Localization Support

This chapter describes the localization support in Cisco Unified Communications Manager Express (Cisco Unified CME) for languages other than English and network tones and cadences not specific to the United States.

Information About Localization

Localization Enhancements in Cisco Unified CME

Cisco Unified CME supports the French locale but some phrases in France French and Canadian French differ. In Cisco Unified CME 9.5, Canadian French is supported as a user-defined locale on Cisco Unified SIP IP phones and Cisco Unified SCCP IP phones when the correct locale package is installed.


Note


Some abbreviations such as BLF, SNR, and CME are not localized.

Prerequisites

  • Cisco Unified CME 9.5 or later version

  • Locale package version 9.5.2.6 is required


Restriction


All the localization enhancements are supported in Cisco Unified CME only. They are not supported in Cisco Unified SRST. Table 1 shows the language codes used in the filenames of locale files.

Table 1. Language Codes for User-Defined Locales

Language

Language Code

Canadian French

fr_CA

For configuration information, see Install User-Defined Locales.


System-Defined Locales

Cisco Unified CME provides built-in, system-defined localization support for 12 languages including English and 16 countries including the United States. Network locales specify country-specific tones and cadences; user locales specify the language to use for text displays.

Configuring system-defined locales depends on the type of IP phone:

  • Cisco Unified IP Phone 7905, 7912, 7940, and 7960—System-defined network locales and user locales are preloaded into Cisco IOS software. No external files are required. Use the network-locale and user-locale commands to set the locales for these phones.

  • Cisco Unified IP Phone 6921, 6945, 7906, 7911, 7921, 7931, 7941, 7961, 7970, 7971, 8941, 8945, and Cisco IP Communicator—You must download locale files to support the system-defined locales and store the files in flash memory, slot 0, or on an external TFTP server. See Install System-Defined Locales for Cisco Unified IP Phone 6921, 6945, 7906, 7911, 7921, 7931, 7941, 7961, 7970, 7971, and Cisco IP Communicator.

  • Cisco Unified 3905, 6941, 6945, 8961, 9951, and 9971 SIP IP Phones—You must download locale files to support the system-defined locales and store the files in flash memory, slot 0, or on an external TFTP server.


Note


TFTP aliases for localization are not automatically created for Cisco Unified SIP IP phones in a Cisco Unified CME system. For more information on how to manually create TFTP aliases, see Install System-Defined Locales for Cisco Unified IP Phone 8961, 9951, and 9971.



Note


Cisco Unified CME 10.5 Release onwards, the System defined locales are deprecated and User-defined locales are recommended.


Cisco Unified 3905 SIP IP Phones and Cisco Unified 6945, 8941, and 8945 SCCP IP Phones have support for all locales up to Cisco Unified CME 8.8.

Localization Support for Cisco Unified SIP IP Phones

Cisco Unified CME 8.6 provides localization support for 12 languages including English and 16 countries including the United States. Network locales specify country-specific tones and cadences; user locales specify the language to use for text displays. Create additional localization support with user-defined locales. For more information about user-defined locales, see User-Defined Locales.

In Cisco Unified CME 9.0 and later versions, localization is enhanced to support Cisco Unified 6941 and 6945 SIP IP Phones.

The load command supports both user-defined and system-defined locales.


Note


The locale files must be stored in the same location as the configuration files.


User-Defined Locales

The user-defined locale feature allows you to support network and user locales other than the system-defined locales that are predefined in Cisco IOS software. For example, if your site has phones that must use the language and tones for Traditional Chinese, which is not one of the system-defined choices, you must install the locale files for Traditional Chinese.

In Cisco Unified CME 4.0 and later versions, you can download files to support a particular user and network locale and store the files in flash memory, slot 0, or an external TFTP server. These files cannot be stored in the system location. User-defined locales can be assigned to all phones or to individual phones.

User-defined language codes for user locales are based on ISO 639 codes, which are available at the Library of Congress website at http://www.loc.gov/standards/iso639-2/. User-defined country codes for network locales are based on ISO 3166 codes.

For configuration information, see Install User-Defined Locales.

Localization Support for Phone Displays

On the Cisco Unified IP Phone 8961, 9951, and 9971, menus and prompts that are managed by the locale file for the IP phone type (.jar) or the Cisco Unified CME dictionary file are localized. Display options configured through Cisco IOS commands are not localized.

The following display items are localized by the IP phone (.jar file):

  • System menus accessed with feature buttons (for example, messages, directories, services, settings, and information)

  • Call processing messages

  • Softkeys (for example, Redial and CFwdALL)

The following display items are localized by the dictionary file for Cisco Unified CME:

  • Directory Service (Local Directory, Local Speed Dial, and Personal Speed Dial)

  • Status Line

Display options configured through Cisco IOS commands are not localized and can only be displayed in English. For example, this includes features such as:

  • Caller ID

  • Header Bar

  • Phone Labels

  • System Message

Multiple Locales

In Cisco Unified CME 8.6 and later versions, you can specify up to five user and network locales and apply different locales to individual ephones or groups of ephones using ephone templates. For example, you can specify French for phones A, B, and C; German for phones D, E, and F; and English for phones G, H, and I. Only one user and network locale can be applied to each phone.

Each of the five user and network locales that you can define in a multilocale system is identified by a locale tag. The locale identified by tag 0 is always the default locale, although you can define this default to be any supported locale. For example, if you define user locale 0 to be JP (Japanese), the default user locale for all phones is JP. If you do not specify a locale for tag 0, the default is US (United States).

To apply alternative locales to different phones, you must use per-phone configuration files to build individual configuration files for each phone. The configuration files automatically use the default user-locale 0 and network-locale 0. You can override these defaults for individual phones by configuring alternative locale codes and then creating ephone-templates to assign the locales to individual ephones.

For configuration information, see Configure Multiple Locales on SCCP Phones.

Locale Installer for Cisco Unified SCCP IP Phones

Before Cisco Unified CME 7.0(1), configuring localization required up to 16 steps, most of which were manual and some of which required filename changes. In Cisco Unified CME 7.0(1) and later versions, the following enhancements for installing locales are supported:
  • Locale installer that supports a single procedure for all SCCP IP phones.

  • Cisco Unified CME parses new firmware-load text files and automatically creates the TFTP aliases for localization, eliminating the requirement for you to manually create up to five aliases for files in the TAR file. To use this feature in Cisco Unified CME 7.0(1), you must use the complete filename, including the file suffix, when you configure the load command for phone firmware versions later than version 8-2-2 for all phone types. For example:

    Router(config-telephony)# load 7941 SCCP41.8-3-3S.loads 

Note


In Cisco Unified CME 4.3 and earlier versions, you do not include the file suffix for any phone type except Cisco ATA and Cisco Unified IP Phone 7905 and 7912. For example:

Router(config-telephony)# load 7941 SCCP41.8-2-2SR2S 

  • Backward compatibility with the configuration method in Cisco Unified CME 7.0 and earlier versions.

For configuration information, see Use the Locale Installer in Cisco Unified CME 7.0(1) and Later Versions.

Locale Installer for Cisco Unified SIP IP Phones

Cisco Unified CME 9.0 and later versions support the following enhancements for installing locales for Cisco Unified SIP IP phones:

  • Locale installer that supports a single procedure for all Cisco Unified SIP IP phones.

  • New load keyword that requires you to use the complete filename, including the file suffix (.tar), when you configure the user-locale command for all Cisco Unified SIP IP phone types. The command syntax is user-locale [user-locale-tag ] {[user-defined-code ] country-code } [load TAR-filename ]. For example,

    Router(config-register-global)#user-locale 2 DE load CME-locale-de_DE-German-8.6.3.0.tar 

With the locale installer, you do not need to perform manual configuration. Instead, you copy the locale file using the copy command in privileged EXEC configuration mode.


Note


You must copy the locale file into the /its directory (flash:/its or slot0:/its) when you store the locale files on the Cisco Unified CME router.


