Cisco Voice Applications OID MIB

Similar documents
BGP Enforce the First Autonomous System Path

OSPF Incremental SPF

IS-IS Incremental SPF

Generic Routing Encapsulation Tunnel IP Source and Destination VRF Membership

DHCP Lease Limit per ATM/RBE Unnumbered Interface

Configuring Multiple Basic Service Set Identifiers and Microsoft WPS IE SSIDL

PPPoE Session Recovery After Reload

Suppress BGP Advertisement for Inactive Routes

DHCP Option 82 Support for Routed Bridge Encapsulation

QoS Child Service Policy for Priority Class

PPPoE Client DDR Idle Timer

IMA Dynamic Bandwidth

VPDN Group Session Limiting

SSG Service Profile Caching

RADIUS NAS-IP-Address Attribute Configurability

Logging to Local Nonvolatile Storage (ATA Disk)

Cisco Unity Express Voic System User s Guide

OSPF RFC 3623 Graceful Restart Helper Mode

DHCP Relay MPLS VPN Support

RADIUS Tunnel Preference for Load Balancing and Fail-Over

Contextual Configuration Diff Utility

Installing IEC Rack Mounting Brackets on the ONS SDH Shelf Assembly

Protocol-Independent MAC ACL Filtering on the Cisco Series Internet Router

ISSU and SSO DHCP High Availability Features

MPLS MTU Command Changes

PPP/MLP MRRU Negotiation Configuration

Cisco Smart Business Communications System Teleworker Set Up

Using Application Level Gateways with NAT

Configuring an Intermediate IP Multicast Helper Between Broadcast-Only Networks

RADIUS Logical Line ID

Configuring the Cisco IOS DHCP Relay Agent

Per IP Subscriber DHCP Triggered RADIUS Accounting

Configuring Route Maps to Control the Distribution of MPLS Labels Between Routers in an MPLS VPN

IP SLAs Random Scheduler

DHCP ODAP Server Support

Frame Relay Conditional Debug Support

Modified LNS Dead-Cache Handling

Route Processor Redundancy Plus (RPR+)

Cisco 806, Cisco 820 Series, Cisco 830 Series, SOHO 70 Series and SOHO 90 Series Routers ROM Monitor Download Procedures

Extended NAS-Port-Type and NAS-Port Support

Wireless LAN Overview

BECN and FECN Marking for Frame Relay over MPLS

Autosense of MUX/SNAP Encapsulation and PPPoA/PPPoE on ATM PVCs

Packet Classification Using the Frame Relay DLCI Number

Troubleshooting ISA with Session Monitoring and Distributed Conditional Debugging

Cisco Software Licensing Information for Cisco Unified Communications 500 Series for Small Business

PPPoE Session Limits per NAS Port

VPDN LNS Address Checking

Cisco Unified MeetingPlace for Microsoft Office Communicator

MIB Quick Reference for the Cisco ONS Series

Configuring MPLS Multi-VRF (VRF-lite)

Cisco Unified Mobile Communicator 3.0 User Portal Guide

Cisco Report Server Readme

Wireless LAN Error Messages

IP Event Dampening. Feature History for the IP Event Dampening feature

Configuring Token Ring LAN Emulation for Multiprotocol over ATM

Cisco Aironet Directional Antenna (AIR-ANT-SE-WiFi-D)

Maintenance Checklists for Cisco Unity VPIM Networking (with Microsoft Exchange)

Application Firewall Instant Message Traffic Enforcement

MPLS VPN OSPF and Sham-Link Support

This feature was introduced. This feature was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(27)SBA.

Exclusive Configuration Change Access and Access Session Locking

RSVP Message Authentication

Cisco Aironet 1500 Series Access Point Large Pole Mounting Kit Instructions

Connecting Cisco DSU/CSU High-Speed WAN Interface Cards

Release Notes for Cisco Security Agent for Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Release 6.0(7)

Low Latency Queueing with Priority Percentage Support

LAN Emulation Overview

Configuring ISA Accounting

Chunk Validation During Scheduler Heapcheck

Installing the Cisco ONS Deep Door Kit

Configuring Virtual Interfaces

MPLS VPN: VRF Selection Based on Source IP Address

White Paper: Using Microsoft Windows Server 2003 with Cisco Unity 4.0(4)

