Understanding Interactions With Other Cisco Unified Ip Telephony Products - Cisco 6901 Administration Manual

Unified ip phone communications manager 8.6 (sccp and sip)
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What Networking Protocols are Used?
Table 1-3
Supported Networking Protocols on the Cisco Unified IP Phone (continued)
Networking Protocol
Real-Time Control
Protocol (RTCP)
Session Initiation Protocol
(SIP)
Skinny Client Control
Protocol (SCCP)
Transmission Control
Protocol (TCP)
Transport Layer Security
(TLS)
Trivial File Transfer
Protocol (TFTP)
User Datagram Protocol
(UDP)
Related Topics
Cisco Unified IP Phone 6901 and 6911 Administration Guide for Cisco Unified Communications Manager 8.6 (SCCP and SIP)
1-8
Purpose
RTCP works in conjunction with RTP to
provide QoS data (such as jitter, latency,
and round trip delay) on RTP streams.
SIP is the Internet Engineering Task Force
(IETF) standard for multimedia
conferencing over IP. SIP is an
ASCII-based application-layer control
protocol (defined in RFC 3261) that can be
used to establish, maintain, and terminate
calls between two or more endpoints.
SCCP includes a messaging set that allows
communications between call control
servers and endpoint clients such as IP
Phones. SCCP is proprietary to Cisco
Systems.
TCP is a connection-oriented transport
protocol.
TLS is a standard protocol for securing
and authenticating communications.
TFTP allows you to transfer files over the
network.
On the Cisco Unified IP Phone, TFTP
enables you to obtain a configuration file
specific to the phone type.
UDP is a connectionless messaging
protocol for delivery of data packets.
Understanding Interactions with Other Cisco Unified IP Telephony Products, page 2-1
Understanding the Phone Startup Process, page 2-6
Chapter 1
An Overview of the Cisco Unified IP Phone
Usage Notes
RTCP is disabled by default, but you can enable it
on each individual phone using Cisco Unified
Communications Manager.
Like other VoIP protocols, SIP is designed to
address the functions of signaling and session
management within a packet telephony network.
Signaling allows call information to be carried
across network boundaries. Session management
provides the ability to control the attributes of an
end-to-end call.
You can configure the Cisco Unified IP Phone to use
either SIP or Skinny Client Control Protocol
(SCCP).
Cisco Unified IP Phone 6901 and 6911 use SCCP,
version 20 for call control.
Cisco Unified IP Phones use TCP to connect to
Cisco Unified Communications Manager.
When security is implemented, Cisco
Unified IP Phones use the TLS protocol when
securely registering with Cisco
Unified Communications Manager.
For more information, refer to the Cisco Unified
Communications Manager Security Guide.
TFTP requires a TFTP server in your network,
which can be automatically identified from the
DHCP server. If you want a phone to use a TFTP
server other than the one specified by the DHCP
server, you must manually assign the IP address of
the TFTP server by using the Network
Configuration menu on the phone.
For more information, go to the
in the Cisco Unified Communications Manager
System Guide.
Cisco Unified IP Phones transmit and receive RTP
streams, which utilize UDP.
Cisco TFTP
chapter
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