Table Of Contents
Monitoring the Cisco Unified IP Phone Remotely
Accessing the Web Page for a Phone
Disabling Web Page Access
Device Information
Network Configuration
Network Statistics
Ethernet Statistics
Port 1 (Network), Port 2 (Access), and Port 3 (Phone) Statistics
Device Logs
Stack Statistics
Status Messages
Streaming Statistics
Monitoring the Cisco Unified IP Phone Remotely
Each Cisco Unified IP Phone has a web page from which you can view a variety of information about the phone, including:
•Device information
•Network configuration information
•Network statistics
•Device logs
•Streaming statistics
This chapter describes the information that you can obtain from the phone's web page. You can use this information to remotely monitor the operation of a phone and to assist with troubleshooting.
You can also obtain much of this information directly from a phone. For more information, see "Viewing Model Information, Status, Statistics, and Security Information on the Cisco Unified IP Phone."
For more information about troubleshooting the Cisco Unified IP Phone, "Troubleshooting the Cisco Unified IP Phone."
This chapter includes these topics:
•Accessing the Web Page for a Phone
•Disabling Web Page Access
•Device Information
•Network Configuration
•Network Statistics
•Device Logs
•Streaming Statistics
Accessing the Web Page for a Phone
To access the web page for a Cisco Unified IP Phone, perform the following steps. If you cannot access the web page, it may be disabled. See the "Disabling Web Page Access" section for more information.
Procedure
Step 1 Obtain the IP address of the Cisco Unified IP Phone using one of these methods:
•Search for the phone in Cisco Unified CallManager by choosing Device > Phone. Phones registered with Cisco Unified CallManager display the IP address on the Find and List Phones web page and at the top of the Phone Configuration web page.
•On the Cisco Unified IP Phone, press the Settings button, choose Network Configuration, and then scroll to the IP Address option.
Step 2 Open a web browser and enter the following URL, where IP_address is the IP address of the Cisco Unified IP Phone:
http://IP_address
The web page for a Cisco Unified IP Phone includes these topics:
•Device Information—Displays device settings and related information for the phone. For more information, see the "Device Information" section.
•Network Configuration—Displays network configuration information and information about other phone settings. For more information, see the "Network Configuration" section.
•Network Statistics—Includes the following hyperlinks, which provide information about network traffic:
–Ethernet—Displays information about Ethernet traffic. For more information, see the "Network Statistics" section.
–Port 1 (Network)—Displays information about network traffic to and from the 10/100 SW port on the phone. This port connects the phone to the network. For more information, see the "Network Statistics" section.
–Port 2 (Access)—Displays information about network traffic to and from the 10/100 PC port on the phone. This port connects the phone to a network device, such as a computer. For more information, see the "Network Statistics" section.
–Port 3 (Phone)—Displays information about network traffic to and from the phone. For more information, see the "Network Statistics" section.
•Device Logs—Includes the following hyperlinks, which provide information that you can use for troubleshooting:
–Debug Display—Provides information that may be useful to the Cisco TAC if you require assistance with troubleshooting
–Stack Statistics—Displays information about the phone's stack tasks. For more information, see the "Device Logs" section.
–Status Messages—Displays various system messages. For more information, see the "Device Logs" section.
•Streaming Statistics—Includes the following hyperlink:
–Stream 1—Display a variety of streaming statistics. For more information, see the "Streaming Statistics" section.
Disabling Web Page Access
For security purposes, you may choose to prevent access to the web pages for a phone. If you do so, you will prevent access to the web pages that are described in this chapter and to the Cisco Unified CallManager User Options web pages.
To disable access to the web pages for a phone, follow these steps from Cisco Unified CallManager Administration:
Step 1 Choose Device > Phone.
Step 2 Specify the criteria to find the phone and click Find, or click Find to display a list of all phones.
Step 3 Click the device name to open the Phone Configuration window for the device.
Step 4 From the Web Access drop-down list box, choose Disabled.
Step 5 Click Update.
Note Some features, such as Cisco Quality Report Tool, do not function properly without access to the phone web pages. Disabling web access also affects any serviceability application that relies on web access, such as CiscoWorks.
To enable web page access when it is disabled, follow the preceding steps, but choose Enabled in Step 4.
