Table Of Contents
    
Configuring the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server System
Configuring the LAN Parameters for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series
Configuring the Time Zone for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series
About Configuring the Blades
Configuring a T1 CAS Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Configuring 576 T1 CAS Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106 Only) Example
Configuring 1152 T1 CAS Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 Only) Example
Configuring Spans for a T1 CAS Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Configuring a T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Configuring 368 T1 PRI Ports Example
Configuring 736 T1 PRI Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 Only) Example
Configuring Port Groups
Assigning Ports to Port Groups
Copying Port Records
Configuring T1 Spans for a T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Configuring an E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Configuring 240 E1 Ports Example
Configuring 720 E1 Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 Only) Example
Configuring 960 E1 Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 Only) Example
Configuring Port Groups
Assigning Ports to Port Groups
Copying Port Records
Configuring Spans for an E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
About a Pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
About QoS Configuration
About Type of Service Byte
About IP Precedence
About DSCP
About Jitter Buffer Settings
About Jitter Buffer Configuration
Configuring a Pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Configuring 480 IP Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106 Only) Example
Configuring 960 IP Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 Only) Example
Setting IP Codec Configuration
About Mixed Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System Configurations
Configuring 96 T1 CAS Ports and 240 IP Ports Example
Configuring 23 T1 PRI Ports and 120 IP Ports Example
Configuring 120 E1 Ports and 120 IP Ports Example
Configuring 480 E1 Ports and 480 IP Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 Only) Example
Setting the Date and Time for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series
Configuring Ports By Using MeetingTime
Changing the IP Address of your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server System
    
    
    
Configuring the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server System
This chapter explains how to configure a newly-installed Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server system, which consists of the following activities:
• Configuring the LAN Parameters for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series
Configuring the LAN Parameters for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series
• Configuring the Time Zone for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series
Configuring the Time Zone for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series
• Configuring a T1 CAS Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Configuring a T1 CAS Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
• Configuring a T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Configuring a T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
• Configuring an E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Configuring an E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
• Configuring a Pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Configuring a Pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
• Setting the Date and Time for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series
Setting the Date and Time for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series
• Configuring Ports By Using MeetingTime
Configuring Ports By Using MeetingTime
Note	 For information about the CLI commands, see Appendix A, "Command-Line Interface Reference."
For information about the CLI commands, see Appendix A, "Command-Line Interface Reference."
 
Configuring the LAN Parameters for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series
The LAN parameters identify your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 series on your TCP/IP network. Use the LAN parameter information from worksheet 3-3 in the applicable Installation Planning Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
To Configure LAN Parameters
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 Enter getether. The Ethernet address of the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 series appears as in the following example:
Enter getether. The Ethernet address of the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 series appears as in the following example:
meetingplace: tech$ getether
 
Step 3	 Record the Ethernet address for future use.
Record the Ethernet address for future use.
Step 4	 Enter net. The following menu appears:
Enter net. The following menu appears:
 1) View the server & site configuration
 
 2) Modify the server configuration
 
 3) Select another server (current unit = #0)
 
Step 5	 Modify the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server configuration by entering 2. The following menu appears:
Modify the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server configuration by entering 2. The following menu appears:
 1) View the current configuration
 
 2) Select a different site for this server
 
 3) Change the host and site names
 
 4) Change server IP address and Ethernet address
 
 5) Change site subnet mask or broadcast addr
 
 6) Change site routing information
 
 7) Change network time protocol servers
 
99) Return to the main menu
 
Step 6	 Select 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 in order and follow the prompts to enter values by using Worksheet 3-5 in the Installation Planning Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace.
Select 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 in order and follow the prompts to enter values by using Worksheet 3-5 in the Installation Planning Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace.
See Table 1-1 for the details of each parameter.
 
Table 1-1	Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server System Configuration Parameters 
      | 
Parameter
 | 
Explanation
 | 
  | 
Active
 | 
System status, noneditable.
 | 
  | 
Description
 | 
Designates three names:
 
Host name—The name that appears as the command line prompt for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace CLI.
 
Note	 To help with network maintenance issues, you may want to make this name identical to the external DNS name. This external DNS name is how the network refers to the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 series. However, configuring this host name in Cisco Unified MeetingPlace does not automatically configure the DNS entry in your DNS server. In addition, when attempting to access other servers from Cisco Unified MeetingPlace, the other server IP address must be used because Cisco Unified MeetingPlace is not configured to support DNS internally. 
Host description—The name of the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server as seen in MeetingTime and Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Web Conferencing. It is helpful to use "MeetingPlace" in this field because it can be different from the TCP/IP name.
 
Site name—An arbitrary name for the location of the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server.
 | 
  | 
IP address
 | 
Must correspond to your network requirements. See worksheet 3-5 in the Installation Planning Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace.
 | 
  | 
Ethernet address
 | 
The Media Access Control (MAC) address of the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server. It corresponds to the MAC hardware address that uniquely identifies each node of a network. During setup, the getether command produced this value.
 | 
  | 
NTP server
 | 
This IP address designates the Network Time Protocol (NTP) server on your LAN. It allows Cisco Unified MeetingPlace to synchronize its clock with the network time server.
 | 
  | 
Site subnet mask
 | 
A bit mask used to determine to which subnet an IP address belongs. Your network administrator specifies this value. See worksheet 3-5 in the Installation Planning Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace.
 | 
  | 
Site broadcast address
 | 
Address used to broadcast packets on the LAN segment. The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server provides this automatically. See worksheet 3-5 in the Installation Planning Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace.
 | 
  | 
Site default gateway
 | 
Address of the gateway that accepts and routes information to other networks. See worksheet 3-5 in the Installation Planning Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace.
 | 
 
See the "Examples" section for detailed examples.
Step 7	 Quit modifying by entering 99.
Quit modifying by entering 99.
Step 8	 Save the changes you made by entering y. The net command menu is displayed.
Save the changes you made by entering y. The net command menu is displayed.
Step 9	 View and confirm the new configuration by entering 1. See the following example:
View and confirm the new configuration by entering 1. See the following example:
 1) View the server & site configuration
 
 2) Modify the server configuration
 
 3) Select another server (current unit = 30)
 
Current server configuration:
 
Description:          MeetingPlace
 
Ethernet address:     0001af0bc2cd
 
NTP servers:          198.207.208.114 198.207.208.84
 
Site subnet mask:     255.255.0.0
 
Site broadcast addr:  172.20.255.255
 
Site default gateway: 172.20.1.1
 
 1) View the server & site configuration
 
 2) Modify the server configuration
 
 3) Select another server 9current unit = 30)
 
Step 10	 Exit the net command by entering 99.
Exit the net command by entering 99.
Note	 You must restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system before some of the changes made by the net command can take affect. If you need to restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system will say so. If you need to restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system to test your changes, restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, wait five minutes, and then ping the IP address you entered with the net command.
You must restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system before some of the changes made by the net command can take affect. If you need to restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system will say so. If you need to restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system to test your changes, restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, wait five minutes, and then ping the IP address you entered with the net command.
Examples
See the following for an example of changing the host and site names (option 3 from the net command menu):
Enter new host name [giraffe]: giraffe
 
Enter new host description [MeetingPlace]: MeetingPlace
 
Enter new site name [Home Site]: Home Site
 
 1) View the current configuration
 
 2) Select a different site for this server
 
 3) Change the host and site names
 
 4) Change server IP address and Ethernet address
 
 5) Change site subnet mask or broadcast addr
 
 6) Change site routing information
 
 7) Change network time protocol servers
 
99) Return to the main menu
 
See the following for an example of changing the IP address and verifying the Ethernet address (option 4 from the net command menu):
Enter new IP address [172.20.21.13]: 172.20.21.13
 
Please enter the 12-digit Ethernet address (e.g., 0000c0112233).
 
[0001af0bc2cd]: 0001af0bc2cd
 
 1) View the current configuration
 
 2) Select a different site for this server
 
 3) Change the host and site names
 
 4) Change server IP address and Ethernet address
 
 5) Change site subnet mask or broadcast addr
 
 6) Change site routing information
 
 7) Change network time protocol servers
 
99) Return to the main menu
 
See the following for an example of changing the site subnet mask or broadcast address (option 5 from the net command menu). The net command displays the default site subnet mask and broadcast address. You do not need to modify these unless they are different from the default.
Enter new subnet mask [255.255.0.0]: 255.255.0.0
 
Enter new broadcast address [172.20.255.255]: 172.20.255.255
 
 1) View the current configuration
 
 2) Select a different site for this server
 
 3) Change the host and site names
 
 4) Change server IP address and Ethernet address
 
 5) Change site subnet mask or broadcast addr
 
 6) Change site routing information
 
 7) Change network time protocol servers
 
99) Return to the main menu
 
See the following for an example of changing the site routing information (option 6 from the net command menu). The net command displays the default gateway. You do not need to be modify it unless it is different.
To specify no default gateway, enter "0.0.0.0".
 
Enter new default gateway address [172.20.1.1]: 172.20.1.1
 
 1) View the current configuration
 
 2) Select a different site for this server
 
 3) Change the host and site names
 
 4) Change server IP address and Ethernet address
 
 5) Change site subnet mask or broadcast addr
 
 6) Change site routing information
 
 7) Change network time protocol servers
 
99) Return to the main menu
 
See the following for an example of changing the Network Time Protocol servers (option 7 from the net command menu):
The IP addresses for up to three Network Time Protocol servers may be entered.
 
To clear an entry, use the address "0.0.0.0".
 
NTP server #1 [198.201.208.114]: 198.207.208.114
 
NTP server #2 [198.201.208.84]: 198.207.208.84
 
NTP server #3 [0.0.0.0]: 0.0.0.0
 
 1) View the current configuration
 
 2) Select a different site for this server
 
 3) Change the host and site names
 
 4) Change server IP address and Ethernet address
 
 5) Change site subnet mask or broadcast addr
 
 6) Change site routing information
 
 7) Change network time protocol servers
 
99) Return to the main menu
 
 
Configuring the Time Zone for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series
This section describes how to configure the time zone for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 series.
Note	 If the time zone is not set correctly, meetings will occur at the wrong time.
If the time zone is not set correctly, meetings will occur at the wrong time.
To Configure the Time Zone
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter timezone. The following example appears:
At the tech$ prompt, enter timezone. The following example appears:
meetingplace:tech$ timezone
 
Please select the region where this server is installed:
 
Step 3	 Enter the number that applies to the region where your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server is located. Another menu appears with options for that region. The following is an example of the screen that appears:
Enter the number that applies to the region where your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server is located. Another menu appears with options for that region. The following is an example of the screen that appears:
Please select the time zone for this server.
 
The following timezones are available:
 
Step 4	 Enter the number that appears next to the location where your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server is. The following is an example of the screen that appears if you select option 7 for Los Angeles:
Enter the number that appears next to the location where your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server is. The following is an example of the screen that appears if you select option 7 for Los Angeles:
The local time zone (PST) is 480 minutes west of GMT
 
Daylight savings time policy: US/Canada
 
Step 5	 Confirm your selection by entering y. The line "DONE" and the tech$ prompt appear.
Confirm your selection by entering y. The line "DONE" and the tech$ prompt appear.
Note	 See Appendix B, "Time Zone Codes" for a complete list of the time zone codes.
See Appendix B, "Time Zone Codes" for a complete list of the time zone codes.
 
About Configuring the Blades
This section describes how to configure the blades of a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 series. There are four types of blades:
• T1 Smart Blade
T1 Smart Blade
• Multi Access Blade (MP-MA-16)
Multi Access Blade (MP-MA-16)
• Multi Access Blade (MP-MA-4)
Multi Access Blade (MP-MA-4)
• Smart Blade
Smart Blade
See Table 1-2 for an explanation of each blade type.
 
Table 1-2	Blade Types 
      | 
Blade Type
 | 
Explanation
 | 
  | 
T1 Smart Blade
 | 
Provides both PRC and MSC functionality along with necessary trunk interface functionality for digital T1 CAS phone lines.
 | 
  | 
Multi Access Blade (MP-MA-16 and MP-MA-4)
 | 
Provides the necessary trunk interface card functionality for E1 digital telephony, T1 PRI functionality, and IP-based telephony. The Multi Access Blade supports both Euro ISDN and QSIG telephony protocols, T1 PRI support for North America (U.S. and Canada), and G.711 and G.729a audio encoding for IP.
 
MP-MA-16: Supports up to 16 spans.
 
MP-MA-4: Supports up to 4 spans.
 | 
  | 
Smart Blade
 | 
Provides both PRC and MSC functionality in a single card.
 | 
 

Note	 Mixing protocols is not supported except in combination with IP ports. For example, a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system cannot have both T1 and E1 ports configured but it can have T1 (either PRI or CAS) and IP ports or E1 and IP ports. Also, a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system cannot have both T1 CAS and T1 PRI ports configured. See Table 1-3.
Mixing protocols is not supported except in combination with IP ports. For example, a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system cannot have both T1 and E1 ports configured but it can have T1 (either PRI or CAS) and IP ports or E1 and IP ports. Also, a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system cannot have both T1 CAS and T1 PRI ports configured. See Table 1-3.
 