PPPoE Agent Remote-ID and DSL Line Characteristics Enhancement

Site Preparation and Network Communications Requirements

IP SLAs Proactive Threshold Monitoring

PPPoE Service Selection

ATM VP Average Traffic Rate

Cisco CRS Port Utilization Guide, Release 6.0(1) Cisco Unified Contact Center Express and Cisco Unified IP IVR

Maintenance Checklists for Microsoft Exchange on a Cisco Unity System

Release Notes for Cisco Aironet Client Utility and Driver, Version 3.0 for Mac OS

Configuration Replace and Configuration Rollback

Using Microsoft Outlook to Schedule and Join Cisco Unified MeetingPlace Express Meetings

Connecting Cisco WLAN Controller Enhanced Network Modules to the Network

Support of Provisionable QoS for Signaling Traffic

Connecting Cisco 4-Port FXS/DID Voice Interface Cards

Simple Network-Enabled Auto-Provisioning for Cisco IAD2420 Series IADs

Cisco 10-Gigabit Fibre Channel X2 Transceiver Module Installation Note

Cisco Unified Web and Interaction Manager Supervision Console User s Guide

QoS: Color-Aware Policer

Installation Notes for Catalyst 3750-E and Catalyst 3560-E Switch Fan Modules

Cisco IOS SIP SRST Version 3.4 Command Reference

This module was first published on May 2, 2005, and last updated on May 2, 2005.

MPLS Traffic Engineering Fast Reroute Link Protection

Corporate Headquarters: Cisco Systems, Inc., 170 West Tasman Drive, San Jose, CA USA

Cisco IP Phone 7960 and 7940 Firmware Upgrade Matrix

Cisco Video Surveillance Virtual Matrix Client Configuration Guide

Catalyst 2955 Switch DIN Rail Clip Installation Notes

Cisco Registered Envelope Recipient Guide

Transcription:

Cisco Voice Applications OID MIB The Cisco Voice Applications OID MIB (ciscovoiceapplicationsoidmib) defines the object identifiers (OIDs) that are assigned to various Cisco voice applications, such as Cisco Call Manager, Cisco Call Manager Express, Cisco Survivable Remote Site Telephony, Cisco Broadband Telephony Services, and Cisco SIP Proxy Server Voice applications include call agents and other voice application products Call agents are call processing components of a device in an IP telephony and VoIP network The Cisco Voice Applications OID MIB identifies the OIDs for the following call managers with which it connects: Cisco Call Manager Application (CCM) Cisco Call Manager Express (CCME) Cisco Survivable Remote Site Telephony (SRST) Cisco Broadband Telephony Services (BTS) Cisco SIP Proxy Server (Standalone Unix/Linux SIP Proxy) Finding Support Information for Platforms and Cisco IOS Software Images Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco IOS software image support Access Cisco Feature Navigator at http://wwwciscocom/go/fn You must have an account on Ciscocom If you do not have an account or have forgotten your username or password, click Cancel at the login dialog box and follow the instructions that appear Contents Information About the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB, page 2 CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB Objects, page 4 CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB Objects, page 4 How to Use the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB, page 5 Corporate Headquarters: Cisco Systems, Inc, 170 West Tasman Drive, San Jose, CA 95134-1706 USA Copyright 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc All rights reserved

Information About the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB Cisco Voice Applications OID MIB Information About the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB The MIB provides enumeration of call agent types used by the CISCO-VOICE-CONNECTIVITY-MIB CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB Structure The CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB is uniquely identified within the Cisco module (12) group by the number 5 Therefore, the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB is: 1361419125 Objects in the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB can be identified by either of the following methods The object identifier 1361419125<Cisco Voice Applications OID MIB-variable> or The object name iso(1)org(3)dod(6)internet(1)private(4)enterprise(1)cisco(9)ciscomodules(12) CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB(5)<MIB-variable> Figure 1 shows the position of the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB in the Internet MIB hierarchy The CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB is part of the Cisco modules (12) group, and is shown graphically in Figure 1 The CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB uses definitions from the following MIBs: SNMPv2-SMI CISCO-SMI 2

Cisco Voice Applications OID MIB Information About the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB Figure 1 CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB Tree Structure unnamed CCITT 0 joint ISO/CCITT 2 ISO 1 org 3 dod 6 Internet 1 directory 1 mgmt 2 experimental 3 private 4 mib 1 enterprise 1 cisco 9 ciscomodule 12 CISCO-VOICE- APPLICATIONS- OID-MIB 5 142741 The CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB structure is divided into the following OIDs cvamiboids ciscocallmanager ciscocallmanagerexpress ciscosrst 3

CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB Objects Cisco Voice Applications OID MIB ciscobts ciscocsps CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB Objects This section contains the Cisco Voice Applications OID MIB object Table 1 lists the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB Table 2 lists the ciscovoiceapplicationsoidmib object IDs (OIDs) Table 1 CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB Objects Group Object Max Access Description cvamiboids ciscovoiceapplicati onsoidmib This module defines the object identifiers that are assigned to various Cisco voice applications Voice applications include call agents and other voice application products Call agents are call processing components of a device in a IP telephony and VoIP network ciscocallmanager This MIB allows management of ciscocallmanager ciscocallmanagere This MIB allows management of Cisco Call Manager Express xpress ciscosrst This MIB allows management of Cisco Survivable Remote Site Telephony ciscobts This MIB allows management of Cisco Broadband Telephony Services ciscocsps This MIB allows management of Cisco SIP Proxy Server CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB Objects Table 2 lists the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB object name and the corresponding object ID mapping There are five CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB objects listed in Table 2: Table 2 CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB Object ID Mapping Object Name Object ID ciscovoiceapplicationsoidmib 1361419125 ciscocallmanager 13614191251 ciscocallmanagerexpress 13614191252 ciscosrst 13614191253 ciscobts 13614191254 ciscocsps 13614191255 4

Cisco Voice Applications OID MIB How to Use the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB How to Use the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB The following sections contain information regarding configuring and using the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB The snmp-server community string command provides access control for SNMPv1 and SNMPv2c but also continues to provide backward compatibility between different versions The previous version of this command did not have an option to create a community string that allows SNMP messages to execute a set operation on a MIB object An rw or ro option has been introduced for this purpose Note The SNMP agent is disabled by default, and a community string is not configured The following example enables the SNMP agent and assigns the community string comaccess to SNMP: 507-1(config)# snmp-server community comaccess ro The preceding example defines a community string comaccess used as a password for authentication when you access the SNMP agent Any SNMP message sent to the SNMP agent must have the Community Name field of the message match the community string defined here in order to be authenticated Entering a community string enables the SNMP agent The following example disables the SNMP agent and removes the previously defined community string 507-1(config)# no snmp-server community comaccess ro Locating the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB To locate and download MIBs for selected platforms, Cisco IOS releases, and feature sets, use the Cisco MIB Locator found at the following URL: http://toolsciscocom/itdit/mibs/servlet/index If Cisco MIB Locator does not support the MIB information that you need, you can also obtain a list of supported MIBs and download MIBs from the Cisco MIBs page at the following URL: http://wwwciscocom/public/sw-center/netmgmt/cmtk/mibsshtml To access Cisco MIB Locator, you must have an account on Ciscocom If you have forgotten or lost your account information, send a blank e-mail to cco-locksmith@ciscocom An automatic check will verify that your e-mail address is registered with Ciscocom If the check is successful, account details with a new random password will be e-mailed to you Qualified users can establish an account on Ciscocom by following the directions found at the following URL: http://toolsciscocom/rpf/register/registerdo Enabling the SNMP Agent The SNMP agent for the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB is disabled by default Prerequisites Be sure the router platform is a supported router and the required MIBs are installed 5

How to Use the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB Cisco Voice Applications OID MIB DETAILED STEPS Step 1 Command or Action Access your router directly using Telnet or using Terminal server Purpose Telnets to the router identified by the specified IP address (represented as xxxxxxxxxxxx) Step 2 Router> enable Enters privileged EXEC mode Step 3 Router# config UPR terminal Enters global configuration mode Step 4 Step 5 Router(config)# snmp-server community <password> RO Router(config)# snmp-server community <password> RW Enables the read-only (RO) community string, where <password> represents the read-only community/password string Enables the read-write (RW) community string, where <password> represents the read-write community/password string Step 6 Router(config)# exit Exits global configuration mode and returns to privileged EXEC mode Step 7 Router# write memory Writes the modified configuration to NVRAM, permanently saving the settings Verifying the Enabling of the SNMP Agent DETAILED STEPS To verify that the SNMP agent has been enabled on a given network device, perform the following steps Step 1 Step 2 Telnet to the target device Display the running configuration on the device and examine the output for any displayed SNMP information: Router# show running-config snmp-server community public RO snmp-server community private RW Any snmp-server statement appearing in the output that takes the form shown above verifies that SNMP has been enabled on the specified device Configuring the MIB Browser to Read MIB Values For the MIB browser to read the MIB values, configure the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB using the following CLI commands 6