Device Information
The Device Information area on a phone's web page displays device settings and related information for the phone. Table 7-1 describes these items.
To display the Device Information area, access the web page for the phone as described in the "Accessing the Web Page for a Phone" section, and then click the Device Information hyperlink.
Table 7-1 Device Information Area Items
Item
|
Description
|
MAC Address
|
Media Access Control (MAC) address of the phone
|
Host Name
|
Host name that the DHCP server assigned to the phone
|
Phone DN
|
Directory number assigned to the phone
|
App Load ID
|
Identifier of the firmware running on the phone
|
Boot Load ID
|
Identifier of the factory-installed load running on the phone
|
Version
|
Version of the phone hardware
|
Expansion Module 1
|
Phone load ID for the first Cisco Unified IP Phone Expansion Module 7914 if connected to the phone
|
Expansion Module 2
|
Phone load ID for the second Cisco Unified IP Phone Expansion Module 7914, if connected to the phone
|
Hardware Revision
|
Version of the phone hardware
|
Serial Number
|
Serial number of the phone
|
Model Number
|
Model number of the phone
|
Codec
|
Codec used by the phone
|
Amps
|
Indicates whether 3 volt or 5 volt amplifier is being used by the phone
|
C3PO Revision
|
Revision of the Cisco 3 port switch in the phone
|
Message Waiting
|
Indicates if there is a voice message waiting on any line for this phone
|
Network Configuration
The Network Configuration area on a phone's web page displays network configuration information and information about other phone settings. Table 7-2 describes these items.
You can view and set many of these items from the Network Configuration Menu the Cisco Unified IP Phone. For more information, see "Configuring Settings on the Cisco Unified IP Phone."
To display the Network Configuration area, access the web page for the phone as described in the "Accessing the Web Page for a Phone" section, and then click the Network Configuration hyperlink.
Table 7-2 Network Configuration Area Items
Item
|
Description
|
DHCP Server
|
IP address of the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) server from which the phone obtains its IP address.
|
BOOTP Server
|
Indicates whether the phone obtains its configuration from a Bootstrap Protocol (BootP) server.
|
MAC Address
|
Media Access Control (MAC) address of the phone.
|
Host Name
|
Host name that the DHCP server assigned to the phone.
|
Domain Name
|
Name of the Domain Name System (DNS) domain in which the phone resides.
|
IP Address
|
Internet Protocol (IP) address of the phone.
|
Subnet Mask
|
Subnet mask used by the phone.
|
TFTP Server 1
|
Primary Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP) server used by the phone.
|
Default Router 1-5
|
Default router used by the phone (Default Router 1) and optional backup routers (Default Router 2-5.
|
DNS Server 1-5
|
Primary Domain Name System (DNS) server (DNS Server 1) and optional backup DNS servers (DNS Server 2-5) used by the phone.
|
VLAN ID
|
Auxiliary Virtual Local Area Network (VLAN) configured on a Cisco Catalyst switch in which the phone is a member.
|
Admin. VLAN Id
|
Auxiliary VLAN in which the phone is a member.
|
Call Manager 1-5
|
Host names or IP addresses, in prioritized order, of the Cisco Unified CallManager servers with which the phone can register. An item can also show the IP address of an SRST router that is capable of providing limited Cisco Unified CallManager functionality, if such a router is available.
For an available server, an item will show the Cisco Unified CallManager server IP address and one of the following states:
•Active—Cisco Unified CallManager server from which the phone is currently receiving call-processing services.
•Standby—Cisco Unified CallManager server to which the phone switches if the current server becomes unavailable.
•Blank—No current connection to this Cisco Unified CallManager server.
An item may also include the Survivable Remote Site Telephony (SRST) designation, which identifies an SRST router capable of providing Cisco Unified CallManager functionality with a limited feature set. This router assumes control of call processing if all other Cisco Unified CallManager servers become unreachable. The SRST Cisco Unified CallManager always appears last in the list of servers, even if it is active.
