitor. As a precaution, the reinstallation procedure performs a backup prior to copying and installing new files on your system.
Note
To reinstall Service Monitor on a system with Operations Manager, see Installation Guide for Cisco Unified Operations Manager (Includes Service Monitor).
Use this procedure if you need to install Service Monitor 1.1 on a system where Service Monitor 1.1 is already installed.
Step 1
As the local administrator, log in to the machine on which you will reinstall Service Monitor, and insert the Service Monitor CD-ROM into the CD-ROM drive. The installer window appears, asking you if you want to install Service Monitor.
Note
If the CD-ROM is already in the CD-ROM drive and you stopped the reinstallation process to close programs or if Autostart is disabled, click Setup.exe from the top directory of your CD-ROM to restart the process.
Step 2
Click Yes. The Welcome window appears.
Step 3
Click Next. The Software License Agreement window appears.
Step 4
Click Accept. The Setup Type dialog box appears.
Step 5
Select the Typical radio button and click Next. The Backup Data window appears.
Step 6
Enter or browse to a directory where you want to store data and click Next. The backup starts and a message is displayed while it is in progress. The Select Components window appears.
Step 7
Select all radio buttons. Click Next.
The installation program checks dependencies and system requirements.
The System Requirements window displays the results of the requirements check and advises whether the installation can continue. One of the following might occur:
•
If there is not enough disk space for the installation, the installation program displays an error message and stops.
•
If the minimum recommended requirements are not met, the installation program displays an error message and continues installing.
Step 8
Click Next. A message is displayed, informing you that this is a reinstallation and that the database will be preserved.
Step 9
Click OK. A window appears, displaying the current location for storing call metrics data.
Step 10
Click Next to keep the current location, or browse to a new location and click Next.
A window appears, displaying the current location for storing Cisco 1040 Sensor image and configuration files.
Step 11
Click Next to keep the current location, or browse to a new location and click Next.
Step 12
The Summary window appears, displaying the current settings. Click Next. The reinstallation proceeds and the Setup Complete window appears.
Step 13
Click Finish.
9 Where to Go Next
After you have installed Service Monitor, you are ready to configure it, install and start managing Cisco 1040s, and start monitoring IP telephony service quality. For more information, see the following User Guides:
•
User Guide for Cisco Unified Service Monitor
•
User Guide for Cisco Unified Operations Manager
You can access these documents:
•
In PDF in the Documentation directory on the respective product CD-ROM.
•
From the online help integrated into the product.
Note
For information about Cisco 1040 Sensor, see Quick Start Guide for Cisco 1040 Sensor, shipped with Cisco 1040 and available on Cisco.com.
10 Related Documentation
Note
The originally published printed and electronic documentation is included with your product. Any changes after original publication are reflected on Cisco.com, where you will find the most up-to-date documentation.
For information about installing, troubleshooting, and using the applications and tools in the Cisco Unified Communications Management Suite, see the sources of information described in Table 8.
Note
To view documents in Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF), Adobe Acrobat 4.0 or later is required.
Table 8 Related Documentation
To learn
more about... See this document In the product package? On the product
CD?1 On Cisco.com? On the Cisco Doc. CD? In the online
help?The known product bugs (DDTSs)
Release Notes for Cisco Unified Service Monitor 1.1
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
No
Release Notes for Cisco Unified Operations Manager 1.1
No
No
No
Yes
No
Quick Start Guide for Cisco Unified Service Monitor 1.1
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
No
Quick Start Guide for Cisco 1040 Sensor
No
Yes
No
Yes
No
Features, tasks, and troubleshooting
User Guide for Cisco Unified Operations Manager
No
No
No
Yes
No
User Guide for Cisco Unified Service Monitor
No
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
1 Provided as PDF in Documentation folder on the documentation CD.
11 Obtaining Documentation
Cisco documentation and additional literature are available on Cisco.com. Cisco also provides several ways to obtain technical assistance and other technical resources. These sections explain how to obtain technical information from Cisco Systems.
Cisco.com
You can access the most current Cisco documentation at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/techsupport
You can access the Cisco website at this URL:
You can access international Cisco websites at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/public/countries_languages.shtml
Product Documentation DVD
The Product Documentation DVD is a comprehensive library of technical product documentation on a portable medium. The DVD enables you to access multiple versions of installation, configuration, and command guides for Cisco hardware and software products. With the DVD, you have access to the same HTML documentation that is found on the Cisco website without being connected to the Internet. Certain products also have .PDF versions of the documentation available.