Table 1-3	Allowed Blade Configurations
      | 
Not Allowed
 | 
Allowed
 | 
  | 
T1 CAS and E1
 | 
T1 PRI and IP
 | 
  | 
T1 PRI and E1
 | 
E1 and IP
 | 
  | 
T1 PRI and T1 CAS
 | 
T1 CAS and IP
 | 
 
The following procedures describe how to configure a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server:
• Configuring a T1 CAS Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Configuring a T1 CAS Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
• Configuring a T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Configuring a T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
• Configuring an E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Configuring an E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
• About a Pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
About a Pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
• About Mixed Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System Configurations
About Mixed Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System Configurations
 
Configuring a T1 CAS Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Note	 The necessary cables should already be attached to the transition modules on the back of your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server. If they are not, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server.
The necessary cables should already be attached to the transition modules on the back of your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server. If they are not, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server.
To Configure a T1 CAS Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -t number_of_T1_ports for a pure T1 CAS Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system without any IP configuration.
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -t number_of_T1_ports for a pure T1 CAS Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system without any IP configuration.
Step 3	 Confirm the blade command by entering y.
Confirm the blade command by entering y.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system tells you what it is configuring. The tech$ prompt appears when the configuration is complete. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ blade -t <# T1 ports>
 
This will reset many DB tables, are you sure? (y/n): y
 
Restart the system for changes to take effect
 
Step 4	 Verify your configuration by entering blade. See the example in step 5 of the "Configuring 1152 T1 CAS Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 Only) Example" section.
Verify your configuration by entering blade. See the example in step 5 of the "Configuring 1152 T1 CAS Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 Only) Example" section.
Step 5	 Confirm the screen output is correct for your configuration.
Confirm the screen output is correct for your configuration.
Step 6	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Configuring 576 T1 CAS Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106 Only) Example
Note	 Although a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 can be configured with 576 T1 CAS ports, this example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106 only.
Although a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 can be configured with 576 T1 CAS ports, this example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106 only.
To Configure 575 T1 CAS Ports Example
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -t 576.
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -t 576.
Step 3	 Confirm the blade command by entering y.
Confirm the blade command by entering y.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system responds by telling you how many ports it is configuring. When the tech$ prompt appears, it is complete. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ blade -t 576
 
This will reset many DB tables, are you sure? (y/n): y
 
Restart the system for changes to take effect
 
Step 4	 Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Step 5	 Confirm that the screen output is similar to the following example:
Confirm that the screen output is similar to the following example:
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     CG6000C   T1       0      0-23, 24-47, 48-71, 72-95
 
 2     CG6000C   T1       1      96-119, 120-143, 144-167, 168-191
 
 3     CG6000C   T1       2      192-215, 216-239, 240-263, 264-287
 
 4     CG6000C   T1       3      288-311, 312-335, 336-359, 360-383
 
 5     CG6000C   T1       4      384-407, 408-431, 432-455, 456-479
 
 6     CG6000C   T1       5      480-503, 504-527, 528-552, 552-575
 
*****        B L A D E   C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Step 6	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Configuring 1152 T1 CAS Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 Only) Example
To Configure 1152 T1 CAS Ports Example
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -t 1152.
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -t 1152.
Step 3	 Confirm the blade command by entering y.
Confirm the blade command by entering y.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system responds by telling you how many ports it is configuring. When the tech$ prompt appears, it is complete. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ blade -t 1152
 
This will reset many DB tables, are you sure? (y/n): y
 
Configuring 1152 T1 ports
 
Restart the system for changes to take effect
 
Step 4	 Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Step 5	 Confirm that the screen output is similar to the following example:
Confirm that the screen output is similar to the following example:
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     CG6000C   T1       0      0-23, 24-47, 48-71, 72-95
 
 2     CG6000C   T1       1      96-119, 120-143, 144-167, 168-191
 
 3     CG6000C   T1       2      192-215, 216-239, 240-263, 264-287
 
 4     CG6000C   T1       3      288-311, 312-335, 336-359, 360-383
 
 5     CG6000C   T1       4      384-407, 408-431, 432-455, 456-479
 
 6     CG6000C   T1       5      480-503, 504-527, 528-552, 552-575
 
 11    CG6000C   T1       6      576-599, 600-623, 624-647, 648-671
 
 12    CG6000C   T1       7      672-695, 696-719, 720-743, 744-767
 
 13    CG6000C   T1       8      768-791, 792-815, 816-839, 840-863
 
 14    CG6000C   T1       9      864-887, 888-911, 912-935, 936-959
 
 15    CG6000C   T1       10     960-983, 984-1007, 1008-1031, 1032-1055
 
 16    CG6000C   T1       11     1056-1079, 1080-1103, 1104-1127, 1128-1151
 
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Step 6	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Configuring Spans for a T1 CAS Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
T1 spans connect to the T1 Smart Blade transition modules in the back of the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server. The T1 spans are automatically activated and configured with default settings when the blade command is run. Table 1-4 lists the default span configuration.
Check the worksheets in the Installation Planning Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace to see if your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system is configured this way. If these default settings are accurate for your installation, you do not need to complete this section.
 
Table 1-4	Default T1 CAS Span Configuration 
      | 
Parameter
 | 
Default
 | 
Explanation
 | 
Possible Values
 | 
  | 
Activate the DTI span?
 | 
y
 | 
Specifies if the span is active.
 | 
• y = active 
• n = inactive | 
  | 
Framing
 | 
ESF
 | 
Specifies the framing protocol used on this span. Determined by the service provider.
 
We recommend using ESF only.
 | 
• D4 
• ESF | 
  | 
Zero code suppression
 | 
B8ZS
 | 
Specifies the zero code suppression for the span. Determined by the service provider.
 
We recommend using B8ZS only.
 | 
• none 
• B8ZS 
• jammed-bit | 
  | 
Timing
 | 
external
 | 
Specifies if the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server should get clock timing from the PBX or the central office or if timing is generated by Cisco Unified MeetingPlace.
 
All spans should be configured as external. The internal setting is for diagnostic purposes.
 | 
• internal 
• external (the span is connected to the public network or a trusted system, such as the PBX) | 
  | 
External sync priority
 | 
none.
 
The T1 span connected to the T1 Smart Blade in slot 1, line A gets sync priority 1, line B gets 2, etc. 
 | 
Specifies the priority of the spans that are set for external timing. The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system always tries to synchronize from the highest priority span. If the synchronization span goes down, the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system automatically switches synchronization to the next highest span. If a higher priority span comes up, the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system automatically synchronizes off of it.
 | 
• 1-255 (1 is the highest, 255 is the lowest) 
• never | 
  | 
Trunk [x]
 | 
Numbering is done in order (1, 2, 3, etc.). For example,
 
Trunk [1]:port 0
 
Trunk [2]:port 1
 
Trunk [3]:port 2
 | 
Specifies which port in the database is assigned to the specific hardware trunk on the card.
 | 
• number | 
  | 
Remote loopback to network
 | 
n
 | 
Specifies if the span should be put into a loopback mode for testing from the remote end.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no (normal operation) | 
  | 
Internal data loopback
 | 
n
 | 
Specifies if the span should loop back locally for running diagnostics.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no (normal operation) | 
  | 
Port group
 | 
0
 | 
Specifies the number of the port group.
 | 
• 0 (T1 CAS) 
• 1 (IP) 
• 2 (E1) 
• 3 (T1 PRI) | 
  | 
Active?
 | 
y (if you use a blade to configure T1)
 | 
Specifies if the port group is active.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no | 
  | 
Card type
 | 
T1
 | 
Specifies the type of card.
 | 
• none 
• T1 
• analog 
• E1 
• IP | 
  | 
Signaling protocol
 | 
wink start
 | 
Specifies the signaling protocol.
 | 
• loop start 
• wink start 
• ground start 
• clear channel 
• E1 
• IP 
• protocol table | 
  | 
Protocol table
 | 
0
 | 
Specifies the number of the protocol table to copy from.
 | 
• number from 0 to 99 | 
  | 
Number of DID digits expected
 | 
0
 | 
Specifies the number of DID digits.
 | 
• number from 0 to 6 | 
  | 
Default access type
 | 
combined access
 | 
Specifies the access type
 | 
• Combined access 
• DID meeting 
• Profile 
• MeetingNotes 
• loop through transfer 
• EBSApp1004 
• EBSApp1005 
• EBSApp1007 
• EBS Xfer test 
• NewApp1011 
• Choose music 
• Spanish samples 
• Goto123123_1015 | 
  | 
Language
 | 
English (US)
 | 
Specifies which language to use.
 | 
• English (US) 
• English (UK) 
• no language | 
  | 
Human assistance?
 | 
n
 | 
Specifies if human assistance is allowed.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no | 
  | 
Flash transfer?
 | 
n
 | 
Specifies if this can be flash transferred.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no | 
  | 
Outdial?
 | 
y
 | 
Specifies if this can be outdialed on.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no | 
 
To Configure Spans for a T1 CAS Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade. One of the following examples appears:
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade. One of the following examples appears:
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106:
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Enter blade slot [1..6]:   1
 
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     CG6000C   T1       0      0-23, none, none, none
 
 6     TP1610-4  IP       0      24-83 (172.27.6.140)
 
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112:
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Enter blade slot [1..16]:   1
 
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     TP1610    T1       0      0-22, 23-45, 46-68, 69-91
 
                                 92-114, 115-137, 138-160, 161-183
 
                                 184-206, 207-229, 230-252, 253-275
 
                                 276-298, 299-321, 322-344, 345-367
 
 2     TP1610    T1       1      368-390, 391-413, 414-436, 437-459
 
                                 460-482, 483-505, 506-528, 529-551
 
                                 552-574, 575-597, 598-620, 621-643
 
                                 644-666, 667-689, 690-712, 713-735
 
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Step 3	 Enter the values from Table 1-4. Press Enter after you enter each value and the next line appears. If you receive an error stating that you have exceeded the number of available ports, check your MeetingTime settings.
Enter the values from Table 1-4. Press Enter after you enter each value and the next line appears. If you receive an error stating that you have exceeded the number of available ports, check your MeetingTime settings.
Note	 Do not change the Span Flags field unless a Cisco TAC representative instructs you to.
Do not change the Span Flags field unless a Cisco TAC representative instructs you to.
Step 4	 (Optional) Enter 2 to configure another span.
(Optional) Enter 2 to configure another span.
Step 5	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Configuring a T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Note	 The necessary cables should already be attached to the transition modules on the back of your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server. If they are not, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server.
The necessary cables should already be attached to the transition modules on the back of your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server. If they are not, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server.
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106: In a T1 PRI configuration, the maximum number of ports per span is 23. The maximum number of T1 PRI ports for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106 is 368 because each MP-MA-16-PRI can support up to 16 spans and it can have only one Multi Access Blade (either MP-MA-4-PRI or MP-MA-16-PRI). 16 spans x 23 ports each = 368 total ports.
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112: In a T1 PRI configuration, the maximum number of ports per span is 23. The maximum number of T1 PRI ports for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 is 736 because each Multi Access Blade can support up to 16 spans. A Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 can have 2 MP-MA-16-PRIs for a total of 32 spans. 32 spans x 23 ports each = 736 total ports.
To Configure a T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -p number_of_T1_PRI_ports for a pure T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system without any IP configuration.
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -p number_of_T1_PRI_ports for a pure T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system without any IP configuration.
Step 3	 Confirm the blade command by entering y.
Confirm the blade command by entering y.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system tells you what it is configuring. The tech$ prompt appears when the configuration is complete. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ blade -p <# T1 PRI ports>
 
This will reset many DB tables, are you sure? (y/n): y
 
Configuring "X" T1 PRI ports
 
Restart the system for changes to take effect
 
Step 4	 Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Step 5	 Confirm the screen output is correct for your configuration.
Confirm the screen output is correct for your configuration.
Step 6	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Configuring 368 T1 PRI Ports Example
To Configure 368 T1 PRI Ports Example
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -p 368 and press Enter.
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -p 368 and press Enter.
Step 3	 Confirm the blade command by entering y.
Confirm the blade command by entering y.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system responds by telling you how many ports it is configuring. When the tech$ prompt appears, it is complete. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ blade -p 368
 
This will reset many DB tables, are you sure? (y/n): y
 
Configuring 368 T1 PRI ports
 
Restart the system for changes to take effect
 
Step 4	 Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Step 5	 Confirm the screen output is similar to the following example:
Confirm the screen output is similar to the following example:
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     TP1610    T1       0      0-22, 23-45, 46-68, 69-91
 