For example,

Router# copy tftp://12.1.1.100/CME-locale-de_DE-German-8.6.3.0.tar flash:/its 

For configuration information, see Use the Locale Installer in Cisco Unified CME 9.0 and Later Versions.

Configure Localization Support on SCCP Phones

Install System-Defined Locales for Cisco Unified IP Phone 6921, 6945, 7906, 7911, 7921, 7931, 7941, 7961, 7970, 7971, and Cisco IP Communicator

Network locale files allow an IP phone to play the proper network tone for the specified country. You must download and install a tone file for the country you want to support.

User locale files allow an IP phone to display the menus and prompts in the specified language. You must download and install JAR files and dictionary files for each language you want to support.

To download and install locale files for system-defined locales, perform the following steps.


Tip


The locale installer simplifies the installation and configuration of system- and user-defined locales in Cisco Unified CME 7.0(1) and later versions. To use the locale installer in Cisco Unified CME 7.0(1) and later versions, see Use the Locale Installer in Cisco Unified CME 7.0(1) and Later Versions.

Restriction


  • Localization is not supported for SIP phones.

  • Phone firmware, configuration files, and locale files must be in the same directory, except the directory file for Japanese and Russian, which must be in flash memory.


Before you begin

Procedure


Step 1

Go to http://www.cisco.com/cgi-bin/tablebuild.pl/CME-Locale.

You must have an account on Cisco.com to access the Software Download Center. If you do not have an account or if you have forgotten your username or password, click the appropriate button at the login dialog box and follow the instructions that appear.

Step 2

Navigate to Downloads Home > Products > Unified Communications > Call Control > Mid-Market Call Control > Cisco Unified Communications Manager Express > Unified Communications Manager Express Individual File Set and select your version of Cisco Unified CME.

Step 3

Select the TAR file for the locale you want to install. Each TAR file contains locale files for a specific language and country and uses the following naming convention: CME-locale-language _country -CMEversion

Example:

For example, CME-locale-de_DE-4.0.2-2.0 is German for Germany for Cisco Unified CME 4.0(2).

Step 4

Download the TAR file to a TFTP server that is accessible to the Cisco Unified CME router. Each file contains all the firmware required for all phone types supported by that version of Cisco Unified CME.

Step 5

Use the archive tar command to extract the files to flash memory, slot 0, or an external TFTP server.

Example:

Router# archive tar /xtract source-urlflash:/file-url 

Example:

For example, to extract the contents of CME-locale-de_DE-4.0.2-2.0.tar from TFTP server 192.168.1.1 to router flash memory, use this command:

Router# archive tar /xtract tftp://192.168.1.1/cme-locale-de_DE-4.0.2-2.0.tar flash: 

Step 6

See Table 1 and Table 2 for a description of the codes used in the filenames and the list of supported directory names.

Each phone type has a JAR file that uses the following naming convention:

language-phone -sccp.jar

Example:

For example, de-td-sccp.jar is for German on the Cisco Unified IP Phone 7970.

Each TAR file also includes the file g3-tones.xml for country-specific network tones and cadences.

Table 2. Phone-Type Codes for Locale JAR Files

Phone Type

Phone Code

6921

rtl

6945

rtl

7906/7911

tc

7931

gp

7941/7961

mk

7970/7971

td

8941/8945

gh

CIPC

ipc

Table 3. System-Defined User and Network Locales

Language

Language Code

User-Locale

Directory Name

Country Code

Network-Locale

Directory Name

English

en

English_United_States1

US

United_States

English_United_Kingdom

UK

United_Kingdom

CA

Canada

Danish

dk

Danish_Denmark

DK

Denmark

Dutch

nl

Dutch_Netherlands

NL

Netherlands

French

fr

French_France

FR

France

CA

Canada

German

de

German_Germany

DE

Germany

AT

Austria

CH

Switzerland

Italian

it

Italian_Italy

IT

Italy

Japanese2

jp

Japanese_Japan

JP

Japan

Norwegian

no

Norwegian_Norway

NO

Norway

Portuguese

pt

Portuguese_Portugal

PT

Portugal

Russian

ru

Russian_Russia

RU

Russian_Federation

Spanish

es

Spanish_Spain

ES

Spain

Swedish

se

Swedish_Sweden

SE

Sweden

1 English for the United States is the default language. You do not need to install the JAR file for U.S. English unless you assign a different language to a phone and then want to reassign English.
2 Katakana is supported by Cisco Unified IP Phone 7905, 7912, 7940, and 7960. Kanji is supported by Cisco Unified IP Phone 7911, 7941, 7961, 7970, and 7971.

Step 7

If you store the locale files in flash memory or slot 0 on the Cisco Unified CME router, create a TFTP alias for the user locale (text displays) and network locale (tones) using this format:

Example:

Router(config)# tftp-server flash:/jar_filealias directory_name/td-sccp.jar 
Router(config)# tftp-server flash:/g3-tones.xml aliasdirectory_name/g3-tones.xml 

Use the appropriate directory name shown in Table 2 and remove the two-letter language code from the JAR file name. For example, the TFTP aliases for German and Germany for the Cisco Unified IP Phone 7970 are:

Router(config)# tftp-server flash:/de-td-sccp.jar alias German_Germany/td-sccp.jar 
Router(config)# tftp-server flash:/g3-tones.xml alias Germany/g3-tones.xml 

Note

 
On Cisco 3800 series routers, you must include /its in the directory name (flash:/its or slot0:/its). For example, the TFTP alias for German for the Cisco Unified IP Phone 7970 is: Router# tftp-server flash:/its/de-td-sccp.jar alias German_Germany/td-sccp.jar

Step 8

If you store the locale files on an external TFTP server, create a directory under the TFTP root directory for each user and network locale.

Use the appropriate directory name shown in Table 2 and remove the two-letter language code from the JAR file name.

Example:

For example, the user-locale directory for German and the network-locale directory for Germany for the Cisco Unified IP Phone 7970 are:

TFTP-Root/German_Germany/td-sccp.jar TFTP-Root/Germany/g3-tones.xml

Step 9

For Russian and Japanese, you must copy the UTF8 dictionary file into flash memory to use special phrases.

  • Only flash memory can be used for these locales. Copy russian_tags_utf8_phrases for Russian; Japanese_tags_utf8_phrases for Japanese.

  • Use the user-locale jp and user-locale ru command to load the UTF8 phrases into Cisco Unified CME.

Step 10

Assign the locales to phones. To set a default locale for all phones, use the user-locale and network-locale commands in telephony-service configuration mode.

Step 11

To support more than one user or network locale, see Configure Multiple Locales on SCCP Phones.

Step 12

Use the create cnf-files command to rebuild the configuration files.

Step 13

Use the reset command to reset the phones and see the localized displays.


Install User-Defined Locales

You must download XML files for locales that are not predefined in the system. To install up to five user-defined locale files to use with phones, perform the following steps.


Note


From Cisco Unified CME 10.5 Release onwards, the System defined locales are deprecated and User-defined locales are recommended. However, the older locale packages can be still used but some phrases may be displayed in English.

Restriction


  • User-defined locales are not supported on the Cisco Unified IP Phone 7920 or 7936.

  • User-defined locales are not supported if the configuration file location is “system:”.

  • When you use the setup tool from the telephony-service setup command to provision phones, you can only choose a default user locale and network locale and you are limited to selecting a locale code that is supported in the system. You cannot use multiple locales or user-defined locales with the setup tool.

  • When using a user-defined locale, the phone normally displays text using the user-defined fonts, except for any strings that are interpreted by Cisco Unified CME, such as “Cisco/Personal Directory,” “Speed Dial/Fast Dial,” and so forth.


Before you begin

Procedure


Step 1

Go to http://www.cisco.com/cgi-bin/tablebuild.pl/CME-Locale.