The Product Documentation DVD is available as a single unit or as a subscription. Registered Cisco.com users (Cisco direct customers) can order a Product Documentation DVD (product number DOC-DOCDVD= or DOC-DOCDVD=SUB) from Cisco Marketplace at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/go/marketplace/
Ordering Documentation
Registered Cisco.com users may order Cisco documentation at the Product Documentation Store in the Cisco Marketplace at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/go/marketplace/
Nonregistered Cisco.com users can order technical documentation from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. (0800 to 1700) PDT by calling 1 866 463-3487 in the United States and Canada, or elsewhere by calling 011 408 519-5055. You can also order documentation by e-mail at tech-doc-store-mkpl@external.cisco.com or by fax at 1 408 519-5001 in the United States and Canada, or elsewhere at 011 408 519-5001.
12 Documentation Feedback
You can rate and provide feedback about Cisco technical documents by completing the online feedback form that appears with the technical documents on Cisco.com.
You can submit comments about Cisco documentation by using the response card (if present) behind the front cover of your document or by writing to the following address:
Cisco Systems
Attn: Customer Document Ordering
170 West Tasman Drive
San Jose, CA 95134-9883We appreciate your comments.
13 Cisco Product Security Overview
Cisco provides a free online Security Vulnerability Policy portal at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/products_security_vulnerability_policy.html
From this site, you will find information about how to:
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Report security vulnerabilities in Cisco products.
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Obtain assistance with security incidents that involve Cisco products.
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Register to receive security information from Cisco.
A current list of security advisories, security notices, and security responses for Cisco products is available at this URL:
To see security advisories, security notices, and security responses as they are updated in real time, you can subscribe to the Product Security Incident Response Team Really Simple Syndication (PSIRT RSS) feed. Information about how to subscribe to the PSIRT RSS feed is found at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/products_psirt_rss_feed.html
Reporting Security Problems in Cisco Products
Cisco is committed to delivering secure products. We test our products internally before we release them, and we strive to correct all vulnerabilities quickly. If you think that you have identified a vulnerability in a Cisco product, contact PSIRT:
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For Emergencies only — security-alert@cisco.com
An emergency is either a condition in which a system is under active attack or a condition for which a severe and urgent security vulnerability should be reported. All other conditions are considered nonemergencies.
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For Nonemergencies — psirt@cisco.com
In an emergency, you can also reach PSIRT by telephone:
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1 877 228-7302
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1 408 525-6532
Tip
We encourage you to use Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) or a compatible product (for example, GnuPG) to encrypt any sensitive information that you send to Cisco. PSIRT can work with information that has been encrypted with PGP versions 2.x through 9.x.
Never use a revoked or an expired encryption key. The correct public key to use in your correspondence with PSIRT is the one linked in the Contact Summary section of the Security Vulnerability Policy page at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/products_security_vulnerability_policy.html
The link on this page has the current PGP key ID in use.
If you do not have or use PGP, contact PSIRT at the aforementioned e-mail addresses or phone numbers before sending any sensitive material to find other means of encrypting the data.
14 Obtaining Technical Assistance
Cisco Technical Support provides 24-hour-a-day award-winning technical assistance. The Cisco Technical Support & Documentation website on Cisco.com features extensive online support resources. In addition, if you have a valid Cisco service contract, Cisco Technical Assistance Center (TAC) engineers provide telephone support. If you do not have a valid Cisco service contract, contact your reseller.
Cisco Technical Support & Documentation Website
The Cisco Technical Support & Documentation website provides online documents and tools for troubleshooting and resolving technical issues with Cisco products and technologies. The website is available 24 hours a day, at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/techsupport
Access to all tools on the Cisco Technical Support & Documentation website requires a Cisco.com user ID and password. If you have a valid service contract but do not have a user ID or password, you can register at this URL:
http://tools.cisco.com/RPF/register/register.do
Note
Use the Cisco Product Identification (CPI) tool to locate your product serial number before submitting a web or phone request for service. You can access the CPI tool from the Cisco Technical Support & Documentation website by clicking the Tools & Resources link under Documentation & Tools. Choose Cisco Product Identification Tool from the Alphabetical Index drop-down list, or click the Cisco Product Identification Tool link under Alerts & RMAs. The CPI tool offers three search options: by product ID or model name; by tree view; or for certain products, by copying and pasting show command output. Search results show an illustration of your product with the serial number label location highlighted. Locate the serial number label on your product and record the information before placing a service call.