                                 92-114, 115-137, 138-160, 161-183
 
                                 184-206, 207-229, 230-252, 253-275
 
                                 276-298, 299-321, 322-344, 345-367
 
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Note	 A Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106 has 6 slots only, so the slots labeled 11 to 16 (the highlighted lines) in the preceding example are for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 only.
A Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106 has 6 slots only, so the slots labeled 11 to 16 (the highlighted lines) in the preceding example are for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 only.
Step 6	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Configuring 736 T1 PRI Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 Only) Example
To Configure 736 T1 PRI Ports Example
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -p 736 and press Enter.
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -p 736 and press Enter.
Step 3	 Confirm the blade command by entering y.
Confirm the blade command by entering y.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system responds by telling you how many ports it is configuring. When the tech$ prompt appears, it is complete. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ blade -p 736
 
This will reset many DB tables, are you sure? (y/n): y
 
Configuring 736 T1 PRI ports
 
Restart the system for changes to take effect
 
Step 4	 Verify your configuration by typing blade and pressing Enter.
Verify your configuration by typing blade and pressing Enter.
Step 5	 Confirm the screen output is similar to the example below.
Confirm the screen output is similar to the example below.
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     TP1610    T1       0      0-22, 23-45, 46-68, 69-91
 
                                 92-114, 115-137, 138-160, 161-183
 
                                 184-206, 207-229, 230-252, 253-275
 
                                 276-298, 299-321, 322-344, 345-367
 
 2     TP1610    T1       1      368-390, 391-413, 414-436, 437-459
 
                                 460-482, 483-505, 506-528, 529-551
 
                                 552-574, 575-597, 598-620, 621-643
 
                                 644-666, 667-689, 690-712, 713-735
 
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Step 6	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Configuring Port Groups
You can create port groups so that a group of ports can be configured with the same parameters. You use port groups to separate Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server functions, such as outdial versus no outdial and T1 CAS versus IP.
Note	 If this installation requires NSF codes or if you are unsure if they are required, see Chapter 3, "Configuring Network Specific Facility Codes."
If this installation requires NSF codes or if you are unsure if they are required, see Chapter 3, "Configuring Network Specific Facility Codes."
To Configure Port Groups
Step 1	 At the tech$ prompt, enter port. The following menu appears:
At the tech$ prompt, enter port. The following menu appears:
*****   P O R T / G R O U P  C O N F I G  M E N U  *****
 
Step 2	 Modify the group record by entering 5. The second line in the following example appears:
Modify the group record by entering 5. The second line in the following example appears:
Enter port group record number [0..31, <cr> for all] : 0
 
------------     GROUP 0      --------------
 
--- To skip over a field, just press <cr> ---
 
  Activate the group?               [y] :  y
 
  Signaling         [                 ] :  protocol table
 
  Number of DID digits              [0] :
 
Step 3	 Enter the appropriate port group record number. In the preceding example, it is port group 0, so enter 0. The rest of the preceding example appears.
Enter the appropriate port group record number. In the preceding example, it is port group 0, so enter 0. The rest of the preceding example appears.
Step 4	 Activate the port group by entering y.
Activate the port group by entering y.
Step 5	 Select the card type by entering T1.
Select the card type by entering T1.
Step 6	 Select signaling by entering protocol table.
Select signaling by entering protocol table.
Step 7	 Select the appropriate protocol table number. In this example, it is protocol table 2, so enter 2. See Table 1-5 for a list of default protocol tables.
Select the appropriate protocol table number. In this example, it is protocol table 2, so enter 2. See Table 1-5 for a list of default protocol tables.
 
Table 1-5	Default Protocol Table Settings—T1 PRI
      | 
Protocol Table Number
 | 
Default Protocol
 | 
  | 
2
 | 
AT&T PRI
 | 
  | 
3
 | 
Nortel PRI
 | 
  | 
4
 | 
Bell PRI
 | 
 
Note	 The protocol table contains the configuration information for the type of signaling used. All T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace systems are shipped from the factory with protocol table 2 set to use the default setting of AT&T PRI protocol, protocol table 3 to use Nortel PRI, and table 4 to use Bell PRI. If this is not correct for your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, change it by using the protparm command.
The protocol table contains the configuration information for the type of signaling used. All T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace systems are shipped from the factory with protocol table 2 set to use the default setting of AT&T PRI protocol, protocol table 3 to use Nortel PRI, and table 4 to use Bell PRI. If this is not correct for your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, change it by using the protparm command.
Step 8	 (Optional) Repeat this procedure if you need more than one port group.
(Optional) Repeat this procedure if you need more than one port group.
Step 9	 To exit the port command, enter x.
To exit the port command, enter x.
 
Assigning Ports to Port Groups
You can assign specific ports to port groups so that all ports in that group have the same parameters.
To Assign Ports to Port Groups
Step 1	 At the tech$ prompt, enter port. See the example in step 1 of the "Configuring Port Groups" section.
At the tech$ prompt, enter port. See the example in step 1 of the "Configuring Port Groups" section.
Step 2	 Enter 2 to modify a port record. The first line in the following example appears:
Enter 2 to modify a port record. The first line in the following example appears:
Enter port record number [0..735] : 0 
 
-------------- UNIT 0   PORT 0 -------------
 
--- To skip over a field, just press <cr> ---
 
Note	 The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the ports number from 0 to 368.
The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the ports number from 0 to 368.
Step 3	 Enter the port number. In this example, it is port 0, so enter 0. The rest of the preceding example appears.
Enter the port number. In this example, it is port 0, so enter 0. The rest of the preceding example appears.
Step 4	 Enter the number of the port group. In this example, it is port group 0, so enter 0.
Enter the number of the port group. In this example, it is port group 0, so enter 0.
Note	 If you would like to copy this port record to other ports, see the "Copying Port Records" section.
If you would like to copy this port record to other ports, see the "Copying Port Records" section.
Step 5	 Exit the port command by entering x.
Exit the port command by entering x.
 
Copying Port Records
Copying port records provides an easy way to copy the port record for one port to as many ports as desired.
To Copy Port Records
Step 1	 If you are not already accessing the port command, at the tech$ prompt, enter port. See the following example:
If you are not already accessing the port command, at the tech$ prompt, enter port. See the following example:
*****   P O R T / G R O U P   C O N F I G   M E N U  *****
 
Enter port record number to copy from [0..735] : 0
 
Enter port(s) to copy to [0-735] : 1-735
 
Copied to port record(s) 1-735.
 
Note	 The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the ports number from 0 to 368. These are the maximum number of ports allowed. Depending on your configuration, you may have fewer ports.
The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the ports number from 0 to 368. These are the maximum number of ports allowed. Depending on your configuration, you may have fewer ports.
Step 2	 Copy the port records by entering 3.
Copy the port records by entering 3.
Step 3	 Enter the port number from which you want to copy, as shown in line 13 of the preceding example. In this example, it is port 0, so enter 0.
Enter the port number from which you want to copy, as shown in line 13 of the preceding example. In this example, it is port 0, so enter 0.
Step 4	 Enter the port numbers to which you want to copy, as shown in line 14 of the preceding example. In this example, all ports are being configured with the same parameters as port 0, so enter 1-735 for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 or 1-368 for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106.
Enter the port numbers to which you want to copy, as shown in line 14 of the preceding example. In this example, all ports are being configured with the same parameters as port 0, so enter 1-735 for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 or 1-368 for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106.
Step 5	 The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system tells you which ports were copied to, as shown in line 15 of the preceding example.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system tells you which ports were copied to, as shown in line 15 of the preceding example.
Step 6	 Exit the port command by entering x.
Exit the port command by entering x.
 
Configuring T1 Spans for a T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
T1 spans connect to the Multi Access Blade transition modules in the back of your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server.
Note	 The T1 spans are automatically activated and configured with default settings when the blade command is run. Table 1-6 lists the default span configuration.
The T1 spans are automatically activated and configured with default settings when the blade command is run. Table 1-6 lists the default span configuration.
Check the worksheets in the Installation Planning Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace to see if your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system is configured this way. If these default settings are accurate for your installation, you do not need to complete this section. If the default settings are not accurate for your installation, complete the steps that follow.
 
Table 1-6	Default T1 PRI Span Configuration 
      | 
Parameter
 | 
Default
 | 
Explanation
 | 
Possible Values
 | 
  | 
Activate the DTI span?
 | 
y
 | 
Specifies if the span is active.
 | 
• y = active 
• n = inactive | 
  | 
Framing
 | 
ESF
 | 
Specifies the framing protocol used on this span. Determined by the service provider.
 
We recommend using ESF only.
 | 
• D4 
• ESF | 
  | 
Zero code suppression
 | 
B8ZS
 | 
Specifies the zero code suppression for the span. Determined by the service provider.
 
We recommend using B8ZS only.
 | 
• none 
• B8ZS 
• jammed-bit | 
  | 
Timing
 | 
external
 | 
Specifies if the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server should get clock timing from the PBX or central office or if timing is generated by Cisco Unified MeetingPlace.
 
All spans should be configured as external. The internal setting is for diagnostic purposes.
 | 
• internal 
• external (the span is connected to the public network or a trusted system, such as the PBX) | 
  | 
External sync priority
 | 
none. 
 
The T1 span connected to the T1 Smart Blade in slot 1, line A gets sync priority 1, line B gets 2, etc.
 | 
Specifies the priority of the spans that are set for external timing. The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system always tries to synchronize from the highest priority span. If the synchronization span goes down, the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system automatically switches synchronization to the next highest span. If a higher priority span comes up, the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system automatically synchronizes off of it.
 | 
• 1-255 (1 is the highest, 255 is the lowest) 
• never | 
  | 
Trunk [x]
 | 
Numbering is done in order (1, 2, 3, etc.). For example,
 
Trunk [1]:port 0
 
Trunk [2]:port 1
 
Trunk [3]:port 2
 | 
Specifies which port in the database is assigned to the specific hardware trunk on the card.
 | 
• number | 
  | 
Remote loopback to network
 | 
n
 | 
Specifies if the span should be put into a loopback mode for testing from the remote end.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no (normal operation) | 
  | 
Internal data loopback
 | 
n
 | 
Specifies if the span should loop back locally for running diagnostics.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no (normal operation) | 
  | 
Port group
 | 
3
 | 
Specifies the number of the port group.
 | 
• 0 (T1 CAS) 
• 1 (IP) 
• 2 (E1) 
• 3 (T1 PRI) | 
  | 
Active?
 | 
y (if you use a blade to configure T1)
 | 
Specifies if the port group is active.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no | 
  | 
Card type
 | 
T1
 | 
Specifies the type of card.
 | 
• none 
• T1 
• analog 
• E1 
• IP | 
  | 
Signaling protocol
 | 
wink start
 | 
Specifies the signaling protocol.
 | 
• loop start 
• wink start 
• ground start 
• clear channel 
• E1 
• IP 
• protocol table | 
  | 
Protocol table
 | 
0
 | 
Specifies the number of the protocol table to copy from.
 | 
• number from 0 to 99 | 
  | 
Number of DID digits expected
 | 
0
 | 
Specifies the number of DID digits.
 | 
• number from 0 to 6 | 
  | 
Default access type
 | 
combined access
 | 
Specifies the access type
 | 
• Combined access 
• DID meeting 
• Profile 
• MeetingNotes 
• loop through transfer 
• EBSApp1004 
• EBSApp1005 
• EBSApp1007 
• EBS Xfer test 
• NewApp1011 
• Choose music 
• Spanish samples 
• Goto123123_1015 | 
  | 
Language
 | 
English (US)
 | 
Specifies which language to use.
 | 
• English (US) 
• English (UK) 
• no language | 
  | 
Human assistance?
 | 
n
 | 
Specifies if human assistance is allowed.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no | 
  | 
Flash transfer?
 | 
n
 | 
Specifies if this can be flash transferred.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no | 
  | 
Outdial?
 | 
y
 | 
Specifies if this can be outdialed on.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no | 
 
To Configure T1 Spans for a T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade. One of the following examples appears:
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade. One of the following examples appears:
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106:
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Enter blade slot [1..6]:   1
 
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     CG6000C   T1       0      0-23, none, none, none
 
 6     TP1610-4  IP       0      24-83 (172.27.6.140)
 
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112:
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Enter blade slot [1..16]:   1
 
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     TP1610    T1       0      0-22, 23-45, 46-68, 69-91
 
                                 92-114, 115-137, 138-160, 161-183
 
                                 184-206, 207-229, 230-252, 253-275
 
                                 276-298, 299-321, 322-344, 345-367
 
 2     TP1610    T1       1      368-390, 391-413, 414-436, 437-459
 
                                 460-482, 483-505, 506-528, 529-551
 
                                 552-574, 575-597, 598-620, 621-643
 
                                 644-666, 667-689, 690-712, 713-735
 
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Step 3	 Enter the values from Table 1-6. Press Enter after you enter each value and the next line appears. If you receive an error stating that you have exceeded the number of available ports, check your MeetingTime settings.
Enter the values from Table 1-6. Press Enter after you enter each value and the next line appears. If you receive an error stating that you have exceeded the number of available ports, check your MeetingTime settings.
Note	 Do not change the Span Flags field unless a Cisco TAC representative instructs you to.
Do not change the Span Flags field unless a Cisco TAC representative instructs you to.
Step 4	 (Optional) Enter 2 to configure another span.
(Optional) Enter 2 to configure another span.
Step 5	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Configuring an E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Note	 The necessary cables should already be attached to the transition modules on the back of your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server. If they are not, see the Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server.
The necessary cables should already be attached to the transition modules on the back of your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server. If they are not, see the Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server.
To Configure an E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -e number_of_E1_ports for a pure E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system without any IP configuration. See the following example:
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -e number_of_E1_ports for a pure E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system without any IP configuration. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ blade -e <# E1 ports>
 
This will reset many DB tables, are you sure? (y/n): y
 
Restart the system for changes to take effect
 
Step 3	 Confirm the blade command by entering y.
Confirm the blade command by entering y.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system tells you what it is configuring. The tech$ prompt appears when the configuration is complete.
Step 4	 Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Step 5	 Confirm the screen output is correct for your configuration.
Confirm the screen output is correct for your configuration.
Step 6	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
Note	 You can reserve slots for later use by using the blade command with the -r option.
You can reserve slots for later use by using the blade command with the -r option.
 
