Table Of Contents
General Information About Cisco TelePresence Manager
Contents
Overview of the Cisco TelePresence Manager Administration Guide
Terminology
Introduction to the Cisco TelePresence System
Making Point-to-Point Cisco TelePresence calls
CTS Endpoints
Components of the Cisco TelePresence System
Cisco TelePresence Manager Specifications and System Requirements
Installation Procedures Guidelines
General Information About Cisco TelePresence Manager
First Published: September 27, 2010, OL-22226-01
Contents
•
Overview of the Cisco TelePresence Manager Administration Guide
–
Terminology
•
Introduction to the Cisco TelePresence System
–
Making Point-to-Point Cisco TelePresence calls
–
Components of the Cisco TelePresence System
•
Cisco TelePresence Manager Specifications and System Requirements
•
Installation Procedures Guidelines
Overview of the Cisco TelePresence Manager Administration Guide
Table 1-1 give a brief description of the contents of each chapter in the Cisco TelePresence Manager (CTS-Manager) Administration Guide.
Terminology
The following terms are used in this guide:
•
Audio call: An audio call refers to a call placed to or from an audio-only telephone for the purpose of conferencing the audio call into a Cisco TelePresence meeting.
Note
Audio calls are placed or answered with the CTS phone's handset on-hook.
•
Cisco TelePresence call: A Cisco TelePresence call is placed between two or more CTS endpoints.
•
Cisco TelePresence meeting: A Cisco TelePresence meeting refers to two or more endpoints connected by a Cisco TelePresence call.
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Conference: A conference refers to a Cisco TelePresence meeting that includes an audio call.
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CUVC - Cisco Unified Video Conferencing Server.
•
Endpoint: An endpoint, or `CTS endpoint' refers to the combination of hardware and software that comprise a Cisco TelePresence System. Examples of a CTS endpoint are the CTS 3200 and the CTS 500. CTS endpoints are also referred to as Cisco TelePresence rooms, in the case of a CTS 3000 or CTS 3200 endpoint.
•
Interop: Interoperability with video conferencing. The ability for TelePresence meetings to include Cisco TelePresence endpoints and traditional video conferencing/video telephony endpoints.
•
LDAP: Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
•
VC: Video conferencing
Introduction to the Cisco TelePresence System
The Cisco TelePresence System is composed of several hardware and software components. The Cisco TelePresence System also gets information and services with peripheral components such as Cisco Unified Communications Manager (Unified CM), and calendar services such as Microsoft Exchange or IBM Domino. Together all the peripheral and CTS components offer the features and services needed to schedule, place, and manage Cisco TelePresence calls and maintain all the Cisco TelePresence System components.
The following sections provide a general overview of the components that make up the Cisco TelePresence System.
Making Point-to-Point Cisco TelePresence calls
Placing a call between two CTS endpoints is similar to making a simple audio call. If you know the phone number of the endpoint you can dial it directly using the CTS IP phone.
CTS Endpoints
There are five CTS endpoint models supported by Cisco Unified CM.
•
CTS 500 - For data sheets and other product literature refer to the product page. For hardware installation information refer to the Cisco TelePresence System 500 Assembly, Use & Care, and Field-replaceable Unit Guide.
•
CTS 1100 - For data sheets and other product literature refer to the product page. For hardware installation information refer to the Cisco TelePresence System 1100 Assembly, Use & Care, and Field-replaceable Unit Guide.
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CTS 1300 - For data sheets and other product literature refer to the product page. For hardware installation information refer to the Cisco TelePresence System 1300 Assembly, Use & Care, and Field-replaceable Unit Guide.
•
CTS 3000 - For data sheets and other product literature refer to the product page. For hardware installation information refer to the Cisco TelePresence System 3000 Assembly, Use & Care, and Field-replaceable Unit Guide.
•
CTS 3200 - For data sheets and other product literature refer to the product page. For hardware installation information refer to the Cisco TelePresence System 3200 Assembly, Use & Care, and Field-replaceable Unit Guide.
Each endpoint is configured and maintained through Unified CM and the CTS Administration software. The CTS Administration software is installed on each endpoint and is accessible by browser. All Cisco TelePresence Administration software supports Internet Explorer 6.0. For information about installing, configuring, and maintaining CTS endpoints refer to the CTS Administrator's Guide.
Components of the Cisco TelePresence System
In order to schedule meetings in advance you need to include CTS-Manager in your Cisco TelePresence system. CTS-Manager works with Microsoft Exchange or IBM Domino servers to schedule Cisco TelePresence meeting rooms and enable One-Button-To-Push meeting access.
CTS-Manager communicates with the following components:
•
CTS endpoints - CTS-Manager polls endpoints and reports errors to your CTS-Manager Administrator. CTS-Manager also pushes an endpoint's meeting schedule to the endpoint, which is then displayed on the IP Phone.
•
Cisco Unified CM - CTS-Manager works with Cisco Unified CM to maintain current configurations for each endpoint, and to discover new endpoints as they are added to your Cisco TelePresence network.
•
Calendar server - Each CTS endpoint has a corresponding mailbox on a calendar server to support scheduling through Outlook, Lotus Notes, or other groupware client. CTS-Manager monitors endpoint calendars and reports errors. CTS-Manager also uses the scheduling information to push meeting schedules to each CTS endpoint which is displayed on the IP phone.
•
LDAP/Active Directory - Each CTS endpoint's room ID is stored in LDAP/Active Directory. CTS-Manager is the conduit between Active Directory and an endpoint. On login to CTS-Manager users are authenticated to LDAP/AD. No user IDs or passwords are stored in CTS-Manager.