Submitting a Service Request
Using the online TAC Service Request Tool is the fastest way to open S3 and S4 service requests. (S3 and S4 service requests are those in which your network is minimally impaired or for which you require product information.) After you describe your situation, the TAC Service Request Tool provides recommended solutions. If your issue is not resolved using the recommended resources, your service request is assigned to a Cisco engineer. The TAC Service Request Tool is located at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/techsupport/servicerequest
For S1 or S2 service requests, or if you do not have Internet access, contact the Cisco TAC by telephone. (S1 or S2 service requests are those in which your production network is down or severely degraded.) Cisco engineers are assigned immediately to S1 and S2 service requests to help keep your business operations running smoothly.
To open a service request by telephone, use one of the following numbers:
Asia-Pacific: +61 2 8446 7411 (Australia: 1 800 805 227)
EMEA: +32 2 704 55 55
USA: 1 800 553-2447For a complete list of Cisco TAC contacts, go to this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/techsupport/contacts
Definitions of Service Request Severity
To ensure that all service requests are reported in a standard format, Cisco has established severity definitions.
Severity 1 (S1)—An existing network is down, or there is a critical impact to your business operations. You and Cisco will commit all necessary resources around the clock to resolve the situation.
Severity 2 (S2)—Operation of an existing network is severely degraded, or significant aspects of your business operations are negatively affected by inadequate performance of Cisco products. You and Cisco will commit full-time resources during normal business hours to resolve the situation.
Severity 3 (S3)—Operational performance of the network is impaired, while most business operations remain functional. You and Cisco will commit resources during normal business hours to restore service to satisfactory levels.
Severity 4 (S4)—You require information or assistance with Cisco product capabilities, installation, or configuration. There is little or no effect on your business operations.
15 Obtaining Additional Publications and Information
Information about Cisco products, technologies, and network solutions is available from various online and printed sources.
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The Cisco Product Quick Reference Guide is a handy, compact reference tool that includes brief product overviews, key features, sample part numbers, and abbreviated technical specifications for many Cisco products that are sold through channel partners. It is updated twice a year and includes the latest Cisco offerings. To order and find out more about the Cisco Product Quick Reference Guide, go to this URL:
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Cisco Marketplace provides a variety of Cisco books, reference guides, documentation, and logo merchandise. Visit Cisco Marketplace, the company store, at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/go/marketplace/
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Cisco Press publishes a wide range of general networking, training and certification titles. Both new and experienced users will benefit from these publications. For current Cisco Press titles and other information, go to Cisco Press at this URL:
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Packet magazine is the Cisco Systems technical user magazine for maximizing Internet and networking investments. Each quarter, Packet delivers coverage of the latest industry trends, technology breakthroughs, and Cisco products and solutions, as well as network deployment and troubleshooting tips, configuration examples, customer case studies, certification and training information, and links to scores of in-depth online resources. You can access Packet magazine at this URL:
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iQ Magazine is the quarterly publication from Cisco Systems designed to help growing companies learn how they can use technology to increase revenue, streamline their business, and expand services. The publication identifies the challenges facing these companies and the technologies to help solve them, using real-world case studies and business strategies to help readers make sound technology investment decisions. You can access iQ Magazine at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/go/iqmagazine
or view the digital edition at this URL:
http://ciscoiq.texterity.com/ciscoiq/sample/
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Internet Protocol Journal is a quarterly journal published by Cisco Systems for engineering professionals involved in designing, developing, and operating public and private internets and intranets. You can access the Internet Protocol Journal at this URL:
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Networking products offered by Cisco Systems, as well as customer support services, can be obtained at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/index.html
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Networking Professionals Connection is an interactive website for networking professionals to share questions, suggestions, and information about networking products and technologies with Cisco experts and other networking professionals. Join a discussion at this URL:
http://www.cisco.com/discuss/networking
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World-class networking training is available from Cisco. You can view current offerings at this URL:




