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In the previous lecture we worked on basic SIP registration with one softphone.
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In this lecture we’ll integrate multiple Q-SYS softphones with a real SIP proxy to get a deeper
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understanding of the typical setup of the proxy itself and what we need to know about that
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setup to be successful in registering and making calls.
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In an advanced setup CUCM supports registering up to 8 softphones per device.
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We’ll discuss this more a bit later.
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A quick review of the basic topology of a typical VoIP deployment is shown above.
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Everything here stays the same when we are working with multiple softphones instead of only one.
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Keep in mind the topology here is greatly simplified from an
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actual enterprise VoIP deployment,
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but the basic concepts shown here should apply to any running CUCM implementation.
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The steps will be as follows:
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Again, the first step for most SIP telephony endpoints is to register with the SIP proxy.
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In this case, CUCM checks the credentials of each endpoint and responds accordingly.
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The endpoints can make calls when and only when they’re registered with the call manager.
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We’ll discover that different methods are required to interface Q-SYS to CUCM
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depending on the number of Q-SYS softphones required in your project.
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Previously we focused on one softphone only.
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In this workshop we are going to focus on multiple softphone registration.
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In a future workshop we will address SIP trunk integration.
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Next we will configure a system with multiple softphones.
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The steps to configure this are similar but
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slightly different in CUCM and for the Q-SYS Softphone.
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First we create the Security profile that will be used for the Softphones.
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This is shared by all of the softphones.
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Next we create the End User profile that includes the
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credentials the softphones will use to register.
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These credentials are shared by all of the softphones.
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Finally we create the phone definition which consists of a Device
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and the associated Directory Numbers.
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The Directory Numbers are the phone numbers used for the softphones.
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Let’s look at each step in detail…
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When multiple softphones are required in a Q-SYS design
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they need to be registered as “Third-party SIP Device (Advanced).
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As before the very first part of defining the softphones in CUCM
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is to create a ‘Phone Security Profile’.
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We can skip the details of each field as we saw them in our previous workshop.
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The ‘User ID’ in the end user setup corresponds
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to the authentication username in the Q-SYS softphone setup.
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This User ID will be shared by multiple softphones in this setup.
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Again the authentication password is set in the ‘Digest Credentials’ field.
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The password will be shared among all of the softphones as well.
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The final step is to configure a phone device of the correct type tied to that user account.
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We see here the device is set up as an advanced third-party SIP device.
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We also see here how multiple directory numbers will be associated to the same device.
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Here we see the device type again showing it is configured as Advanced.
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As we saw in the basic setup we also need to add a Digest User on the Device screen.
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This will match what we configured earlier. In this example it would be ‘QSYS1’.
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In the Protocol Specific Information at the bottom of this page,
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we assign the device security profile we created for an Advanced phone.
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The SIP Profile will be the same as it was for a basic phone.
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The very last element to tie in the directory numbers associated with this account.
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In this case, you can see that we have four directory numbers assigned
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and 4 spaces for additional directory numbers if needed later.
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On the core side most things remain the same except that for each softphone
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you want to configure it to use a different username.
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This will correspond to the directory numbers that were configured in the previous step on CUCM.
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For example, if we had 4 softphones the Usernames might be 1001, 1002, 1003, and 1004.
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The Authentication ID and Password will all be the same.
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Now if we go back to the core we should see all 4 of our softphones registered.
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One of the common issues that sometimes occurs
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is that the extensions are setup as basic and not advanced.
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Recall back to our earlier slide where we setup a ‘Third Party SIP Device (Advanced)’.
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If for some reason we accidentally configured our extensions as a Basic device instead
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we’d see something strange happen.
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One line will register but the other will stay in fault.
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Then you might see the other line register and the first one fault.
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Because a Basic device only allows one line to register.
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If we go back to CUCM and change it to Advanced then it should work again!
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At this point you should be able to open
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each softphone and see the same ‘OK’ status as before when we only had one.
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You also can try to place a test call from each softphone.
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You can even call one softphone from the other.
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At this point you should have multiple softphones registered to your CUCM.
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Stay tuned for our last workshop where we will discuss sip trunking.