You must have an account on Cisco.com to access the Software Download Center. If you do not have an account or if you have forgotten your username or password, click the appropriate button at the login dialog box and follow the instructions that appear.

Step 2

Navigate to Downloads Home > Products > Unified Communications > Call Control > Mid-Market Call Control > Cisco Unified Communications Manager Express > Unified Communications Manager Express Individual File Set and select your version of Cisco Unified CME.

Step 3

Select the TAR file for the locale that you want to install. Each TAR file contains locale files for a specific language and country and uses the following naming convention: CME-locale-language _country -CMEversion -fileversion.

Example:

For example, CME-locale-zh_CN-4.0.3-2.0 is Traditional Chinese for China for Cisco Unified CME 4.0(3).

Step 4

Download the TAR file to a TFTP server that is accessible to the Cisco Unified CME router. Each file contains all the firmware required for all phone types supported by that version of Cisco Unified CME.

Step 5

Use the archive tar command to extract the files to slot 0, flash memory, or an external TFTP server.

Example:

Router# archive tar /xtract source-urlflash:/file-url 

For example, to extract the contents of CME-locale-zh_CN-4.0.3-2.0.tar from TFTP server 192.168.1.1 to router flash memory, use this command:

Router# archive tar /xtract tftp://192.168.1.1/cme-locale-zh_CN-4.0.3-2.0.tar flash: 

Step 6

For Cisco Unified IP Phone 7905, 7912, 7940, or 7960, go to Step 11. For Cisco Unified IP Phone 7911, 7941, 7961, 7970, or 7971, go to Step 7.

Step 7

Each phone type has a JAR file that uses the following naming convention: language -type -sccp.jar

Example:

For example, zh-td-sccp.jar is Traditional Chinese for the Cisco Unified IP Phone 7970.

See Table 1 and Table 2 for a description of the codes used in the filenames.

Table 4. Phone-Type Codes for Locale Files

Phone Type

Code

6921

rtl

6945

rtl

7906/7911

tc

7931

gp

7941/7961

mk

7970/7971

td

8941/8945

gh

CIPC

ipc

Table 5. Language Codes for User-Defined Locales

Language

Language Code

Bulgarian

bg

Chinese

zh3

Croation

hr

Czech Republic

cs

Finnish

fi

Greek

el

Hungarian

hu

Korean

ko

Polish

pl

Portugese (Brazil)

pt

Romanian

ro

Serbian

sr

Slovakian

sk

Slovenian

sl

Turkish

tr

3 For Cisco Unified IP Phone 7931, code for Chinese Simplified is chs; Chinese Traditional is cht.

Step 8

If you store the locale files in flash memory or slot 0 on the Cisco Unified CME router, create a TFTP alias using this format:

Example:

Router(config)# tftp-server flash:/jar_filealias directory_name/td-sccp.jar 

Remove the two-letter language code from the JAR filename and use one of five supported directory names with the following convention:

user_define_number , where number is 1 to 5

For example, the alias for Chinese on the Cisco Unified IP Phone 7970 is:

Router(config)# tftp-server flash:/zh-td-sccp.jar alias user_define_1/td-sccp.jar 

Note

 

On Cisco 3800 series routers, you must include /its in the directory name (flash:/its or slot0:/its). For example, the TFTP alias for Chinese for the Cisco Unified IP Phone 7970 is:

Router(config)# tftp-server flash:/its/zh-td-sccp.jar alias user_define_1/td-sccp.jar

Step 9

If you store the locale files on an external TFTP server, create a directory under the TFTP root directory for each locale.

Remove the two-letter language code from the JAR filename and use one of five supported directory names with the following convention:

user_define_number , where number is 1 to 5

Example:

For example, for Chinese on the Cisco Unified IP Phone 7970, remove “zh” from the JAR filename and create the “user_define_1” directory under TFTP-Root on the TFTP server:

TFTP-Root/user_define_1/td-sccp.jar

Step 10

Go to Step 13.

Step 11

Download one or more of the following XML files depending on your selected locale and phone type. All required files are included in the JAR file.

Example:

	      7905-dictionary.xml 
			 7905-font.xml  
			 7905-kate.xml  
			 7920-dictionary.xml 
			 7960-dictionary.xml 
			 7960-font.xml 
			 7960-kate.xml  
			 7960-tones.xml 
			 SCCP-dictionary.utf-8.xml 
			 SCCP-dictionary.xml 

Step 12

Rename these files and copy them to flash memory, slot 0, or an external TFTP server. Rename the files using the format user_define_number _filename where number is 1 to 5.

Example:

For example, use the following names if you are setting up the first user-locale:

	      user_define_1_7905-dictionary.xml  
			 user_define_1_7905-font.xml 
			 user_define_1_7905-kate.xml 
			 user_define_1_7920-dictionary.xml 
			 user_define_1_7960-dictionary.xml 
			 user_define_1_7960-font.xml  
			 user_define_1_7960-kate.xml  
			 user_define_1_7960-tones.xml 
			 user_define_1_SCCP-dictionary.utf-8.xml  
			 user_define_1_SCCP-dictionary.xml

Step 13

Copy the language _tags_file and language _utf8_tags_file to the location of the other locale files (flash memory, slot 0, or TFTP server). Rename the files to user_define_number _tags_file and user_define_number _utf8_tags_file respectively, wherenumber is 1 to 5 and matches the user-defined directory.

Step 14

Assign the locales to phones. See Configure Multiple Locales on SCCP Phones.

Step 15

Use the create cnf-files command to rebuild the configuration files.

Step 16

Use the reset command to reset the phones and see the localized displays.


Use the Locale Installer in Cisco Unified CME 7.0(1) and Later Versions

To install and configure locale files to use with SCCP phones in Cisco Unified CME, perform the following steps.


Tip


Cisco Unified CME 7.0(1) provides backward compatibility with the configuration method in Cisco Unified CME 4.3/7.0 and earlier versions. To use the same procedures as you used with earlier versions of Cisco Unified CME, see Install System-Defined Locales for Cisco Unified IP Phone 6921, 6945, 7906, 7911, 7921, 7931, 7941, 7961, 7970, 7971, and Cisco IP Communicator.

Restriction


  • When using an external TFTP server, you must manually create the user locale folders in the root directory. This is a limitation of the TFTP server.

  • Locale support is limited to phone firmware versions that are supported by Cisco Unified CME.

  • User-defined locales are not supported on the Cisco Unified IP Phone 7920 or 7936.

  • User-defined locales are not supported if the configuration file location is system.

  • When you use the setup tool from the telephony-service setup command to provision phones, you can only choose a default user locale and network locale, and you are limited to selecting a locale code that is supported in the system. You cannot use multiple locales or user-defined locales with the setup tool.

  • When using a user-defined locale, the phone normally displays text using the user-defined fonts, except for any strings that are interpreted by Cisco Unified CME, such as “Cisco/Personal Directory,” and “Speed Dial/Fast Dial.”

  • If you install and configure a user-defined locale using country codes U1-U5 and then you install a new locale using the same label, the phone retains the original language locale even after the phone is reset. This is a limitation of the IP phone. To work around this limitation, you must configure the new package using a different country code.

  • Each user-defined country code (U1-U5) can be used for only one user-locale-tag at a time. For example:

    Router(config-telephony)# user-locale 2 U2 load Finnish.pkg 
    Router(config-telephony)# user-locale 1 U2 load Chinese.pkg 
    LOCALE ERROR: User Defined Locale U2 already exists on locale index 2.
    

Before you begin

  • Cisco Unified CME 7.0(1) or a later version.

  • You must configure Cisco Unified CME for per-phone configuration files. See Define Per-Phone Configuration Files and Alternate Location for SCCP Phones.

  • When the storage location specified by the cnf-file location command is flash memory, sufficient space must be on the flash file system for extracting the contents of the locale TAR file.

  • You must have an account on Cisco.com to download locale files.

Procedure


Step 1

Go to http://www.cisco.com/cgi-bin/tablebuild.pl/CME-Locale.

