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安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- Solved: Avaya IP Phones block PC from getting authenticated and . . .
The Avaya IP Phone itself was authenticated, profiled, and authorized perfectly However, when we tried to make a call with the phone, we experienced one-way problem The Avaya phone could send voice and be heard by the user on the other end, but couldn't hear anything as a reply
- Avaya IP Office SIP Trunk Configuration Guide - Cisco Community
SIP Server is the address of the Avaya IP Office, “192 168 97 60”, and the Register box is not checked SIP Server Port is the port number on which the Avaya IP Office SIP server is listening for SIP data SIP Port is the port number on which the Valcom device is listening for SIP data By default, both SIP ports are set to “5060”
- Avaya IPT - LLDP DHCP issues - Cisco Community
I've seen that before at a client, and here's what Avaya said: 96xx IP phones use scope option 242 If you only have 176 defined, the 96xx IP Phone will display "Waiting for LLDP" because the DHCP server is not telling the phone where to connect
- Solved: CUCM -AVAYA Integration - Cisco Community
Also enable options ping on CUCM SIP trunk for the avaya SM ip address You can do a trace from CUCM to avaya side because ping is sometime disabled on some devices in network You can do a packet capture on CUCM to see what messages are you receiving from avaya but first you need to make sure you atleast have connectivity Thanks
- Avaya phones with Cisco switches
We are trying to install a group of Avaya phones in our network (Cisco network) but I have a doubt about the configuration, actually we have next configs in each switch: default-gateway is the router of our LAN Data (10 6 140 1) VLAN data is number 2 VLAN voice (defined in each switch now) is num
- Solved: QoS settings for Avaya phones - Cisco Community
Indeed Avaya phones do not use CDP You have three options with Avaya phones and Cisco switches 1 configure trunks like you mentioned 2 use LLDP 3 configuire port for switch access vlan and voice vlan and have the Avaya phones learn the voice vlan number from option 242 (for 96xx and 16xx phones) or option 176 (for 46xx series phones)
- Cisco Avaya Integration
Or, if the Avaya isn't SIP, then you can terminate a Qsig trunk on a Cisco GW which then communicates with CUCM via whatever IP protocol you want to use Of course, other than the trunk you use, you need to set up the dial-plans on the Cisco side and the Avaya side so that each knows what calls to route to each other
- DHCP option 242 string handling for Avaya IP phones
Avaya 4600 Series phones use Option 176 as the default DHCP Site Specific Option Number (SSON) with TFTP or HTTP The 1600 and 9600 Series phones use Option 242 with HTTP or TLS Both IP telephones use these servers as file servers, to download firmware and access scripts or settings files
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