•
Cisco TelePresence Multipoint Switch (CTMS) - A CTMS provides the resources for multipoint (three or more endpoints) and WebEx calls. CTS-Manager reports errors with a CTMS and specifies which CTMS is used for each scheduled Cisco TelePresence meeting. Cisco TelePresence supports the ability to conference existing standards-based video conference sessions into a Cisco TelePresence meeting by integrating the Cisco TelePresence Multipoint Switch (CTMS) with Cisco Unified Video conferencing Systems (CUVC) and Media Experience Engine (MXE). This provides interoperability with many standards-based video conferencing systems installed today.
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WebEx OneTouch integration, meetings which include Webex, are scheduled by CTS-Manager through a direct connection to the WebEx Scheduling Server. The WebEx meeting ID and password are included in the email sent to meeting organizers to forward to others.
•
For data sheets and other product literature refer to the product page. For hardware installation and CTMS maintenance refer to the Cisco TelePresence Multipoint Switch administration guide.
Cisco TelePresence Manager Specifications and System Requirements
Table 1-2 gives product specifications and Table 1-3 provides system requirements of the Cisco TelePresence Manager. Table 1-4 provides the flow of tasks you need follow to install the CTS-Manager system.
Table 1-2 Product Specifications
Specifications
|
Description
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Product compatibility
|
New Installs: MCS 7845 I2 or I3 only.
Upgrades: MCS 7845 or MCS 7835.
Commercial Bundle: MCS 7835 only.
Note MCS 7835 I2: A failure of power supply number 2 does not generate a trap.
Note MCS 7835 H2: 4 GB of memory is required. Supports up to 100 rooms.
|
Protocols
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HTTP, HTTPS, Administrative XML (AXL)/SOAP, Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP), and CTI
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Connectivity
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IP
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Reliability and availability
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High availability through Cisco 7845 Media Convergence Server platform
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Table 1-3 System Requirements
Specifications
|
Description
|
Groupware connectivity:
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Microsoft
• Microsoft Exchange Server:
– 2003 SP2 (Windows Server 2003 Enterprise Edition SP2).
– 2007 SP2 (Windows Server 2003 SP2 Enterprise Edition 64-bit).
– 2007 SP2 and SP3 (Windows Server 2008 SP2 Enterprise Edition 64-bit).
Note 2007 is supported with WebDAV and EWS.
– supported versions: [08.00.10685, 08.01.10240, 6.5.6944, 6.5.7226, 6.5.7638, 8.1.240.5, 8.2.176.2 6.5.6944, 6.5.7226, 6.5.7638, 8.1.240.5, 8.2.176.2, 8.3.083]
– 2010 SP1 (Windows Server 2008 SP2 Enterprise Edition 64-bit).
Note The English language version of Microsoft Exchange is required.
• Microsoft Outlook client: 2003, 2007 and 2010
– Required Installation: cumulative time zone update for Microsoft Windows operating systems (December 2008 or newer).
For more information, refer to:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/979306.
– Microsoft Outlook 2003 SP3 is supported only with the following bug fixes installed sequentially, available from Microsoft:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/956310 11.0.8233.0
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/957142 11.0.8234.0
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/959628 11.0.8238.0
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/965495 11.0.8249.0
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/968689 11.0.8309.0
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/971366 11.0.8312.0
Note Microsoft Exchange with Entourage client is not supported.
|
IBM
• IBM Domino Server: 8.5, 8.2, 8.0.x and 7.0.x (Operating System: Windows Server 2003 Enterprise Edition SP2)
– The Resource Reservation database must be initially created using the Resource Reservation Template 7 or later. Reservation templates prior to version 7 cannot be upgraded.
• IBM Lotus Notes Client: 8.5.1, 8.0.x, 7.0.x, and 6.5.x
|
|
Other
• Other Groupware integrations with CTS-Manager are allowed using the Cisco Developer CTS-Manager Scheduling-API. Information on the Scheduling API for customers or developers can be found at: http://developer.cisco.com.
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Cisco Unified Communications Manager
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Cisco Unified CM 7.1.5 or later
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Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) connectivity
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Active Directory 2003 SP2, 2008 SP2
Domino Directory, versions: 7.0.x, 8.0.x, 8.5
Note CTS-Manager LDAP user and SysAdmin need read permission to the Domino Directory.
|
Ethernet Cable
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Connect to MCS server's NIC Port 1
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Web browsers supported
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Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.x, 7.x (Windows) Firefox 3.6 (Mac and Windows).
Note Cisco cannot guarantee correct system behavior using unsupported browsers. When using Firefox, the height of the browser window must be equal to at least 50 percent of the height of the computer screen. If it is less than 50 percent, windows with secondary tabs and tables may not display properly.
|
Licensing
|
Licenses are required for the following features:
• Rooms: TelePresence endpoint (room) license. Licenses are available in groups of 10, 50 and 100 rooms. All TelePresence rooms must be licensed to be used with CTS-Manager.
• Metrics Dashboard and Reporting API: Survey and benefits reports and meeting information for external metrics reporting solutions.
• Scheduling API: Scheduling support for organizations that are not using MS Exchange or IBM Domino.
|

Note
CTS-Manager is supported only in an enterprise intranet environment. NAT deployment is not supported.
Installation Procedures Guidelines
The flow of tasks you need to perform in order to configure the Cisco TelePresence network and install and configure CTS-Manager are provided in the following table:
Table 1-4 Install and Configuration Procedures Guidelines for setting up the CTS-Manager System