You must have an account on Cisco.com to access the Software Download Center. If you do not have an account or have forgotten your username or password, click the appropriate button at the login dialog box and follow the instructions that appear.

Step 2

Navigate to Downloads Home > Products > Unified Communications > Call Control > Mid-Market Call Control > Cisco Unified Communications Manager Express > Unified Communications Manager Express Individual File Set and select your version of Cisco Unified CME.

Step 3

Select the TAR file for the locale you want to install. Each TAR file contains locale files for a specific language and country and uses the following naming convention: CME-locale-language _country -CMEversion

Example:

For example, CME-locale-de_DE-7.0.1.0 is German for Germany for Cisco Unified CME 7.0(1).

Step 4

Download the TAR file to the location previously specified by the cnf-file location command. Each file contains all the firmware required for all phone types supported by that version of Cisco Unified CME.

  1. If the cnf-file location is flash memory: Copy the TAR file to the flash:/its directory.

  2. If the cnf-file location is slot0: Copy the TAR file to the slot0:/its directory.

  3. If the cnf-file location is tftp: Create a folder in the root directory of the TFTP server for each locale using the following format and then copy the TAR file to the TFTP-Root folder. TFTP-Root/ TAR-filename

    Example:

    For system-defined locales, use the locale folder name as shown in Table 1. For example, create the folder for system-defined German as follows:

    TFTP-Root/de_DE-7.0.1.0.tar  

    For up to five user-defined locales, use the User_Define_n folder name as shown in Table 1. A user-defined locale is a language other than the system-defined locales that are predefined in Cisco IOS software. For example, create the folder for user-defined locale Chinese (User_Define_1) as follows:

    TFTP-Root/CME-locale-zh_CN-7.0.1.0.tar  

    Note

     
    For a list of user-defined languages supported in Cisco Unified CME, see Cisco Unified CME Localization Matrix.
    Table 6. System-Defined and User-Defined Locales

    Language

    Locale Folder Name

    Country Code

    English

    English_United_States

    US

    English_United_Kingdom

    UK

    CA

    Danish

    Danish_Denmark

    DK

    Dutch

    Dutch_Netherlands

    NL

    French

    French_France

    FR

    CA

    German

    German_Germany

    DE

    AT

    CH

    Italian

    Italian_Italy

    IT

    Japanese4

    Japanese_Japan

    JP

    Norwegian

    Norwegian_Norway

    NO

    Portuguese

    Portuguese_Portugal

    PT

    Russian

    Russian_Russia

    RU

    Spanish

    Spanish_Spain

    ES

    Swedish

    Swedish_Sweden

    SE

    Un5

    User_Define_n2

    Un2

    4 Katakana is supported by Cisco Unified IP Phone 7905, 7912, 7940, and 7960. Kanji is supported by Cisco Unified IP Phone 7911, 7941, 7961, 7970, and 7971.
    5 Where “n” is a number from 1 to 5.

Step 5

Use the user-locale [ user-locale-tag] country-codeload TAR-filename command in telephony-service configuration mode to extract the contents of the TAR file. For country codes, see Table 1.

Example:

For example, to extract the contents of the CME-locale-zh_CN-7.0.1.0.tar file when U1 is the country code for user-defined locale Chinese (User_Define_1), use this command:

Router (telephony-service)# user-locale U1 load CME-locale-zh_CN-7.0.1.0.tar 

Step 6

Assign the locales to phones. See Configure Multiple Locales on SCCP Phones.

Step 7

Use the create cnf-files command to rebuild the configuration files.

Step 8

Use the reset command to reset the phones and see the localized displays.


Configure Multiple Locales on SCCP Phones

To define one or more alternatives to the default user and network locales and apply them to individual phones, perform the following steps.


Restriction


  • Multiple user and network locales are not supported on the Cisco Unified IP Phone 7902G, 7910, 7910G, or 7920, or the Cisco Unified IP Conference Stations 7935 and 7936.

  • When you use the setup tool from the telephony-service setup command to provision phones, you can only choose a default user locale and network locale and you must select a locale code that is predefined in the system. You cannot use multiple or user-defined locales with the setup tool.


Before you begin

SUMMARY STEPS

  1. enable
  2. configure terminal
  3. telephony-service
  4. user-locale [ user-locale-tag] { [ user-defined-code] country-code}
  5. network-locale network-locale-tag [ user-defined-code] country-code
  6. create cnf-files
  7. exit
  8. ephone-template template-tag
  9. user-locale user-locale-tag
  10. network-locale network-locale-tag
  11. exit
  12. ephone phone-tag
  13. ephone-template template-tag
  14. exit
  15. telephony-service
  16. reset { all [ time-interval] | cancel | mac-address mac-address | sequence-all}
  17. end

DETAILED STEPS

  Command or Action Purpose

Step 1

enable

Example:

Router> enable

Enables privileged EXEC mode.

  • Enter your password if prompted.

Step 2

configure terminal

Example:

Router# configure terminal

Enters global configuration mode.

Step 3

telephony-service

Example:

Router(config)# telephony-service

Enters telephony-service configuration mode.

Step 4

user-locale [ user-locale-tag] { [ user-defined-code] country-code}

Example:

Router(config-telephony)# user-locale 1 U1 ZH

Specifies a language for phone displays.

  • user-locale-tag —Assigns a locale identifier to the locale. Range is 0 to 4. Default: 0. This argument is required when defining some locale other than the default (0).

  • user-defined-code —(Optional) Assigns one of the user-defined codes to the specified country code. Valid codes are U1 , U2 ,U3 , U4 , and U5 .

  • country-code —Type ? to display a list of system-defined codes. Default: US (United States). You can assign any valid ISO 639 code to a user-defined code (U1 to U5).

Step 5

network-locale network-locale-tag [ user-defined-code] country-code

Example:

Router(config-telephony)# network-locale 1 FR

Specifies a country for tones and cadences.

  • network-locale-tag —Assigns a locale identifier to the country code. Range is 0 to 4. Default: 0. This argument is required when defining some locale other than the default (0).

  • user-defined-code —(Optional) Assigns one of the user-defined codes to the specified country code. Valid codes are U1 , U2 ,U3 , U4 , and U5 .

  • country-code —Type ? to display a list of system-defined codes. Default: US (United States). You can assign any valid ISO 3166 code to a user-defined code (U1 to U5).

Step 6

create cnf-files

Example:

Router(config-telephony)# create cnf-files

Builds the required XML configuration files for IP phones. Use this command after you update configuration file parameters such as the user locale or network locale.

Step 7

exit

Example:

Router(config-telephony)# exit

Exits telephony-service configuration mode.

Step 8

ephone-template template-tag

Example:

Router(config)# ephone template 1

Enters ephone-template configuration mode.

  • template-tag —Unique sequence number that identifies this template during configuration tasks.

Step 9

user-locale user-locale-tag

Example:

Router(config-ephone-template)# user-locale 2

Assigns a user locale to this ephone template.

  • user-locale-tag —A locale tag that was created in Step 4. Range is 0 to 4.

Step 10

network-locale network-locale-tag

Example:

Router(config-ephone-template)# network-locale 2

Assigns a network locale to this ephone template.

  • network-locale-tag —A locale tag that was created in Step 5. Range is 0 to 4.

Step 11

exit

Example:

Router(config-ephone-template)# exit

Exits ephone-template configuration mode.

Step 12

ephone phone-tag

Example:

Router(config)# ephone 36

Enters ephone configuration mode.

  • phone-tag —Unique sequence number that identifies this ephone during configuration tasks.

Step 13

ephone-template template-tag

Example:

Router(config-ephone)# ephone-template 1

Applies an ephone template to an ephone.

  • template-tag —Number of the template to apply to this ephone.

Step 14

exit

Example:

Router(config-ephone)# exit

Exits ephone configuration mode.

Step 15

telephony-service

Example:

Router(config)# telephony-service

Enters telephony-service configuration mode.