Configuring 240 E1 Ports Example
To Configure 240 E1 Ports Example
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -e 240.
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -e 240.
Step 3	 Confirm the blade command by entering y.
Confirm the blade command by entering y.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system responds by telling you how many ports it is configuring. When the tech$ prompt appears, it is complete. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ blade -e 240
 
This will reset many DB tables, are you sure? (y/n): y
 
Restart the system for changes to take effect
 
Step 4	 Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Step 5	 Confirm the screen output is similar to one of the following examples:
Confirm the screen output is similar to one of the following examples:
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106:
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     TP1610-4   E1       0      0-29, 30-59, 60-89, 90-119
 
 2     TP1610-4   E1       1      120-149, 150-179, 180-209, 210-239
 
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112:
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     TP1610    E1       0      0-29, 30-59, 60-89, 90-119
 
                                 120-149, 150-179, 180-209, 210-239
 
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Step 6	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Configuring 720 E1 Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 Only) Example
To Configure 720 E1 Ports Example
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -e 720.
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -e 720.
Step 3	 Confirm the blade command you entered by entering y.
Confirm the blade command you entered by entering y.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system responds by telling you how many ports it is configuring. When the tech$ prompt appears, it is complete. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ blade -e 720
 
This will reset many DB tables, are you sure? (y/n): y
 
Restart the system for changes to take effect
 
Step 4	 Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Step 5	 Confirm the screen output is similar to the following example:
Confirm the screen output is similar to the following example:
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     TP1610    E1       0      0-29, 30-59, 60-89, 90-119
 
                                 120-149, 150-179, 180-209, 210-239
 
                                 240-269, 270-299, 300-329, 330-359
 
                                 360-389, 390-419, 420-449, 450-479
 
 2     TP1610    E1       1      480-509, 510-539, 540-569, 570-599
 
                                 600-629, 630-659, 660-689, 690-719
 
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Step 6	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Configuring 960 E1 Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 Only) Example
To Configure 960 E1 Ports Example
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -e 960.
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -e 960.
Step 3	 Confirm the blade command by entering y.
Confirm the blade command by entering y.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system responds by telling you how many ports it is configuring. When the tech$ prompt appears, it is complete. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ blade -e 960
 
This will reset many DB tables, are you sure? (y/n): y
 
Restart the system for changes to take effect
 
Step 4	 Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Step 5	 Confirm the screen output is similar to the following example:
Confirm the screen output is similar to the following example:
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     TP1610    E1       0      0-29, 30-59, 60-89, 90-119
 
                                 120-149, 150-179, 180-209, 210-239
 
                                 240-269, 270-299, 300-329, 330-359
 
                                 360-389, 390-419, 420-449, 450-479
 
 2     TP1610    E1       1      480-509, 510-539, 540-569, 570-599
 
                                 600-629, 630-659, 660-689, 690-719
 
                                 720-749, 750-779, 780-809, 810-839
 
                                 840-869, 870-899, 900-929, 930-959
 
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Step 6	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Configuring Port Groups
You can create port groups so that a group of ports can be configured with the same parameters. Below are the instructions for creating and configuring port groups.
To Configure Port Groups
Step 1	 At the tech$ prompt, enter port. The following menu appears:
At the tech$ prompt, enter port. The following menu appears:
*****   P O R T / G R O U P   C O N F I G   M E N U  *****
 
Step 2	 Modify the group record by entering 5. The second line in the following example appears:
Modify the group record by entering 5. The second line in the following example appears:
Enter port group record number [0..31, <cr> for all] : 0
 
------------     GROUP 0      --------------
 
--- To skip over a field, just press <cr> ---
 
  Activate the group?               [y] :  y
 
  Signaling         [                 ] :  protocol table
 
  Number of DID digits              [0] :  0
 
  Human assistance?                 [n] :  n
 
Step 3	 Enter the appropriate port group record number. In this example, it is port group 0, so enter 0. The rest of the preceding example appears.
Enter the appropriate port group record number. In this example, it is port group 0, so enter 0. The rest of the preceding example appears.
Step 4	 Activate the port group by entering y.
Activate the port group by entering y.
Step 5	 Select the card type by entering E1.
Select the card type by entering E1.
Step 6	 Select signaling by entering protocol table.
Select signaling by entering protocol table.
Step 7	 Select the appropriate protocol table number. In the preceding example, it is protocol table 0, so enter 0. See Table 1-7 for a list of default protocol tables.
Select the appropriate protocol table number. In the preceding example, it is protocol table 0, so enter 0. See Table 1-7 for a list of default protocol tables.
Note	 The protocol table contains the configuration information for the type of signaling used. Cisco Systems ships all E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace systems with protocol table 0 set to use the default setting of Euro ISDN protocol and protocol table 1 to use the QSIG protocol. If this is not correct for your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, change it with the protparm command.
The protocol table contains the configuration information for the type of signaling used. Cisco Systems ships all E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace systems with protocol table 0 set to use the default setting of Euro ISDN protocol and protocol table 1 to use the QSIG protocol. If this is not correct for your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, change it with the protparm command. 
If this is part of an upgrade from a pre-5.1 release, the default protocol tables 3 and 4 will not be correct. To resolve this, use the protparm command to delete tables 3 and 4. This restores them to the defaults as listed in Table 1-7.
 
Table 1-7	Default Protocol Table Settings—E1
      | 
Protocol Table Number
 | 
Default Protocol
 | 
  | 
0
 | 
Euro ISDN
 | 
  | 
1
 | 
QSIG ECMA
 | 
  | 
5
 | 
QSIG ETSI
 | 
 
Note	 There are two QSIG variants: QSIG ECMA and QSIG ETSI. Use the same variant that your PBX is set up to use.
There are two QSIG variants: QSIG ECMA and QSIG ETSI. Use the same variant that your PBX is set up to use.
Step 8	 (Optional) Repeat this procedure if more than one port group is needed.
(Optional) Repeat this procedure if more than one port group is needed.
Step 9	 Exit the port command by entering x.
Exit the port command by entering x.
 
Assigning Ports to Port Groups
You can assign specific ports to port groups so that all ports in that group have the same parameters.
To Assign Ports to Port Groups
Step 1	 At the tech$ prompt, enter port. The menu in step 1 of the "Configuring Port Groups" section appears.
At the tech$ prompt, enter port. The menu in step 1 of the "Configuring Port Groups" section appears.
Step 2	 Modify a port record by entering 2. The first line in the following example appears:
Modify a port record by entering 2. The first line in the following example appears:
Enter port record number [0..7] : 0
 
--------------UNIT 0   PORT 0  -------------
 
--- To skip over a field, just press <cr> ---
 
Step 3	 Enter the port number. In the preceding example, it is port 0, so enter 0. The rest of the preceding example appears.
Enter the port number. In the preceding example, it is port 0, so enter 0. The rest of the preceding example appears.
Step 4	 Enter the number of the port group. In the preceding example, it is port group 0, so enter 0.
Enter the number of the port group. In the preceding example, it is port group 0, so enter 0.
Note	 If you want to copy this port record to other ports, see the "Copying Port Records" section.
If you want to copy this port record to other ports, see the "Copying Port Records" section.
Step 5	 Exit the port command by entering x.
Exit the port command by entering x.
 
Copying Port Records
Copying port records provides an easy way to copy the port record for one port to as many ports as desired.
To Copy Port Records
Step 1	 If you are not already accessing the port command, at the tech$ prompt, enter port. See the following example:
If you are not already accessing the port command, at the tech$ prompt, enter port. See the following example:
*****   P O R T / G R O U P   C O N F I G   M E N U  *****
 
Enter port record number to copy from [0..959] : 0
 
Enter port(s) to copy to [0-959] : 1-959
 
Copied to port record(s) 1-959.
 
Note	 The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the ports number from 0 to 479. These are the maximum number of ports allowed. Depending on your configuration, you may have fewer ports.
The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the ports number from 0 to 479. These are the maximum number of ports allowed. Depending on your configuration, you may have fewer ports.
Step 2	 Copy port records by entering 3.
Copy port records by entering 3.
Step 3	 Enter the port number from which you want to copy, as shown in line 13 of the preceding example. In the preceding example, it is port 0, so enter 0.
Enter the port number from which you want to copy, as shown in line 13 of the preceding example. In the preceding example, it is port 0, so enter 0.
Step 4	 Enter the port numbers to which you want to copy, as shown in line 14 of the preceding example. In the preceding example, all ports are being configured with the same parameters as port 0, so enter 1-959 for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 or enter 1-479 for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106. The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system tells you which ports were copied to, as shown in line 15 of the preceding example.
Enter the port numbers to which you want to copy, as shown in line 14 of the preceding example. In the preceding example, all ports are being configured with the same parameters as port 0, so enter 1-959 for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 or enter 1-479 for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106. The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system tells you which ports were copied to, as shown in line 15 of the preceding example.
Step 5	 Exit the port command by entering x.
Exit the port command by entering x.
 
Configuring Spans for an E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
E1 spans connect to the Multi Access Blade transition modules in the back of the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server.
Note	 The E1 spans are automatically activated and configured with default settings when you enter the blade command. Table 1-8 lists the default span configuration.
The E1 spans are automatically activated and configured with default settings when you enter the blade command. Table 1-8 lists the default span configuration.
Check the worksheets in the Installation Planning Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace to see if your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system is configured this way. If these default settings are accurate for your installation, you do not need to complete this section. If the default settings are not accurate for your installation, complete the steps that follow.
 
Table 1-8	Default E1 Span Configuration 
      | 
Parameter
 | 
Default
 | 
Explanation
 | 
Possible Values
 | 
  | 
Activate the ACTI span?
 | 
y
 | 
Specifies if the span is active.
 | 
• y = active 
• n = inactive | 
  | 
Framing
 | 
CRC4
 | 
Specifies the framing protocol used on this span. Determined by the service provider.
 
We recommend using CRC4 only.
 | 
• CRC4 
• non-CRC4 | 
  | 
Zero code suppression
 | 
HDB3
 | 
Specifies the zero code suppression for the span. Determined by the service provider.
 
We recommend using HDB3 only.
 | 
• HDB3 | 
  | 
Timing
 | 
external
 | 
Specifies if the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server should get clock timing from the PBX or central office or if timing is generated by Cisco Unified MeetingPlace.
 
All spans should be configured as external. The internal setting is for diagnostic purposes.
 | 
• internal 
• external (the span is connected to the public network or a trusted system, such as the PBX) | 
  | 
External sync priority
 | 
none.
 