Cisco Voice Applications OID MIB How to Use the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB MIB Browser Configuration For the MIB browser to read the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB values, the browser must be configured Prerequisites Be sure the router platform is a supported router and the required MIBs are installed SUMMARY STEPS 1 enter password 2 end the configuration DETAILED STEPS Step 1 Step 2 Command or Action enter password Example: snmp-server community <password> RO end configuration Purpose Allows the use of a MIB browser to read MIB values, you must configure the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB using CLI Where <password> can be any password you choose Ends the configuration mode Example: (config) > end Configuring the MIB Browser to Write MIB Values For the MIB browser to write the MIB values, configure the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB using the following CLI commands MIB Browser Configuration For the MIB browser to write the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB values, the browser must be configured Restrictions Be sure the router platform is a supported router and the required MIBs are installed Prerequisites Be sure the router platform is a supported router and the required MIBs are installed 7

Additional References Cisco Voice Applications OID MIB SUMMARY STEPS 1 enter password 2 end the configuration DETAILED STEPS Step 1 Step 2 Command or Action enter password Example: snmp-server community <password> RW end oonfiguration Purpose Allows the use of a MIB browser to write MIB values, you must configure the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB using CLI Where <password> can be any password you choose Ends the configuration mode Example: (config) > end Note Refer to the Cisco Unity Express System Monitoring Guide Release 22 for a list of CLI commands for use with Cisco Unity Express What to Do Next Begin monitoring your network Additional References The following sections provide references related to the CISCO-VOICE-APPLICATIONS-OID-MIB Related Documents Related Topic Document Title 8

Cisco Voice Applications OID MIB Command Reference Standards Standard No new or modified standards are supported by this feature Title MIBs MIB SNMPv2-SMI CISCO-SMI MIBs Link To locate and download MIBs for selected platforms, Cisco IOS releases, and feature sets, use Cisco MIB Locator found at the following URL: http://wwwciscocom/go/mibs RFCs RFC Title Technical Assistance Description The Cisco Technical Support website contains thousands of pages of searchable technical content, including links to products, technologies, solutions, technical tips, and tools Registered Ciscocom users can log in from this page to access even more content Link http://wwwciscocom/techsupport Command Reference Refer to the Cisco Unity Express System Monitoring Guide Release 22 for a list of new and modified CLI commands 9

Glossary Cisco Voice Applications OID MIB Glossary CCM Cisco CallManager CCME Cisco CallManager Express CRA Customer Response Applications CRS Customer Response Solution CUE Cisco Unity Express HPOV HP Open View MIB Management Information Base NMS Network Management System SNMP Simple Network Management Protocol Note See Internetworking Terms and Acronyms for terms not included in this glossary CCVP, the Cisco logo, and the Cisco Square Bridge logo are trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc; Changing the Way We Work, Live, Play, and Learn is a service mark of Cisco Systems, Inc; and Access Registrar, Aironet, BPX, Catalyst, CCDA, CCDP, CCIE, CCIP, CCNA, CCNP, CCSP, Cisco, the Cisco Certified Internetwork Expert logo, Cisco IOS, Cisco Press, Cisco Systems, Cisco Systems Capital, the Cisco Systems logo, Cisco Unity, Enterprise/Solver, EtherChannel, EtherFast, EtherSwitch, Fast Step, Follow Me Browsing, FormShare, GigaDrive, HomeLink, Internet Quotient, IOS, iphone, IP/TV, iq Expertise, the iq logo, iq Net Readiness Scorecard, iquick Study, LightStream, Linksys, MeetingPlace, MGX, Networking Academy, Network Registrar, Packet, PIX, ProConnect, ScriptShare, SMARTnet, StackWise, The Fastest Way to Increase Your Internet Quotient, and TransPath are registered trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc and/or its affiliates in the United States and certain other countries All other trademarks mentioned in this document or Website are the property of their respective owners The use of the word partner does not imply a partnership relationship between Cisco and any other company (0705R) Copyright 2065 Cisco Systems, Inc All rights reserved 10