Step 16

reset { all [ time-interval] | cancel | mac-address mac-address | sequence-all}

Example:

Router(config-telephony)# reset all

Performs a complete reboot of all phones or the specified phone, including contacting the DHCP and TFTP servers for the latest configuration information.

  • all —All phones in the Cisco Unified CME system.

  • time-interval —(Optional) Time interval, in seconds, between each phone reset. Range is 0 to 60. Default is 15.

  • cancel —Interrupts a sequential reset cycle that was started with a reset sequence-all command.

  • mac-address mac-address —A specific phone.

  • sequence-all —Resets all phones in strict one-at-a-time order by waiting for one phone to reregister before starting the reset for the next phone.

Step 17

end

Example:

Router(config-telephony)# end

Returns to privileged EXEC mode.

Verify Multiple Locales on SCCP Phones

Procedure


Step 1

Use the show telephony-service tftp-bindings command to display a list of configuration files that are accessible to IP phones using TFTP, including the dictionary, language, and tone configuration files.

Example:

Router(config)# show telephony-service tftp-bindings  
tftp-server system:/its/SEPDEFAULT.cnf
tftp-server system:/its/SEPDEFAULT.cnf alias SEPDefault.cnf
tftp-server system:/its/XMLDefault.cnf.xml alias XMLDefault.cnf.xml 
tftp-server system:/its/ATADefault.cnf.xml
tftp-server system:/its/XMLDefault7960.cnf.xml alias SEP00036B54BB15.cnf.xml 
tftp-server system:/its/germany/7960-font.xml alias German_Germany/7960-font.xml
tftp-server system:/its/germany/7960-dictionary.xml alias German_Germany/7960-dictionary.xml
tftp-server system:/its/germany/7960-kate.xml alias German_Germany/7960-kate.xml
tftp-server system:/its/germany/SCCP-dictionary.xml alias German_Germany/SCCP-dictionary.xml
tftp-server system:/its/germany/7960-tones.xml alias Germany/7960-tones.xml 

Step 2

Ensure that per-phone configuration files are defined with the cnf-file perphone command.

Step 3

Use the show telephony-service ephone-template command to check the user locale and network locale settings in each ephone template.

Step 4

Use the show telephony-service ephone command to check that the correct templates are applied to phones.

Step 5

If the configuration file location is not TFTP, use the debug tftp events command to see which files Cisco Unified CME is looking for and whether the files are found and opened correctly. There are usually three states (“looking for x file,” “opened x file,” and “finished x file”). The file is found when all three states are displayed. For an external TFTP server you can use the logs from the TFTP server.


Configure Localization Support on SIP Phones

Install System-Defined Locales for Cisco Unified IP Phone 8961, 9951, and 9971

Network locale files allow an IP phone to play the proper network tone for the specified country. You must download and install a tone file for the country you want to support.

User locale files allow an IP phone to display the menus and prompts in the specified language. You must download and install JAR files and dictionary files for each language you want to support.

To download and install locale files for system-defined locales, perform the following steps.


Restriction


Phone firmware, configuration files, and locale files must be in the same directory.

Before you begin

  • Cisco Unified CME 8.6 or a later version. For Cisco Unified IP Phone 9971, Cisco Unified CME 8.8 or a later version.

  • You must have an account on Cisco.com to download locale files.

Procedure


Step 1

Go to http://www.cisco.com/cgi-bin/tablebuild.pl/CME-Locale.

You must have an account on Cisco.com to access the Software Download Center. If you do not have an account or if you have forgotten your username or password, click the appropriate button at the login dialog box and follow the instructions that appear.

Step 2

Navigate to Downloads Home > Products > Unified Communications > Call Control > Mid-Market Call Control > Cisco Unified Communications Manager Express > Unified Communications Manager Express Individual File Set and select your version of Cisco Unified CME.

Step 3

Select the TAR file for the locale you want to install. Each TAR file contains locale files for a specific language and country and uses the following naming convention: CME-locale-language _country -CMEversion

Example:

For example, CME-locale-de_DE-8.6 is German for Germany for Cisco Unified CME 8.6.

Step 4

Download the TAR file to a TFTP server that is accessible to the Cisco Unified CME router. Each file contains all the firmware required for all phone types supported by that version of Cisco Unified CME.

Step 5

Use the archive tar command to extract the files to flash memory, slot 0, or an external TFTP server.

Example:

Router# archive tar /xtract source-urlflash:/file-url  

For example, to extract the contents of CME-locale-de_DE-8.6.tar from TFTP server 192.168.1.1 to router flash memory, use this command:

Router# archive tar /xtract tftp://192.168.1.1/cme-locale-de_DE-8.6.tar flash:  

Step 6

See Table 1 and Table 2 for a description of the codes used in the filenames and the list of supported directory names.

Each phone type has a JAR file that uses the following naming convention:

language -phone -sip.jar

Example:

For example, de-gh-sip.jar is for German on the Cisco Unified IP Phone 8961.

Each TAR file also includes the file g4-tones.xml for country-specific network tones and cadences.

Table 7. Phone-Type Codes for Locale JAR Files

Phone Type

Phone Code

3905

cin

6941

rtl

6945

rtl

8961

gh

9951

gd

9971

gd

Table 8. System-Defined User and Network Locales

Language

Language Code

User-Locale

Directory Name

Country Code

Network-Locale

Directory Name

English

en

English_United_States6

US

United_States

English_United_Kingdom

UK

United_Kingdom

GB

United_Kingdom

CA

Canada

AU

Australia

Danish

dk

Danish_Denmark

DK

Denmark

Dutch

nl

Dutch_Netherlands

NL

Netherlands

French

fr

French_France

FR

France

CA

Canada

German

de

German_Germany

DE

Germany

AT

Austria

CH

Switzerland

Italian

it

Italian_Italy

IT

Italy

Japanese

jp

Japanese_Japan

JP

Japan

Norwegian

no

Norwegian_Norway

NO

Norway

Portuguese

pt

Portuguese_Portugal

PT

Portugal

Russian

ru

Russian_Russia

RU

Russian_Federation

Spanish

es

Spanish_Spain

ES

Spain

Swedish

se

Swedish_Sweden

SE

Sweden

6 English for the United States is the default language. You do not need to install the JAR file for U.S. English unless you assign a different language to a phone and then want to reassign English.

Step 7

If you store the locale files in flash memory or slot 0 on the Cisco Unified CME router, create a TFTP alias for the user locale (text displays) and network locale (tones) using this format:

Example:

Router(config)# tftp-server flash:/jar_filealias directory_name/gh-sip.jar  
				Router(config)# tftp-server flash:/g4-tones.xml aliasdirectory_name/g4-tones.xml  

Use the appropriate directory name shown in Table 1 and remove the two-letter language code from the JAR file name.

For example, the TFTP aliases for German and Germany for the Cisco Unified IP Phone 8961 are:

Router(config)# tftp-server flash:/de-gh-sip.jar alias German_Germany/   
			 Router(config)# tftp-server flash:/g4-tones.xml alias Germany/g4-tones.xml 

Step 8

If you store the locale files on an external TFTP server, create a directory under the TFTP root directory for each user and network locale.

Use the appropriate directory name shown in Table 1 and remove the two-letter language code from the JAR file name.

Example:

For example, the user-locale directory for German and the network-locale directory for Germany for the Cisco Unified IP Phone 8961 are:

TFTP-Root/German_Germany/gh-sip.jar TFTP-Root/Germany/g4-tones.xml

Step 9

Assign the locales to the phones. To set a default locale for all phones, use the user-locale and network-locale commands in voice register global configuration mode.

Step 10

To support more than one user or network locale, see Verify Multiple Locales on SIP Phones.

Step 11

Use the create profile command to rebuild the configuration files.

Step 12

Use the reset command to reset the phones and see the localized displays.