The T1 span connected to the T1 Smart Blade in slot 1, line A gets sync priority 1, line B gets 2, etc. 
 | 
Specifies the priority of the spans that are set for external timing. The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system always tries to synchronize from the highest priority span. If the synchronization span goes down, the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system automatically switches synchronization to the next highest span. If a higher priority span comes up, the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system automatically synchronizes off of it.
 | 
• 1-255 (1 is the highest, 255 is the lowest) 
• never | 
  | 
Trunk [x]
 | 
Numbering is done in order (1, 2, 3, etc.). For example,
 
Trunk [1]:port 0
 
Trunk [2]:port 1
 
Trunk [3]:port 2
 | 
Specifies which port in the database is assigned to the specific hardware trunk on the card.
 | 
• number | 
  | 
Remote loopback to network
 | 
n
 | 
Specifies if the span should be put into a loopback mode for testing from the remote end.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no (normal operation) | 
  | 
Internal data loopback
 | 
n
 | 
Specifies if the span should loop back locally for running diagnostics.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no (normal operation) | 
  | 
Port group
 | 
2
 | 
Specifies the number of the port group.
 | 
• 0 (T1 CAS) 
• 1 (IP) 
• 2 (E1) 
• 3 (T1 PRI) | 
  | 
Active?
 | 
n
 | 
Specifies if the port group is active.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no | 
  | 
Card type
 | 
E1
 | 
Specifies the type of card.
 | 
• none 
• T1 
• analog 
• E1 
• IP | 
  | 
Signaling protocol
 | 
E1
 | 
Specifies the signaling protocol.
 | 
• loop start 
• wink start 
• ground start 
• clear channel 
• E1 
• IP 
• protocol table | 
  | 
Protocol table
 | 
0
 | 
Specifies the number of the protocol table to copy from.
 | 
• number from 0 to 99 | 
  | 
Number of DID digits expected
 | 
0
 | 
Specifies the number of DID digits.
 | 
• number from 0 to 6 | 
  | 
Default access type
 | 
combined access
 | 
Specifies the access type
 | 
• Combined access 
• DID meeting 
• Profile 
• MeetingNotes 
• loop through transfer 
• EBSApp1004 
• EBSApp1005 
• EBSApp1007 
• EBS Xfer test 
• NewApp1011 
• Choose music 
• Spanish samples 
• Goto123123_1015 | 
  | 
Language
 | 
English (US)
 | 
Specifies which language to use.
 | 
• English (US) 
• English (UK) 
• no language | 
  | 
Human assistance?
 | 
n
 | 
Specifies if human assistance is allowed.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no | 
  | 
Flash transfer?
 | 
n
 | 
Specifies if this can be flash transferred.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no | 
  | 
Outdial?
 | 
y
 | 
Specifies if this can be outdialed on.
 | 
• y = yes 
• n = no | 
 
To Configure Spans for an E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade. One of the following examples appears:
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade. One of the following examples appears:
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106:
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Enter blade slot [1..6]:   1
 
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     CG6000C   T1       0      0-23, none, none, none
 
 6     TP1610-4  IP       0      24-83 (172.27.6.140)
 
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112:
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Enter blade slot [1..16]:   1
 
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     TP1610    T1       0      0-22, 23-45, 46-68, 69-91
 
                                 92-114, 115-137, 138-160, 161-183
 
                                 184-206, 207-229, 230-252, 253-275
 
                                 276-298, 299-321, 322-344, 345-367
 
 2     TP1610    T1       1      368-390, 391-413, 414-436, 437-459
 
                                 460-482, 483-505, 506-528, 529-551
 
                                 552-574, 575-597, 598-620, 621-643
 
                                 644-666, 667-689, 690-712, 713-735
 
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Step 3	 Enter the values from Table 1-8. Press Enter after you enter each value and the next line appears. If you receive an error stating that you have exceeded the number of available ports, check your MeetingTime settings.
Enter the values from Table 1-8. Press Enter after you enter each value and the next line appears. If you receive an error stating that you have exceeded the number of available ports, check your MeetingTime settings.
Note	 Do not change the Span Flags field unless a Cisco TAC representative instructs you to.
Do not change the Span Flags field unless a Cisco TAC representative instructs you to.
Step 4	 (Optional) Enter 2 to configure another span.
(Optional) Enter 2 to configure another span.
Step 5	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
About a Pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
This section contains background information about pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace systems. For detailed instructions on how to implement the techniques described here, see the "Configuring a Pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System" section.
Before configuring the Multi Access Blades in an IP system, you must know which Quality of Service (QoS) configuration you are using: either the IP precedence mechanism or the Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) mechanism. You then need to provide specific settings for the mechanism. The following sections describe each mechanism and their various settings.
 
About QoS Configuration
For pure IP configurations, there are two QoS mechanisms that you can use: IP precedence or DSCP. First, determine which mechanism your IP network uses, then determine, with your IT department, the appropriate settings for these values.
Note	 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace IP gateways do not support sending layer 2, QOS (COS). This means that QOS priorities for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system or Cisco Unified MeetingPlace H.323/SIP Gateway cannot be set on the layer 2 switch level.
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace IP gateways do not support sending layer 2, QOS (COS). This means that QOS priorities for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system or Cisco Unified MeetingPlace H.323/SIP Gateway cannot be set on the layer 2 switch level.
 
About Type of Service Byte
Within the voice packets, the Type of Service (ToS) byte is an 8-bit field in the IP header used for either IP precedence or DSCP (another term for byte is octet). When this byte is used for IP precedence, three bits are used for the IP precedence value and four bits are used for the ToS value.
The following shows the bit layout:
 
  | 
7
 | 
6
 | 
5
 | 
4
 | 
3
 | 
2
 | 
1
 | 
0
 | 
      | 
IP precedence
 | 
Type of service
 |  | 
 
Note	 Note the differences in terminology: the ToS byte includes all 8 bits; but the ToS field is only 4 bits within this byte. The IP precedence mechanism partitions the ToS byte into an IP precedence field and a ToS field.
Note the differences in terminology: the ToS byte includes all 8 bits; but the ToS field is only 4 bits within this byte. The IP precedence mechanism partitions the ToS byte into an IP precedence field and a ToS field.
When this byte is used for DSCP, six bits are used for DSCP. The following is the bit layout:
 
  | 
7
 | 
6
 | 
5
 | 
4
 | 
3
 | 
2
 | 
1
 | 
0
 | 
      | 
Differentiated services code point
 |  |  | 
 
Notice that the DSCP field overlaps the fields used for IP precedence. Therefore, if DSCP values are chosen carefully, then backward compatibility can be achieved if your network has a mixture of devices (some using IP precedence, others using DSCP).
 
About IP Precedence
If you use the traditional IP precedence QoS mechanism, you must provide two values to be used for pure IP configuration:
• IP precedence value — A value from 0 to 7. The IP precedence is used to classify and prioritize types of traffic. Most implementations use an IP precedence value of 5. Here is a complete list of values:
IP precedence value — A value from 0 to 7. The IP precedence is used to classify and prioritize types of traffic. Most implementations use an IP precedence value of 5. Here is a complete list of values:
0-Routine
1-Priority
2-Immediate
3-Flash
4-Flash override
5-CRITIC/ECP
6-Internetwork control
7-Network control
• ToS value — A value from 0 to 15. The ToS value can determine special handling of packets, such as minimizing delay or maximizing throughput. This value is best set to 0.
ToS value — A value from 0 to 15. The ToS value can determine special handling of packets, such as minimizing delay or maximizing throughput. This value is best set to 0.
 
About DSCP
DSCP (sometimes called "DiffServ") is the newer mechanism. It is described in RFC 2474. The DSCP ranges from 0 to 63. In practice, most implementations use a DSCP value of 40, which corresponds exactly to an IP Precedence value of 5.
 
About Jitter Buffer Settings
The jitter buffer concept is driven by the realities of voice packet networks such as network delay, delay jitter, packet loss, and clock drift. The jitter buffer (also known as a "delay jitter buffer") enforces an additional packet delay of typically 50 to 150 additional milliseconds, but it provides the following important benefits:
• Smooths jitter—By delaying all the packets, it is possible to eliminate most effects of delay jitter. That is, for any packets that arrive slightly early or slightly late, the jitter buffer allows the packets to be processed at precise intervals. However, any packets that arrive later or earlier than the size of the jitter buffer are discarded; therefore, the jitter buffer should not be set too small. The jitter buffer should not be set too large because too much delay can be noticed by participants talking to each other.
Smooths jitter—By delaying all the packets, it is possible to eliminate most effects of delay jitter. That is, for any packets that arrive slightly early or slightly late, the jitter buffer allows the packets to be processed at precise intervals. However, any packets that arrive later or earlier than the size of the jitter buffer are discarded; therefore, the jitter buffer should not be set too small. The jitter buffer should not be set too large because too much delay can be noticed by participants talking to each other.
• Handles packets out of sequence—In some cases, various delays can cause consecutive packets to be received out of sequence. A jitter buffer provides an opportunity to put these packets back into the proper sequence.
Handles packets out of sequence—In some cases, various delays can cause consecutive packets to be received out of sequence. A jitter buffer provides an opportunity to put these packets back into the proper sequence.
• Handles missing packets—A jitter buffer makes it easier to handle missing (as opposed to just late) packets. When the software determines that the packet is missing, it provides a reasonable approximation for the missing packet. This assumes that the sender enables redundancy support (RFC 2198).
Handles missing packets—A jitter buffer makes it easier to handle missing (as opposed to just late) packets. When the software determines that the packet is missing, it provides a reasonable approximation for the missing packet. This assumes that the sender enables redundancy support (RFC 2198).
• Handles overruns and underruns—When clocks are not synchronized, there are occasional packet overruns or underruns (depending on whether the far end clock is faster or slower). The jitter buffer allows for a more graceful way of dealing with these.
Handles overruns and underruns—When clocks are not synchronized, there are occasional packet overruns or underruns (depending on whether the far end clock is faster or slower). The jitter buffer allows for a more graceful way of dealing with these.
 
About Jitter Buffer Configuration
There are two jitter buffer parameters that you can configure:
• Jitter buffer minimum size—The jitter buffer automatically adapts to changing jitter values, but a minimum value needs to be defined. The default value is 100 milliseconds. This is a reasonable value for most installations; however, some environments may do better with a different value. The blade command allows for values from 1 to 1000 milliseconds.
Jitter buffer minimum size—The jitter buffer automatically adapts to changing jitter values, but a minimum value needs to be defined. The default value is 100 milliseconds. This is a reasonable value for most installations; however, some environments may do better with a different value. The blade command allows for values from 1 to 1000 milliseconds.
A smaller value reduces the noticeable voice delay, but increases the risk of missing packets that degrade voice quality. A smaller value can be considered for IP networks that are:
– Small geographically
Small geographically
– Few hops
Few hops
– High bandwidth
High bandwidth
A larger value can provide better voice quality; however, the increased delays may become annoying for users. A higher value can be considered for IP networks that are:
– Large geographically
Large geographically
– Many hops
Many hops
– Potential bandwidth bottlenecks
Potential bandwidth bottlenecks
• Jitter buffer optimization—The jitter buffer optimization factor controls how quickly the jitter buffer can react to network jitter. The blade command allows for optimization factor values from 0 to 12 and the value defaults to 7.
Jitter buffer optimization—The jitter buffer optimization factor controls how quickly the jitter buffer can react to network jitter. The blade command allows for optimization factor values from 0 to 12 and the value defaults to 7.
At the highest setting, the jitter buffer quickly tracks to the maximal network latencies and stays there, thus minimizing packet error rates but also maximizing delays. At the lowest setting, the jitter buffer increases delay only to compensate for clock drifts and soon decays to its minimal setting again. Midrange values (such as a default value of 7) provide a reasonable middle ground that is appropriate for most systems.
 
Configuring a Pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Note	 The necessary cables should already be attached to the transition modules on the back of your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server. If they are not, see the Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server.
The necessary cables should already be attached to the transition modules on the back of your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server. If they are not, see the Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server.
Before using the blade command to configure a pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, you must understand the assumptions in Table 1-9. If your installation does not match these assumptions, you must customize the configuration by using the blade command's second option that allows you to modify the blade.
 