Use the Locale Installer in Cisco Unified CME 9.0 and Later Versions


Restriction


  • When using an external TFTP server, you must manually create the user locale folders in the root directory. This is a limitation of the TFTP server.

  • Locale support is limited to phone firmware versions that are supported by Cisco Unified CME.

  • User-defined locales are not supported if the configuration file location is “system:”.

  • If you install and configure a user-defined locale using country codes U1-U5 and then you install a new locale using the same label, the phone retains the original language locale even after the phone is reset. This is a limitation of the IP phone. To work around this limitation, you must configure the new package using a different country code.

  • Each user-defined country code (U1-U5) can be used for only one user-locale-tag at a time. For example:

    
    Router(config-register-global)# user-locale 2 U2 load Finnish.pkg 
    Router(config-register-global)# user-locale 1 U2 load Chinese.pkg 
    LOCALE ERROR: User Defined Locale U2 already exists on locale index 2.
    

Before you begin

  • Cisco Unified CME 9.0(1) or a later version.

  • When the storage location specified by the cnf-file location command is flash memory, sufficient space must be on the flash file system for extracting the contents of the locale TAR file.

  • You must have an account on Cisco.com to download locale files.

Procedure


Step 1

Go to http://www.cisco.com/cgi-bin/tablebuild.pl/CME-Locale

You must have an account on Cisco.com to access the Software Download Center. If you do not have an account or have forgotten your username or password, click the appropriate button at the login dialog box and follow the instructions that appear.

Step 2

Navigate to Downloads Home > Products > Unified Communications > Call Control > Mid-Market Call Control > Cisco Unified Communications Manager Express > Unified Communications Manager Express Individual File Set and select your version of Cisco Unified CME.

Step 3

Select the TAR file for the locale you want to install. Each TAR file contains locale files for a specific language and country and uses the following naming convention: CME-locale-language _country -CMEversion .tar

Example:

For example, CME-locale-de_DE-German-8.6.3.0.tar is German for Germany for Cisco Unified CME 9.0.

Step 4

Download the TAR file to the location previously specified by the cnf-file location command. Each file contains all the firmware required for all phone types supported by that version of Cisco Unified CME.

With the locale installer, you do not need to perform manual configuration. Instead, you copy the locale file using the copy command in privileged EXEC configuration mode.

Note

 

You must copy the locale file into the /its directory (flash:/its or slot0:/its) when you store the locale files on the Cisco Unified CME router.

  1. If the cnf-file location is flash memory: Copy the TAR file to the flash:/its directory.

    Example:

    For example,

    Router# copy tftp://12.1.1.100/CME-locale-de_DE-German-8.6.3.0.tar flash:/its 
    
    
  2. If the cnf-file location is slot0: Copy the TAR file to the slot0:/its directory.

  3. If the cnf-file location is tftp: Create a folder in the root directory of the TFTP server for each locale using the following format and then copy the TAR file to the TFTP-Root folder.

    Example:

    TFTP-Root/ TAR-filename 
    
    

    For system-defined locales, use the locale folder name as shown in Table 1. For example, create the folder for system-defined German as follows:

    TFTP-Root/de_DE-8.6.3.0.tar  
    
    

    For up to five user-defined locales, use the User_Define_n folder name as shown in Table 1. A user-defined locale is a language other than the system-defined locales that are predefined in Cisco IOS software. For example, create the folder for user-defined locale Chinese (User_Define_1) as follows:

    TFTP-Root/CME-locale-zh_CN-Chinese-8.6.3.0.tar  

    Note

     
    For a list of user-defined languages supported in Cisco Unified CME, see Cisco Unified CME Localization Matrix.
    Table 9. System-Defined and User-Defined Locales

    Language

    Locale Folder Name

    Country Code

    English

    English_United_States

    US

    English_United_Kingdom

    UK

    CA

    Danish

    Danish_Denmark

    DK

    Dutch

    Dutch_Netherlands

    NL

    French

    French_France

    FR

    CA

    German

    German_Germany

    DE

    AT

    CH

    Italian

    Italian_Italy

    IT

    Japanese

    Japanese_Japan

    JP

    Norwegian

    Norwegian_Norway

    NO

    Portuguese

    Portuguese_Portugal

    PT

    Russian

    Russian_Russia

    RU

    Spanish

    Spanish_Spain

    ES

    Swedish

    Swedish_Sweden

    SE

    Un7

    User_Define_n1

    Un1

    7 Where “n” is a number from 1 to 5.

Step 5

Use the user-locale [user-locale-tag ] {[user-defined-code]country-code } [load TAR-filename ] command in voice register global configuration mode to extract the contents of the TAR file. For country codes, see Table 1.

Note

 

Use the complete filename, including the file suffix (.tar), when you configure the user-locale command for all Cisco Unified SIP IP phone types.

Example:

For example, to extract the contents of the CME-locale-zh_CN-Chinese-8.6.3.0.tar file when U1 is the country code for user-defined locale Chinese (User_Define_1), use this command:

Router(config-register-global)# user-locale U1 load CME-locale-zh_CN-Chinese-8.6.3.0.tar 

Step 6

Assign the locales to the phones. See Configure Multiple Locales on SIP Phones.

Step 7

Use the create profile command in voice register global configuration mode to generate the configuration profile files required for Cisco Unified SIP IP phones.

Step 8

Use the reset command to reset the phones and see the localized displays.


Configure Multiple Locales on SIP Phones

To define one or more alternatives to the default user and network locales and apply them to individual phones, perform the following steps.


Restriction


  • Multiple user and network locales are supported only on Cisco Unified IP Phone 8961, 9951, and 9971.


Before you begin

SUMMARY STEPS

  1. enable
  2. configure terminal
  3. voice register global
  4. user-locale [ user-locale-tag] { [ user-defined-code] country-code}
  5. network-locale network-locale-tag [ user-defined-code] country-code
  6. create profile
  7. exit
  8. voice register template template-tag
  9. user-locale user-locale-tag
  10. network-locale network-locale-tag
  11. exit
  12. voice register pool pool-tag
  13. voice register template template-tag
  14. exit
  15. voice register global
  16. reset
  17. end

DETAILED STEPS

  Command or Action Purpose

Step 1

enable

Example:

Router> enable

Enables privileged EXEC mode.

  • Enter your password if prompted.

Step 2

configure terminal

Example:

Router# configure terminal

Enters global configuration mode.

Step 3

voice register global

Example:

Router(config)#voice register global

Enters voice register global configuration mode to set parameters for all supported SIP phones in Cisco Unified CME.

Step 4

user-locale [ user-locale-tag] { [ user-defined-code] country-code}

Example:

Router(config-register-global)# user-locale 1 DE

Specifies a language for phone displays.

  • user-locale-tag —Assigns a locale identifier to the locale. Range is 0 to 4. Default: 0. This argument is required when defining some locale other than the default (0).

  • country-code —Type ? to display a list of system-defined codes. Default: US (United States).

Step 5

network-locale network-locale-tag [ user-defined-code] country-code

Example:

Router(config-register-global)# network-locale 1 FR

Specifies a country for tones and cadences.

  • network-locale-tag —Assigns a locale identifier to the country code. Range is 0 to 4. Default: 0. This argument is required when defining some locale other than the default (0).

  • country-code —Type ? to display a list of system-defined codes. Default: US (United States). You can assign any valid ISO 3166 code to a user-defined code (U1 to U5).

Step 6

create profile

Example:

Router(config-register-global)# create profile 

Generates provisioning files required for SIP phones and writes the file to the location specified with the tftp-path command.

Step 7

exit

Example:

Router(config-telephony)# exit

Exits voice register global configuration mode.

Step 8

voice register template template-tag

Example:

Router(config)voice register template 10 

Enters voice register template configuration mode to define a template of common parameters for SIP phones in Cisco Unified CME.

  • Range— 1 to 10.

Step 9

user-locale user-locale-tag

Example:

Router(config-ephone-template)# user-locale 2

Assigns a user locale to this ephone template.