Table 1-9	Blade Command Assumptions for Pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Systems 
      | 
Number of IP Ports
 | 
Assumed Multi Access Blade Type
 | 
  | 
1-120
 | 
1 MP-MA-4
 | 
  | 
121-240
 | 
2 MP-MA-4s
 | 
  | 
241-480
 | 
1 MP-MA-16
 | 
  | 
481-600
 | 
1 MP-MA-4 and 1 MP-MA-16
 | 
  | 
601+
 | 
2 MP-MA-16s
 | 
 
To Configure a Pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -i number_of_IP_ports. This is the command for a pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system.
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -i number_of_IP_ports. This is the command for a pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system.
Step 3	 Confirm the blade command by entering y.
Confirm the blade command by entering y.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system tells you what it is configuring. The tech$ prompt appears when the configuration is complete. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ blade -i <# IP ports>
 
This will reset many DB tables, are you sure? (y/n): y
 
Restart the system for changes to take effect
 
Step 4	 Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Step 5	 Confirm the screen output is correct for your configuration.
Confirm the screen output is correct for your configuration.
Step 6	 Modify the blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears, as shown in the following example:
Modify the blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears, as shown in the following example:
Enter blade slot [1..16]:  16
 
  IP address [0]             [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.10
 
  IP address [1]             [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.11
 
  Subnet Mask                [0.0.0.0]:  255.255.255.0
 
  Default Gateway            [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.1
 
  Base UDP Port [0]            [ 5000]:
 
  Base UDP Port [1]            [ 6000]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Minimum Size    [ 100]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Optimization      [ 7]:
 
  Type of Service (TOS)           [ 0]:
 
  DSCP / DiffServ             [unused]:
 
Note	 The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the blade slot being configured is slot 6, the number of ports is 120, and the first port is 0. Also, the value for the IP address [1] field for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106 is 0.0.0.0. The bold line in the preceding example (Base UDP Port [1]) only appears for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. This line does not appear in the code for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106.
The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the blade slot being configured is slot 6, the number of ports is 120, and the first port is 0. Also, the value for the IP address [1] field for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106 is 0.0.0.0. The bold line in the preceding example (Base UDP Port [1]) only appears for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. This line does not appear in the code for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106.
Step 7	 Modify a blade by entering its slot number. In this configuration, for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112, it is slot 16 so enter 16. For the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, it is slot 6, so enter 6.
Modify a blade by entering its slot number. In this configuration, for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112, it is slot 16 so enter 16. For the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, it is slot 6, so enter 6.
Step 8	 Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Step 9	 Enter the IP address. For an MP-MA-4, the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system prompts you for one IP address. For an MP-MA-16, the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system prompts you for two IP addresses. If you are using fewer than 240 ports on an MP-MA-16, leave the second IP address as 0.0.0.0.
Enter the IP address. For an MP-MA-4, the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system prompts you for one IP address. For an MP-MA-16, the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system prompts you for two IP addresses. If you are using fewer than 240 ports on an MP-MA-16, leave the second IP address as 0.0.0.0.
Step 10	 Continue pressing Enter and verify the default settings are correct for this installation. If your installation calls for values other than the defaults, make the necessary changes.
Continue pressing Enter and verify the default settings are correct for this installation. If your installation calls for values other than the defaults, make the necessary changes.
Note	 The value for the Base UDP Port fields must be divisible by 10 or you will get an error.
The value for the Base UDP Port fields must be divisible by 10 or you will get an error.
The following shows an example of how to use the blade command to configure an IP Precedence value of 5 and a ToS value of 0. Notice that DSCP is disabled.
Note	 This configuration must be done for each Multi Access Blade used in a pure IP configuration.
This configuration must be done for each Multi Access Blade used in a pure IP configuration.
*****    B L A D E   C O N F I G   M E N U    *****
 
Enter blade slot [1..16]:  16
 
  IP address [0]        [172.20.18.30]:
 
  IP address [1]        [172.20.18.31]:
 
  Subnet Mask            [255.255.0.0]:
 
  Default Gateway         [172.20.1.1]:
 
  Base UDP Port [0]            [ 5000]:
 
  Base UDP Port [1]            [ 6000]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Minimum Size    [ 100]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Optimization      [ 7]:
 
  Type of Service (TOS)           [ 0]:  0
 
  DSCP / DiffServ             [unused]:  unused
 
Note	 The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the blade slot being configured is slot 6 and the first port is 0. The bold lines in the preceding example (IP address [1] and Base UDP Port [1]) only appear for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. These two lines do not appear in the code for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106.
The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the blade slot being configured is slot 6 and the first port is 0. The bold lines in the preceding example (IP address [1] and Base UDP Port [1]) only appear for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. These two lines do not appear in the code for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106.
The following is an example of how to use the blade command to configure a DSCP value of 40.
Note	 This configuration must be done for each Multi Access Blade used in a pure IP configuration.
This configuration must be done for each Multi Access Blade used in a pure IP configuration.
*****    B L A D E   C O N F I G   M E N U    *****
 
Enter blade slot [1..16]:  16
 
  IP address [0]        [172.20.18.30]:
 
  IP address [1]        [172.20.18.31]:
 
  Subnet Mask            [255.255.0.0]:
 
  Default Gateway         [172.20.1.1]:
 
  Base UDP Port [0]            [ 5000]:
 
  Base UDP Port [1]            [ 6000]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Minimum Size    [ 100]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Optimization      [ 7]:
 
  IP Precedence                    [0]:  unused
 
  Type of Service (TOS)           [ 0]:  unused
 
  DSCP / DiffServ             [unused]:  40
 
Note	 The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the blade slot being configured is slot 6 and the first port is 0. The bold lines in the preceding example (IP address [1] and Base UDP Port [1]) only appear for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. These two lines do not appear in the code for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106.
The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the blade slot being configured is slot 6 and the first port is 0. The bold lines in the preceding example (IP address [1] and Base UDP Port [1]) only appear for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. These two lines do not appear in the code for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106.
The following example shows how to configure the jitter buffer minimum size to 150 milliseconds and the jitter buffer optimization factor to 9.
Note	 This configuration must be done for each Multi Access Blade used for an IP configuration.
This configuration must be done for each Multi Access Blade used for an IP configuration.
*****    B L A D E   C O N F I G   M E N U    *****
 
Enter blade slot [1..16]:  16
 
  IP address [0]        [172.20.18.30]:
 
  IP address [1]        [172.20.18.31]:
 
  Subnet Mask            [255.255.0.0]:
 
  Default Gateway         [172.20.1.1]:
 
  Base UDP Port [0]            [ 5000]:
 
  Base UDP Port [1]            [ 6000]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Minimum Size    [ 100]:  150
 
  Jitter Buffer Optimization      [ 7]:  9
 
  Type of Service (TOS)           [ 0]:
 
  DSCP / DiffServ             [unused]:
 
Note	 The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the blade slot being configured is slot 6 and the first port is 0. The bold lines in the preceding example (IP address [1] and Base UDP Port [1]) only appear for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. These two lines do not appear in the code for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106.
The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the blade slot being configured is slot 6 and the first port is 0. The bold lines in the preceding example (IP address [1] and Base UDP Port [1]) only appear for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. These two lines do not appear in the code for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106.
Step 11	 Verify that the IP addresses were changed correctly by entering 1.
Verify that the IP addresses were changed correctly by entering 1.
Step 12	 Enter the slot number for the blade you want to see.
Enter the slot number for the blade you want to see.
Step 13	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Configuring 480 IP Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106 Only) Example
Note	 Although a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 can be configured with 480 IP ports, this example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106 only.
Although a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 can be configured with 480 IP ports, this example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106 only.
To Configure 480 IP Ports Example
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -i 480.
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -i 480.
Step 3	 Confirm the blade command by entering y.
Confirm the blade command by entering y.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system responds by telling you how many ports it is configuring. When the tech$ prompt appears, it is complete. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ blade -i 480
 
This will reset many DB tables, are you sure? (y/n): y
 
Restart the system for changes to take effect
 
Step 4	 Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Step 5	 Confirm that the screen output is like the following example:
Confirm that the screen output is like the following example:
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 6     CG6000C    IP       0     0-479 (No IP address)
 
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Step 6	 Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears.
Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears.
Step 7	 Modify the blade by entering the slot number of the blade. In this example, it is slot 6 so enter 6.
Modify the blade by entering the slot number of the blade. In this example, it is slot 6 so enter 6.
*****    B L A D E   C O N F I G   M E N U    *****
 
Enter blade slot [1..6]:  6
 
  IP address [0]             [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.10
 
  Subnet Mask                [0.0.0.0]:  255.255.255.0
 
  Default Gateway            [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.1
 
  Base UDP Port [0]            [ 5000]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Minimum Size    [ 100]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Optimization      [ 7]:
 
  Type of Service (TOS)           [ 0]:
 
  DSCP / DiffServ             [unused]:
 
Step 8	 Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Step 9	 Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Step 10	 Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears.
Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears.
Step 11	 Select the blade in slot 5 by entering 5.
Select the blade in slot 5 by entering 5.
Note	 The preceding example shows slot 6; however, you have already configured slot 6, so you should select slot 5 now.
The preceding example shows slot 6; however, you have already configured slot 6, so you should select slot 5 now.
Step 12	 Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Step 13	 Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Step 14	 Verify that the IP addresses were changed correctly by entering 1.
Verify that the IP addresses were changed correctly by entering 1.
Step 15	 Enter the slot number for the blade you want to see.
Enter the slot number for the blade you want to see.
Step 16	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Configuring 960 IP Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 Only) Example
To Configure 960 IP Ports Example
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -i 960.
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -i 960.
Step 3	 Confirm the blade command by entering y.
Confirm the blade command by entering y.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system responds by telling you how many ports it is configuring. When the tech$ prompt appears, it is complete. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ blade -i 960
 
This will reset many DB tables, are you sure? (y/n): y
 
Restart the system for changes to take effect
 
Step 4	 Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Step 5	 Confirm that the screen output is similar to the following example:
Confirm that the screen output is similar to the following example:
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 15    TP1610     IP       1       480-959 (No IP address)
 
 16    TP1610     IP       0       0-479 (No IP address)
 
*****        B L A D E  C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Step 6	 Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears.
Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears.
Step 7	 Enter the slot number for the blade you want to modify. In this example, it is slot 16 so enter 16.
Enter the slot number for the blade you want to modify. In this example, it is slot 16 so enter 16.
*****    B L A D E   C O N F I G   M E N U    *****
 
Enter blade slot [1..16]:  16
 
  IP address [0]             [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.10
 
  IP address [1]             [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.11
 
  Subnet Mask                [0.0.0.0]:  255.255.255.0
 
  Default Gateway            [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.1
 
  Base UDP Port [0]            [ 5000]:
 
  Base UDP Port [1]            [ 6000]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Minimum Size    [ 100]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Optimization      [ 7]:
 
  Type of Service (TOS)           [ 0]:
 
  DSCP / DiffServ             [unused]:
 
Step 8	 Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Step 9	 Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Step 10	 Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears, as shown in line 8 of the preceding example.
Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears, as shown in line 8 of the preceding example.
Step 11	 Select the blade in slot 15 by entering 15.
Select the blade in slot 15 by entering 15.
Step 12	 Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Step 13	 Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Step 14	 Verify that the IP addresses were changed correctly by entering 1.
Verify that the IP addresses were changed correctly by entering 1.
Step 15	 Enter the slot number for the blade you want to see.
Enter the slot number for the blade you want to see.
Step 16	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Setting IP Codec Configuration
This section only needs to be completed if your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system uses IP ports.
To Set IP Codec Configuration
Step 1	 Install and configure the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace H.323/SIP Gateway. See the Administration Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace H.323/SIP Gateway Release 5.2.1 for instructions. The guide is available at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_maintenance_guides_list.html.
Install and configure the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace H.323/SIP Gateway. See the Administration Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace H.323/SIP Gateway Release 5.2.1 for instructions. The guide is available at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_maintenance_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 3	 Log in to the CLI as a technician.
Log in to the CLI as a technician.
Step 4	 Enter restart.
Enter restart.
Step 5	 Confirm that you want to restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system by entering y.
Confirm that you want to restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system by entering y.
Step 6	 After the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system has finished restarting (about five minutes), launch the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace H.323/SIP Gateway service running on the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace H.323/SIP Gateway machine. See the Administration Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace H.323/SIP Gateway Release 5.2.1 for information on how to launch the service.
After the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system has finished restarting (about five minutes), launch the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace H.323/SIP Gateway service running on the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace H.323/SIP Gateway machine. See the Administration Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace H.323/SIP Gateway Release 5.2.1 for information on how to launch the service.
Step 7	 Log in to the CLI as a technician.
Log in to the CLI as a technician.
Step 8	 Verify that the software is up by entering swstatus. See the example in step 9 of the "Setting the Date and Time for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series" section.
Verify that the software is up by entering swstatus. See the example in step 9 of the "Setting the Date and Time for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series" section.
Step 9	 Verify that the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace H.323/SIP Gateway service is up by entering gwstatus. See the following example:
Verify that the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace H.323/SIP Gateway service is up by entering gwstatus. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ gwstatus
 
Gateway SIM Status/Wed Aug 23 20:06:24 2006
 
-------------------------------------------
 
 Unit 16 mpgateway        v5.2.0.55     Ok        08/23/06 14:02:10
 
  Unit 18 WebPub:DataSvc   v5.4.40.0    Ok        08/23/06 14:02:46
 
  Unit 18 WebPub:MPAgent   v5.4.40.0    Ok        08/23/06 14:02:30
 
  Unit 18 WebPub:Audio     v5.4.40.0    Ok        08/23/06 14:03:26
 
  Unit 18 MPConvert        v5.4.40.0    Ok        08/23/06 14:02:02
 
  Unit 18 IP Gateway       v5.2.1.22    Ok        08/23/06 14:03:30
 
  Unit 18 MPVideo          v5.4.39.0    Ok        08/23/06 14:03:30
 
  Unit 18 WebPub:Master    v5.4.40.0    Ok        08/23/06 14:03:30
 
  Unit 18 DataConf:MCS     v5.4.40.0    Ok        08/23/06 14:03:18
 
  Unit 18 DataConf:GCC     v5.4.40.0    Ok        08/23/06 14:03:18
 
  Unit 18 DataConf:GW      v5.4.40.0    Ok        08/23/06 14:03:18
 
  Unit 19 WebPub:DataSvc   v5.4.40.0    Ok        08/23/06 14:02:43
 
  Unit 19 WebPub:MPAgent   v5.4.40.0    Ok        08/23/06 14:02:11
 
  Unit 19 WebPub:Audio     v5.4.40.0    Ok        08/23/06 14:03:15
 
  Unit 19 MPConvert        v5.4.40.0    Ok        08/23/06 14:02:43
 
  Unit 19 WebPub:Master    v5.4.40.0    Ok        08/23/06 14:03:15
 
  Unit 19 MPVideo          v5.2.0.0     Ok        08/23/06 14:02:15
 
  Unit 19 DataConf:GCC     v5.4.40.0    Ok        08/23/06 14:02:39
 
  Unit 19 DataConf:MCS     v5.4.40.0    Ok        08/23/06 14:02:35
 
  Unit 19 DataConf:GW      v5.4.40.0    Ok        08/23/06 14:02:39
 
Step 10	 Enter setipcodec. The first seven lines of the following example appear.
Enter setipcodec. The first seven lines of the following example appear.
meetingplace:tech$ setipcodec
 