  • user-locale-tag —A locale tag that was created in Step 4. Range is 0 to 4.

Step 10

network-locale network-locale-tag

Example:

Router(config-ephone-template)# network-locale 2

Assigns a network locale to this ephone template.

  • network-locale-tag —A locale tag that was created in Step 5. Range is 0 to 4.

Step 11

exit

Example:

Router(config-ephone-template)# exit

Exits voice register template configuration mode.

Step 12

voice register pool pool-tag

Example:

Router(config)#voice register pool 5

Enters voice register pool configuration mode to set phone-specific parameters for a SIP phone.

Step 13

voice register template template-tag

Example:

Router(config)voice register template 10 

Enters voice register template configuration mode to define a template of common parameters for SIP phones in Cisco Unified CME.

  • Range— 1 to 10.

Step 14

exit

Example:

Router(config-ephone)# exit

Exits voice register template configuration mode.

Step 15

voice register global

Example:

Router(config)#voice register global

Enters voice register global configuration mode to set parameters for all supported SIP phones in Cisco Unified CME.

Step 16

reset

Example:

Router(config-register-global)# reset

Performs a complete reboot of all phones or the specified phone, including contacting the DHCP and TFTP servers for the latest configuration information.

Step 17

end

Example:

Router(config-register-global)# end

Returns to privileged EXEC mode.

Verify Multiple Locales on SIP Phones

Procedure


Step 1

Use the show voice register tftp-bind command to display a list of configuration files that are accessible to IP phones using TFTP, including the dictionary, language, and tone configuration files.

Example:

Router#sh voice register tftp-bind
			 tftp-server syncinfo.xml url system:/cme/sipphone/syncinfo.xml
			 tftp-server SIPDefault.cnf url system:/cme/sipphone/SIPDefault.cnf
			 tftp-server softkeyDefault_kpml.xml url system:/cme/sipphone/softkeyDefault_kpml
			 .xml
			 tftp-server softkeyDefault.xml url system:/cme/sipphone/softkeyDefault.xml
			 tftp-server softkey2_kpml.xml url system:/cme/sipphone/softkey2_kpml.xml
			 tftp-server softkey2.xml url system:/cme/sipphone/softkey2.xml
			 tftp-server featurePolicyDefault.xml url system:/cme/sipphone/featurePolicyDefau
			 lt.xml
			 tftp-server featurePolicy2.xml url system:/cme/sipphone/featurePolicy2.xml
			 tftp-server SEPACA016FDC1BD.cnf.xml url system:/cme/sipphone/SEPACA016FDC1BD.cnf
			 .xml

Step 2

Use the show voice register template all command to check the user locale and network locale settings in each ephone template.

Step 3

Use the show voice register pool all command to check that the correct templates are applied to phones.

Step 4

If the configuration file location is not TFTP, use the debug tftp events command to see which files Cisco Unified CME is looking for and whether the files are found and opened correctly. There are usually three states (“looking for x file,” “opened x file,” and “finished x file”). The file is found when all three states are displayed. For an external TFTP server, you can use the logs from the TFTP server.


Configuration Examples for Localization

Example for Configuring Multiple User and Network Locales

The following example sets the default locale of 0 to Germany, which defines Germany as the default user and network locale. Germany is used for all phones unless you apply a different locale to individual phones using ephone templates.

telephony service
		   cnf-file location flash:
		   cnf-file perphone
		   user-locale 0 DE
		   network-locale 0 DE

After using the previous commands to define Germany as the default user and network locale, use the following commands to return the default value of 0 to US:

telephony service
		   no user-locale 0 DE
		   no network-locale 0 DE

Another way to define Germany as the default user and network locale is to use the following commands:

telephony service
		   cnf-file location flash:
		  cnf-file perphone
		   user-locale DE
		   network-locale DE

After using the previous commands, use the following commands to return the default to US:

telephony service
		   no user-locale DE
		   no network-locale DE

The following example defines three alternative locales: JP (Japan), FR (France), and ES (Spain). The default is US for all phones that do not have an alternative applied using ephone templates. In this example, ephone 11 uses JP for its locales, ephone 12 uses FR, ephone 13 uses ES, and ephone 14 uses the default, US.

telephony-service
		   cnf-file location flash:
		   cnf-file perphone
		   create cnf-files
		   user-locale 1 JP
		   user-locale 2 FR
		   user-locale 3 ES
		   network-locale 1 JP
		   network-locale 2 FR
		   network-locale 3 ES
		   create cnf-files
		  
		  ephone-template 1
		  user-locale 1
		   network-locale 1
		  
		  ephone-template 2
		   user-locale 2
		   network-locale 2
		  
		  ephone-template 3
		   user-locale 3
		   network-locale 3
		  
		  ephone 11
		   button 1:25
		   ephone-template 1
		  
		  ephone 12
		   button 1:26
		   ephone-template 2
		  
		  ephone 13
		   button 1:27
		   ephone-template 3
		  
		  ephone 14
		  button 1:28

Example for Configuring User-Defined Locales

The following example shows user-locale tag 1 assigned to code U1, which is defined as ZH for Traditional Chinese. Traditional Chinese is not predefined in the system so you must download the appropriate XML files to support this language.

In this example, ephone 11 uses Traditional Chinese (ZH) and ephone 12 uses the default, US English. The default is US English for all phones that do not have an alternative applied using ephone templates.

telephony-service
		 cnf-file location flash:
		 cnf-file perphone
		 user-locale 1 U1 ZH
		 network-locale 1 U1 CN
		
		ephone-template 2
		 user-locale 1
		 network-locale 1
	
		ephone 11
		 button 1:25
		 ephone-template 2
		
		ephone 12
		 button 1:26

Example for Configuring Chinese as the User-Defined Locale

The following is a sample output from the user-locale command when you configure the Chinese language as the user-defined locale in Cisco Unified CME:


Router(config-register-global)# user-locale U1 load chinese.pkg 
Updating CNF files

LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: VER:1
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Langcode:zh
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Language:Chinese
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7905-dictionary.xml
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7905-font.xml
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7905-kate.xml
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7960-tones.xml
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: mk-sccp.jar
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: td-sccp.jar
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: tc-sccp.jar
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7921-font.dat
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7921-kate.utf-8.xml
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7921-kate.xml
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: SCCP-dictionary.utf-8.xml
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: SCCP-dictionary.xml
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: SCCP-dictionary-ext.xml
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7921-dictionary.xml
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: g3-tones.xml
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: utf8_tags_file
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: tags_file
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: New Locale configured

Processing file:flash:/its/user_define_1_tags_file

Processing file:flash:/its/user_define_1_utf8_tags_file

CNF-FILES: Clock is not set or synchronized, retaining old versionStamps
CNF files updating complete

Example for Configuring Swedish as the System-Defined Locale

The following is a sample output from the user-locale command when you configure the Swedish language as the system-defined locale in Cisco Unified CME:


Router(config-register-global)# user-locale SE load swedish.pkg 
Updating CNF files

LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: VER:1
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Langcode:se
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Language:swedish
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: g3-tones.xml
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: gp-sccp.jar
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: ipc-sccp.jar
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: mk-sccp.jar
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: tc-sccp.jar
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: td-sccp.jar
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: New Locale configured

CNF-FILES: Clock is not set or synchronized, retaining old versionStamps
CNF files updating complete

Configuration Examples for Locale Installer on SCCP Phones

System-Defined Locale is the Default Applied to All Phones

The following example is the output from the user-locale command when you configure a system-defined locale for Cisco Unified CME and the locale is on the default locale index (user-locale-tag 0). The user-locale-tag argument is required only when using multiple locales; otherwise, the specified language is the default applied to all SCCP phones.

Router(config-telephony)# user-locale SE load CME-locale-sv_SV-7.0.1.1a.tar  
		  Updating CNF files 
		   
		  LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: VER:1 
		  LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Langcode:se 
		  LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Language:swedish 
		  LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: g3-tones.xml 
		  LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: gp-sccp.jar 
		  LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: ipc-sccp.jar 
		  LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: mk-sccp.jar 
		  LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: tc-sccp.jar 
		  LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: td-sccp.jar 
		  LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: New Locale configured 
		  
		  CNF-FILES: Clock is not set or synchronized, retaining old versionStamps 
		  CNF files updating complete 
		  Router(config-telephony)# create cnf-files  
		  Router(config-telephony)# ephone 3  
		  Router(config-ephone)# reset 

User-Defined Locale is Default Language to be Applied to All Phones

The following example is the output from the user-locale command when you configure a user-defined locale for Cisco Unified CME and the locale is on the default locale index (user-locale-tag 0). The user-locale-tag argument is required when using multiple locales, otherwise the specified language is the default applied to all SCCP phones.

Router(config-telephone)# user-locale U1 load CME-locale-xh_CN-7.0.1.1.tar 
		Updating CNF files
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: VER:1
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Langcode:fi
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Language:Finnish
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7905-dictionary.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7905-kate.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7920-dictionary.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7960-dictionary.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7960-font.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7960-kate.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7960-tones.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: mk-sccp.jar
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: tc-sccp.jar
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: td-sccp.jar
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: tags_file
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: utf8_tags_file
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: g3-tones.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: SCCP-dictionary.utf-8.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: SCCP-dictionary.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: ipc-sccp.jar
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: gp-sccp.jar
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: New Locale configured
		
		Processing file:flash:/its/user_define_2_tags_file
		
		Processing file:flash:/its/user_define_2_utf8_tags_file
		
		CNF-FILES: Clock is not set or synchronized, retaining old versionStamps
		CNF files updating complete
		
		Router(config-telephony)# create cnf-files 
		Router(config-telephony)# ephone 3 
		Router(config-ephone)# reset 

Locale on a Non-default Locale Index

The following example is the output from the user-locale command if you configure a user-defined locale as an alternate locale for a particular SCCP phone (ephone 1) in Cisco Unified CME. The user-locale-tag argument is required only when using multiple locales. In this configuration, the locale is user-defined Finnish (U2) on user-locale index 2.

Router(config-telephony)# user-locale 2 U2 load CME-locale-fi_FI-7.0.1.1.tar 
		Updating CNF files
		
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: VER:1
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Langcode:fi
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Language:Finnish
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7905-dictionary.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7905-kate.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7920-dictionary.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7960-dictionary.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7960-font.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7960-kate.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: 7960-tones.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: mk-sccp.jar
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: tc-sccp.jar
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: td-sccp.jar
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: tags_file
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: utf8_tags_file
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: g3-tones.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: SCCP-dictionary.utf-8.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: SCCP-dictionary.xml
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: ipc-sccp.jar
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: gp-sccp.jar
		LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: New Locale configured
		
		Processing file:flash:/its/user_define_2_tags_file
		
		Processing file:flash:/its/user_define_2_utf8_tags_file
		
		CNF-FILES: Clock is not set or synchronized, retaining old versionStamps
		CNF files updating complete
		
		Router(config-telephony)# ephone-template 1 
		Router(config-ephone-template)# user-locale 2 
		Router(config-ephone-template)# ephone 1 
		Router(config-ephone)# ephone-template 1 
		The ephone template tag has been changed under this ephone, please restart or reset ephone to take effect.
		Router(config-ephone)# telephony-service 
		Router(config-telephony)# create cnf-files   
		Router(config-telephony)# ephone 1 
		Router(config-ephone)# reset 

Examples for Configuring Multiple User and Network Locales on SIP Phones

The following example sets the default locale of 0 to Germany, which defines Germany as the default user and network locale. Germany is used for all phones unless you apply a different locale to individual phones using ephone templates.

voice register global
		  user-locale 0 DE
		 network-locale 0 DE
		 

After using the previous commands to define Germany as the default user and network locale, use the following commands to return the default value of 0 to US:

voice register global
		 no user-locale 0 DE
		no network-locale 0 DE
		

Another way to define Germany as the default user and network locale is to use the following commands:

voice register global
		 user-locale DE
		 network-locale DE
		

After using the previous commands, use the following commands to return the default to US:

voice register global
		 no user-locale DE
		 no network-locale DE

SIP: Alternative Locales

The following example defines three alternative locales: JP (Japan), FR (France), and ES (Spain). The default is US for all phones that do not have an alternative applied using ephone templates. In this example, ephone 11 uses JP for its locales, ephone 12 uses FR, ephone 13 uses ES, and ephone 14 uses the default, US.

voice register global
		 create profile
		 user-locale 1 JP
		 user-locale 2 FR
		 user-locale 3 ES
		 network-locale 1 JP
		 network-locale 2 FR
		 network-locale 3 ES
		 create profile
		
		voice register template 1
		 user-locale 1
		 network-locale 1
		
		voice register template 2
		 user-locale 2
		 network-locale 2
		
		voice register pool 1
		  number 1 dn 1
		  template 1
		 user-locale 3
		network-locale 3
		
		voice register pool 2
		  number 2 dn 2
		  template 2
		
		voice register pool 6
		  number 3 dn 3
		   template 3
		

Example for Configuring Locale Installer on SIP Phones

The following example shows how the locale installer only requires you to copy the locale file using the copy command in privileged EXEC configuration mode to configure a locale on a Cisco Unified SIP IP phone. The example also shows that the locale file has been copied in the /its directory.


Router# copy tftp://100.1.1.1/CME-locale-de_DE-German-8.6.3.0.tar flash:/its 
Destination filename [/its/CME-locale-de_DE-German-8.6.3.0.tar]? 
Router# configure terminal
Enter configuration commands, one per line. End with CNTL/Z.
Router(config)# voice register global
Router(config-register-global)# user-locale DE load CME-locale-de_DE-German-8.6.3.0.tar 
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE (SIP):Loading Locale Package...
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: VER:3
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Langcode:de_DE
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Language:German
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: g3-tones.xml
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: tags_file
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: utf8_tags_file
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: gd-sip.jar
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: gh-sip.jar
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: Filename: g4-tones.xml
LOCALE INSTALLER MESSAGE: New Locale configured
Router(config-register-global)#

Where to Go Next

Ephone Templates

For more information about ephone templates, see Templates.

Feature Information for Localization Support

The following table provides release information about the feature or features described in this module. This table lists only the software release that introduced support for a given feature in a given software release train. Unless noted otherwise, subsequent releases of that software release train also support that feature.

Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco software image support. To access Cisco Feature Navigator, go to www.cisco.com/go/cfn. An account on Cisco.com is not required.

Table 10. Feature Information for Localization Support

Feature Name

Cisco Unified CME Version

Feature Information

Localization Enhancements for Cisco Unified SIP IP Phones

10.5

Cisco Unified CME 10.5 provides support for additional languages.

Localization Enhancements for Cisco Unified SIP IP Phones

9.0

Provides the following enhanced localization support for Cisco Unified SIP IP phones:

  • Localization support for Cisco Unified 6941 and 6945 SIP IP Phones.

  • Locale installer that supports a single procedure for all Cisco Unified SIP IP phones.

Localization Enhancement

8.8

Adds localization support for Cisco Unified 3905 SIP and Cisco Unified 6945, 8941, and 8945 SCCP IP Phones.

Usability Enhancement

8.6

Adds localization support for SIP IP Phones.

Cisco Unified CME Usability Enhancement

7.0(1)

  • Locale installer that supports a single procedure for all SCCP IP phones.

  • Parses firmware-load text files and automatically creates the required TFTP aliases for localization.

  • Backward compatibility with the configuration method in Cisco Unified CME 7.0 and earlier versions.

Multiple Locales

4.0

Multiple user and network locales were introduced.

User-Defined Locales

4.0

User-defined locales were introduced.