*****   I P  C O D E C  C O N F I G   M E N U    *****
 
        1)  View IP codec configuration
 
        2)  Modify IP codec configuration
 
Codec Priorities (highest = 1)
 
------------------------------
 
  G.711 packet size (ms)     [ 20] :
 
  G.723 frames per packet    [  1] :
 
  G.723 low rate (5.3 kb/s)?   [y] :
 
  G.728 frames per packet     [ 8] :
 
  G.729 frames per packet     [ 2] :
 
  GSM frames per packet      [  1] :
 
  GSM-EFR frames per packet  [  1] :
 
  QCELP frames per packet    [  1] :
 
  Silence Suppression?         [n] :
 
Step 11	 Modify the IP codec configuration by entering 2. The next line in the preceding example appears.
Modify the IP codec configuration by entering 2. The next line in the preceding example appears.
Step 12	 Continue pressing Enter and enter the appropriate codec priority based on your installation requirements. In the preceding example, G.711 mu-law is given the highest priority and G.711 A-law is given the next highest priority. G.729 is unused. These are the default settings. If you need other settings, use the setipcodec command to change them.
Continue pressing Enter and enter the appropriate codec priority based on your installation requirements. In the preceding example, G.711 mu-law is given the highest priority and G.711 A-law is given the next highest priority. G.729 is unused. These are the default settings. If you need other settings, use the setipcodec command to change them.
Note	 If your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system uses multiple codecs, enable and test each one individually. Then enable all of them with the correct priority, and test again.
If your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system uses multiple codecs, enable and test each one individually. Then enable all of them with the correct priority, and test again.
Step 13	 Continue pressing Enter to accept the default for the remaining settings.
Continue pressing Enter to accept the default for the remaining settings.
Step 14	 Try to place an IP call in to the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system. If the call is successful, the configuration is complete.
Try to place an IP call in to the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system. If the call is successful, the configuration is complete.
If the call is not successful, use the following commands: (These commands produce logs that give you information about why the call failed.) If you still cannot determine the reason for failure, contact Cisco TAC. See the Documentation Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace for details on obtaining technical support.
• errorlog -s info -l
errorlog -s info -l
• cptrace and cptrace -v
cptrace and cptrace -v
• gwcptrace unit_number
gwcptrace unit_number
• tvportstat -s and tvportstat -c
tvportstat -s and tvportstat -c
 
About Mixed Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System Configurations
This section provides examples of the following common mixed Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system configurations:
• Configuring 96 T1 CAS Ports and 240 IP Ports Example
Configuring 96 T1 CAS Ports and 240 IP Ports Example
• Configuring 23 T1 PRI Ports and 120 IP Ports Example
Configuring 23 T1 PRI Ports and 120 IP Ports Example
• Configuring 120 E1 Ports and 120 IP Ports Example
Configuring 120 E1 Ports and 120 IP Ports Example
• Configuring 480 E1 Ports and 480 IP Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 Only) Example
Configuring 480 E1 Ports and 480 IP Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 Only) Example
This section does not include the additional steps necessary to complete configuration, such as the span, port, and port group configuration. For that information, see the section for the type of ports being configured:
• For a T1 CAS Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, see the "Configuring a T1 CAS Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System" section.
For a T1 CAS Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, see the "Configuring a T1 CAS Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System" section.
• For a T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, see the "Configuring a T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System" section.
For a T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, see the "Configuring a T1 PRI Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System" section.
• For an E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, see the "Configuring an E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System" section.
For an E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, see the "Configuring an E1 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System" section.
• For a pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, see the "About a Pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System" section.
For a pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, see the "About a Pure IP Cisco Unified MeetingPlace System" section.
 
Configuring 96 T1 CAS Ports and 240 IP Ports Example
To Configure 96 T1 CAS Ports and 240 IP Ports Example
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -t 96 -i 240.
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -t 96 -i 240.
Step 3	 Confirm the blade command by entering y.
Confirm the blade command by entering y.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system responds by telling you how many ports it is configuring. When the tech$ prompt appears, it is complete. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ blade -t 96 -i 240 
 
This will reset many DB tables, are you sure? (y/n): y
 
Restart the system for changes to take effect
 
Step 4	 Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Step 5	 Confirm that the screen output is similar to one of the following examples.
Confirm that the screen output is similar to one of the following examples.
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106:
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     CG6000C    T1       0     0-23, 24-47, 48-71, 72-95
 
 5     TP1610-4   IP       1     96-215 (No IP address)
 
 6     TP1610-4   IP       0     216-335 (No IP address)
 
*****       B L A D E   C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112:
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     CG6000C    T1       0     0-23, 24-47, 48-71, 72-95
 
 15    TP1610-4   IP       1       216-335 (No IP address)
 
 16    TP1610-4   IP       0       96-215 (No IP address)
 
*****       B L A D E   C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Step 6	 Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears.
Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears.
Enter blade slot [1..16]:  16
 
  IP address [0]             [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.10
 
  Subnet Mask                [0.0.0.0]:  255.255.255.0
 
  Default Gateway            [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.1
 
  Base UDP Port [0]            [ 5000]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Minimum Size    [ 100]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Optimization      [ 7]:
 
  Type of Service (TOS)           [ 0]:
 
  DSCP / DiffServ             [unused]:
 
Note	 The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the blade slot being configured is slot 6, the port group is 3, and the first port is 23. The affected values are highlighted.
The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the blade slot being configured is slot 6, the port group is 3, and the first port is 23. The affected values are highlighted.
Step 7	 Enter the slot number for the blade you want to modify. In this configuration, for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, it is slot 6, so enter 6. For the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112, it is slot 16 so enter 16.
Enter the slot number for the blade you want to modify. In this configuration, for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, it is slot 6, so enter 6. For the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112, it is slot 16 so enter 16.
Step 8	 Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Step 9	 Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Step 10	 Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears.
Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears.
Step 11	 Enter the slot number for the blade you want to modify. In this configuration, for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, it is slot 5, so enter 5. For the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112, it is slot 15 so enter 15.
Enter the slot number for the blade you want to modify. In this configuration, for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, it is slot 5, so enter 5. For the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112, it is slot 15 so enter 15.
Step 12	 Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Step 13	 Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Step 14	 Verify that the IP addresses were changed correctly by entering 1.
Verify that the IP addresses were changed correctly by entering 1.
Step 15	 Enter the slot number for the blade you want to see.
Enter the slot number for the blade you want to see.
Step 16	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Configuring 23 T1 PRI Ports and 120 IP Ports Example
To Configure 23 T1 PRI Ports and 120 IP Ports Example
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -p 23 -i 120.
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -p 23 -i 120.
Step 3	 Confirm the blade command by entering y.
Confirm the blade command by entering y.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system responds by telling you how many ports it is configuring. When the tech$ prompt appears, it is complete. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ blade -p 23 -i 120 
 
This will reset many DB tables, are you sure? (y/n): y
 
Configuring 23 T1 PRI ports
 
Restart the system for changes to take effect
 
Step 4	 Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Step 5	 Confirm the screen output is like one of the following examples:
Confirm the screen output is like one of the following examples:
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106:
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     TP1610-4   T1       0     0-22, none, none, none
 
 6     TP1610-4   IP       1     23-142 (No IP address)
 
*****       B L A D E   C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112:
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     TP1610-4   T1       0     0-22, none, none, none
 
 16    TP1610-4   IP       1       23-142 (No IP address)
 
*****       B L A D E   C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Step 6	 Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears.
Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears.
*****    B L A D E   C O N F I G   M E N U    *****
 
Enter blade slot [1..16]:  16
 
  IP address [0]             [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.10
 
  IP address [1]             [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.11
 
  Subnet Mask                [0.0.0.0]:  255.255.255.0
 
  Default Gateway            [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.1
 
  Base UDP Port [0]            [ 5000]:
 
  Base UDP Port [1]            [ 6000]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Minimum Size    [ 100]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Optimization      [ 7]:
 
  Type of Service (TOS)           [ 0]:
 
  DSCP / DiffServ             [unused]:
 
Note	 The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the blade slot being configured is slot 6, the port group is 3, the number of ports is 120, and the first port is 23. The affected values are highlighted. The bold line in the preceding example (Base UDP Port [1]) only appears for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 and does not appear in the code for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106.
The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the blade slot being configured is slot 6, the port group is 3, the number of ports is 120, and the first port is 23. The affected values are highlighted. The bold line in the preceding example (Base UDP Port [1]) only appears for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 and does not appear in the code for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106.
Step 7	 Enter the slot number for the blade you want to modify. In this configuration, for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, it is slot 6, so enter 6. For the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112, it is slot 16 so enter 16.
Enter the slot number for the blade you want to modify. In this configuration, for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, it is slot 6, so enter 6. For the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112, it is slot 16 so enter 16.
Step 8	 Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Step 9	 Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Step 10	 Verify that the IP addresses were changed correctly by entering 1.
Verify that the IP addresses were changed correctly by entering 1.
Step 11	 Enter the slot number for the blade you want to see.
Enter the slot number for the blade you want to see.
Step 12	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Configuring 120 E1 Ports and 120 IP Ports Example
To Configure 120 E1 Ports and 120 IP Ports Example
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -e 120 -i 120.
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -e 120 -i 120.
Step 3	 Confirm the blade command by entering y.
Confirm the blade command by entering y.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system responds by telling you how many ports it is configuring. When the tech$ prompt appears, it is complete. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ blade -e 120 -i 120
 
This will reset many DB tables, are you sure? (y/n): y
 
Restart the system for changes to take effect
 
Step 4	 Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Step 5	 Confirm that the screen output is similar to one of the following examples:
Confirm that the screen output is similar to one of the following examples:
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106:
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     TP1610     E1       0     0-29, 30-59, 60-89, 90-119
 
 6     TP1610     IP       1     120-239 (No IP address)
 
*****       B L A D E   C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112:
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     TP1610     E1       0     0-29, 30-59, 60-89, 90-119
 
 16    TP1610     IP       1       120-239 (No IP address)
 
*****       B L A D E   C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Step 6	 Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears.
Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears.
Step 7	 Enter the slot number for the blade you want to modify. In this configuration, for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, it is slot 6, so enter 6. For the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112, it is slot 16 so enter 16.
Enter the slot number for the blade you want to modify. In this configuration, for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, it is slot 6, so enter 6. For the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112, it is slot 16 so enter 16.
*****    B L A D E   C O N F I G   M E N U    *****
 
Enter blade slot [1..16]:  16
 
  IP address [0]             [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.10
 
  IP address [1]             [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.11
 
  Subnet Mask                [0.0.0.0]:  255.255.255.0
 
  Default Gateway            [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.1
 
  Base UDP Port [0]            [ 5000]:
 
  Base UDP Port [1]            [ 6000]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Minimum Size    [ 100]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Optimization      [ 7]:
 
  Type of Service (TOS)           [ 0]:
 
  DSCP / DiffServ             [unused]:
 
Note	 The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the blade slot being configured is slot 6, the number of ports is 120, and the first port is 120. The affected values are highlighted. The bold lines in the preceding example (IP address [1] and Base UDP Port [1]) only appear for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 and do not appear in the code for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106.
The preceding example is for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112. For a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106, the blade slot being configured is slot 6, the number of ports is 120, and the first port is 120. The affected values are highlighted. The bold lines in the preceding example (IP address [1] and Base UDP Port [1]) only appear for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 and do not appear in the code for a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8106.
Step 8	 Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Step 9	 Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Step 10	 Verify that the IP addresses were changed correctly by entering 1.
Verify that the IP addresses were changed correctly by entering 1.
Step 11	 Enter the slot number for the blade you want to see.
Enter the slot number for the blade you want to see.
Step 12	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Configuring 480 E1 Ports and 480 IP Ports (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8112 Only) Example
To Configure 480 E1 Ports and 480 IP Ports Example
Step 1	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server, at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/ps5664/ps5669/prod_installation_guides_list.html.
Step 2	 At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -e 480 -i 480.
At the tech$ prompt, enter blade -e 480 -i 480.
Step 3	 Confirm the blade command by entering y.
Confirm the blade command by entering y.
The Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system responds by telling you how many ports it is configuring. When the tech$ prompt appears, it is complete. See the following example:
meetingplace:tech$ blade -e 480 -i 480
 
This will reset many DB tables, are you sure? (y/n): y
 
Restart the system for changes to take effect
 
Step 4	 Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Verify your configuration by entering blade.
Step 5	 Confirm that the screen output is similar to the following example:
Confirm that the screen output is similar to the following example:
Slot   Card      Type   CardId   Ports
 
 1     TP1610     E1       0     0-29, 30-59, 60-89, 90-119,
 
                                 120-149, 150-179, 180-209, 210-239
 
                                 240-269, 270-299, 300-329, 330-359,
 
                                 360-389, 390-419, 420-449, 450-479
 
 16    TP1610     IP       1       480-959 (No IP address)
 
*****       B L A D E   C O N F I G   M E N U     *****
 
Step 6	 Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears.
Modify a blade by entering 2. A prompt for the blade slot to modify appears.
Step 7	 Enter the slot number for the blade you want to modify. In this configuration, it is slot 16 so enter 16.
Enter the slot number for the blade you want to modify. In this configuration, it is slot 16 so enter 16.
*****    B L A D E   C O N F I G   M E N U    *****
 
Enter blade slot [1..16]:  16
 
  IP address [0]             [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.10
 
  IP address [1]             [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.11
 
  Subnet Mask                [0.0.0.0]:  255.255.255.0
 
  Default Gateway            [0.0.0.0]:  10.10.10.1
 
  Base UDP Port [0]            [ 5000]:
 
  Base UDP Port [1]            [ 6000]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Minimum Size    [ 100]:
 
  Jitter Buffer Optimization      [ 7]:
 
  Type of Service (TOS)           [ 0]:
 
  DSCP / DiffServ             [unused]:
 
Step 8	 Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Continue pressing Enter until you are prompted to enter the IP address.
Step 9	 Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Enter the IP address and continue pressing Enter until you get to the blade command menu.
Step 10	 Verify that the IP addresses were changed correctly by entering 1.
Verify that the IP addresses were changed correctly by entering 1.
Step 11	 Enter the slot number for the blade you want to see.
Enter the slot number for the blade you want to see.
Step 12	 Exit the blade command by entering x.
Exit the blade command by entering x.
 
Setting the Date and Time for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series
Use the date command to set the date and time for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 series. You can set any portion of the date and time without specifying the higher parameters. For example, you can set the hour without setting the day or the month, but you must specify the minutes when setting the hour.
Note	 You must set the time zone for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server before you set the date and time. If you have not set the time zone yet, complete the steps in the "Configuring the Time Zone for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series" section.
You must set the time zone for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server before you set the date and time. If you have not set the time zone yet, complete the steps in the "Configuring the Time Zone for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series" section.
To Set the Date and Time
Step 1	 At the tech$ prompt, shut down the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server software by entering down.
At the tech$ prompt, shut down the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server software by entering down.
Step 2	 Verify that you want to shut down the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system by entering y. The third and fourth lines in the following example appear:
Verify that you want to shut down the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system by entering y. The third and fourth lines in the following example appear:
Checking to see if the system is loaded...OK
 
System DOWN procedure has been initiated.
 
Step 3	 Wait about a minute. The fifth and sixth lines of the preceding example appear.
Wait about a minute. The fifth and sixth lines of the preceding example appear.
Step 4	 If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server.
If you do not already have terminal logging turned on, turn it on. For information on logging, see the applicable Installation and Upgrade Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server.
Step 5	 Enter date. The display shows the current date, time, and abbreviated time zone as shown on the second line of the following example.
Enter date. The display shows the current date, time, and abbreviated time zone as shown on the second line of the following example.
Mon Aug 21 15:07:32 PST 2006
 
meetingplace:tech$ date 0408291508
 
Sun Aug 27 15:08:00 PST 2006
 
Step 6	 Enter date followed by a space and then enter a date or time in any of the following formats:
Enter date followed by a space and then enter a date or time in any of the following formats:
• yyyymmddhhmm—Year, month, day, hour, minute
yyyymmddhhmm—Year, month, day, hour, minute
• yymmddhhmm—Year, month, day, hour, minute
yymmddhhmm—Year, month, day, hour, minute
• mmddhhmm—Month, day, hour, minute
mmddhhmm—Month, day, hour, minute
• hhmm—Hour, minute
hhmm—Hour, minute
The display shows the new date and time as in the last line of the preceding example. The month, day, hour, and minute values are all two digits, with a zero prefix for values less than 10. For the year, you can either use all four digits of the year (for example, 1998) or just the last two digits (for example, 02 for the year 2002). The hour is in 24-hour format (00 to 23). You can append seconds to any format by adding a period and two digits (for example, .34 means 34 seconds).
Step 7	 Restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system so the date and time changes can take affect. To restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, enter restart.
Restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system so the date and time changes can take affect. To restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system, enter restart.
Step 8	 Verify that you want to restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system by entering y.
Verify that you want to restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system by entering y.
 
Configuring Ports By Using MeetingTime
This section describes how to use MeetingTime to complete the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system configuration. This procedure consists of transferring information from the worksheets in the Installation Planning Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace to the MeetingTime screens.
Note	 The Administration Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server contains complete information about MeetingTime.
The Administration Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server contains complete information about MeetingTime.
To Configure Ports by Using MeetingTime
Step 1	 Install MeetingTime on the system manager's PC. Follow the directions included in the media kit that Cisco Systems shipped with the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 series.
Install MeetingTime on the system manager's PC. Follow the directions included in the media kit that Cisco Systems shipped with the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 series.
Step 2	 Double-click the MeetingTime icon. The MeetingTime Login dialog box appears.
Double-click the MeetingTime icon. The MeetingTime Login dialog box appears.
Step 3	 Enter your case-sensitive user ID, your password, and the IP address of the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server. If you do not know your password, contact Cisco TAC.
Enter your case-sensitive user ID, your password, and the IP address of the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server. If you do not know your password, contact Cisco TAC.
Step 4	 Click the door key icon. The MeetingPlace Lobby dialog box appears.
Click the door key icon. The MeetingPlace Lobby dialog box appears.
Step 5	 Click the register book on the receptionist desk.
Click the register book on the receptionist desk.
Step 6	 Click the Configure tab. The MeetingTime Configure dialog box appears.
Click the Configure tab. The MeetingTime Configure dialog box appears.
Step 7	 Select Port Groups under Views on the left side. The attributes for port group 0 (ID number 0) appear without values.
Select Port Groups under Views on the left side. The attributes for port group 0 (ID number 0) appear without values.
Step 8	 Click Query. The values for port group 0 appear.
Click Query. The values for port group 0 appear.
Step 9	 Change the attributes by doing the following:
Change the attributes by doing the following:
	a.	 Click the value. Not all values can change. If the value can change, an editable field appears containing the current value just clicked. Fields that are italicized cannot be changed.
Click the value. Not all values can change. If the value can change, an editable field appears containing the current value just clicked. Fields that are italicized cannot be changed.
	b.	 Enter a new value or select one from the drop-down menu.
Enter a new value or select one from the drop-down menu.
	c.	 Click OK. The field disappears and the new value appears.
Click OK. The field disappears and the new value appears.
Note	 You do not need to change these values if you already set them using the command-line interface.
You do not need to change these values if you already set them using the command-line interface.
Step 10	 Make changes to the attributes for port group 0 based on the information in worksheet 5-7 in the Installation Planning Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace.
Make changes to the attributes for port group 0 based on the information in worksheet 5-7 in the Installation Planning Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace.
Step 11	 Under Views, select Telephony Access. Attributes for telephony access appear on the right.
Under Views, select Telephony Access. Attributes for telephony access appear on the right.
Step 12	 Click Query. Values appear.
Click Query. Values appear.
Step 13	 Using the technique described in Step 9, make changes to the telephony access attributes based on the information in worksheet 5-5 in the Installation Planning Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace.
Using the technique described in Step 9, make changes to the telephony access attributes based on the information in worksheet 5-5 in the Installation Planning Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace.
Step 14	 Under Views, select Ports. Attributes for ports appear on the right.
Under Views, select Ports. Attributes for ports appear on the right.
Step 15	 Click Query. Values appear.
Click Query. Values appear.
Step 16	 Using the technique described in Step 9, make changes to the ports attributes based on the information in worksheet 5-6 in the Installation Planning Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace.
Using the technique described in Step 9, make changes to the ports attributes based on the information in worksheet 5-6 in the Installation Planning Guide for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace.
Step 17	 Under Views, select Server Configuration. Attributes for server configuration appear on the right.
Under Views, select Server Configuration. Attributes for server configuration appear on the right.
Step 18	 Click Query. Values appear.
Click Query. Values appear.
Step 19	 Using the technique described in Step 9, make changes to the server configuration attributes.
Using the technique described in Step 9, make changes to the server configuration attributes.
Note	 Cisco Unified MeetingPlace will not operate correctly if these values are not correct.
Cisco Unified MeetingPlace will not operate correctly if these values are not correct.
Step 20	 Check the alarm table by selecting the System tab, Alarm Tables, and click Execute.
Check the alarm table by selecting the System tab, Alarm Tables, and click Execute.
Step 21	 Clear the alarm table by highlighting all the alarms and clicking Clear Alarm(s).
Clear the alarm table by highlighting all the alarms and clicking Clear Alarm(s).
Note	 These alarms are normal.
These alarms are normal.
Step 22	 Under the System tab, select System Shutdown.
Under the System tab, select System Shutdown.
Step 23	 Set attributes to "System restart," "All Servers," and "Immediate."
Set attributes to "System restart," "All Servers," and "Immediate."
Step 24	 Click Execute to reboot Cisco Unified MeetingPlace.
Click Execute to reboot Cisco Unified MeetingPlace.
Note	 When the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system restarts, you may see an error because MeetingTime has lost its connection to the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server. This is normal.
When the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace system restarts, you may see an error because MeetingTime has lost its connection to the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server. This is normal.
 
Changing the IP Address of your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server System
Follow this procedure to change the IP address on your Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server and its corresponding gateway applications.
To Change the IP Address of a Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Audio Server System
Step 1	 Stop all the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace services, including the Gateway SIM, on the MCS servers. For more information about stopping services, see the Administration Guide for the specific Cisco Unified MeetingPlace component.
Stop all the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace services, including the Gateway SIM, on the MCS servers. For more information about stopping services, see the Administration Guide for the specific Cisco Unified MeetingPlace component.
Step 2	 From the Gateway Configuration, delete the units for the Gateway SIM on each MCS server. For more information about deleting gateways, see the Administration Guide for the specific Cisco Unified MeetingPlace component.
From the Gateway Configuration, delete the units for the Gateway SIM on each MCS server. For more information about deleting gateways, see the Administration Guide for the specific Cisco Unified MeetingPlace component.
Step 3	 Use the net command to change the primary IP address on the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 series. See the "Configuring the LAN Parameters for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series" section for complete information about using the net command.
Use the net command to change the primary IP address on the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 series. See the "Configuring the LAN Parameters for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 Series" section for complete information about using the net command.
Step 4	 Change the IP addresses on any blades in the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 series using the blade command. See the "About Configuring the Blades" section for complete information about using the blade command.
Change the IP addresses on any blades in the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 series using the blade command. See the "About Configuring the Blades" section for complete information about using the blade command.
Step 5	 Restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 series server.
Restart the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace 8100 series server.
Step 6	 Change the IP addresses on the NICs on the MCS servers.
Change the IP addresses on the NICs on the MCS servers. 
Note	 This is a Windows function. Search for help in Windows on configuring TCP/IP for static addressing for more information.
This is a Windows function. Search for help in Windows on configuring TCP/IP for static addressing for more information.
Step 7	 If you use IP addresses (instead of host names) for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace integration software (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Web Conferencing, Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Gateway SIM, Cisco Unified MeetingPlace H.323/SIP Gateway, Cisco Unified MeetingPlace for Outlook,and so on) change these values in the software.
If you use IP addresses (instead of host names) for the Cisco Unified MeetingPlace integration software (Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Web Conferencing, Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Gateway SIM, Cisco Unified MeetingPlace H.323/SIP Gateway, Cisco Unified MeetingPlace for Outlook,and so on) change these values in the software.
Note	 If you use host names (instead of IP addresses), these are automatically changed in the DNS table so you do not need to change anything in the other Cisco Unified MeetingPlace applications.
If you use host names (instead of IP addresses), these are automatically changed in the DNS table so you do not need to change anything in the other Cisco Unified MeetingPlace applications.