An item will include a shield icon if the phone has an authenticated connection to the Cisco Unified CallManager server. It will display a padlock icon if the phone has an authenticated connection to the Cisco Unified CallManager server.
|
Information URL
|
URL of the help text that appears on the phone.
|
Directories URL
|
URL of the server from which the phone obtains directory information.
|
Messages URL
|
URL of the server from which the phone obtains message services.
|
Services URL
|
URL of the server from which the phone obtains Cisco Unified IP Phone services.
|
DHCP Enabled
|
Indicates whether DHCP is being used by the phone.
|
DHCP Address Released
|
Indicates the setting of the DHCP Address Released option on the phone's Network Configuration menu.
|
Alternate TFTP
|
Indicates whether the phone is using an alternative TFTP server.
|
Erase Configuration
|
Indicates the setting of the Erase Configuration option on the phone's Network Configuration menu.
|
Forwarding Delay
|
Indicates whether the internal switch begins forwarding packets between the PC port and the switch port on the phone when the phone becomes active.
|
Idle URL
|
URL that the phone displays when the phone has not been used for the time specified by Idle URL Time.
|
Idle URL Time
|
Amount of time in seconds that elapses before the URL shown in Idle URL appears.
|
Authentication URL
|
URL that the phone uses to validate requests made to the phone web server.
|
Proxy Server URL
|
URL used to proxy HTTP requests for access to non-local host addresses from the phone HTTP client.
|
PC Port Disabled
|
Indicates whether the PC port on the phone is enabled or disabled.
|
SW Port Configuration
|
Speed and duplex of the switch port, where:
•A—Auto Negotiate
•10H—10-BaseT / half duplex
•10F—10-BaseT / full duplex
•100H—100-BaseT / half duplex
•100F—100-BaseT / full duplex
•No Link—No connection to the switch port
|
PC Port Configuration
|
Speed and duplex of the switch port, where:
•A—Auto Negotiate
•10H—10-BaseT / half duplex
•10F—10-BaseT / full duplex
•100H—100-BaseT / half duplex
•100F—100-BaseT / full duplex
•No Link—No connection to the PC port
|
TFTP Server 2
|
Backup TFTP server that the phone uses if the primary TFTP server is unavailable.
|
User Locale
|
User locale associated with the phone user. Identifies a set of detailed information to support users, including language, font, date and time formatting, and alphanumeric keyboard text information.
|
Network Locale
|
Network locale associated with the phone user. Identifies a set of detailed information to support the phone in a specific location, including definitions of the tones and cadences used by the phone.
|
Handset Only Mode
|
Indicates whether the speakerphone and headset are enabled (No) or disabled (Yes) on the phone. When the speakerphone and headset are disabled, the phone will function with the handset only.
|
User Locale Version
|
Version of the user locale loaded on the phone.
|
Network Locale Version
|
Version of the network locale loaded on the phone.
|
GARP Enabled
|
Indicates whether the phone learns MAC addresses from Gratuitous ARP responses.
|
Voice VLAN Enabled
|
Indicates whether the phone allows a device attached to the PC port to access the Voice VLAN.
|
Auto Line Select Enabled
|
Indicates whether the phone shifts the call focus to incoming calls on all lines.
|
Video Capability Enabled
|
Indicates whether the phone can participate in video calls when connected to an appropriately equipped PC.
|
Related Topic
•Configuring Settings on the Cisco Unified IP Phone
•Configuring Features, Templates, Services, and Users, page 5-1
Network Statistics
These Network Statistics areas on a phone's web page provide information about network traffic on the phone:
•Ethernet area—Displays information about Ethernet traffic. See the "Ethernet Statistics" section for detailed information. Table 7-3 describes the items in this area.
•Port 1 (Network) area—Displays information about network traffic to and from the 10/100 SW port on the phone. See the "Port 1 (Network), Port 2 (Access), and Port 3 (Phone) Statistics" section for detailed information.
•Port 2 (Access)—Displays information about network traffic to and from the 10/100 PC port on the phone. See the "Port 1 (Network), Port 2 (Access), and Port 3 (Phone) Statistics" section for detailed information.
•Port 3 (Phone)—Displays information about network traffic to and from the phone. See the "Port 1 (Network), Port 2 (Access), and Port 3 (Phone) Statistics" section for detailed information.
To display a Network Statistics area, access the web page for the phone as described in the "Accessing the Web Page for a Phone" section, and then click the Ethernet Information, the Access, or the Network hyperlink.
Ethernet Statistics
The Ethernet area on a phone's web page provides detailed information about Ethernet traffic to and from the phone.
To display this area, access the web page for the phone as described in the "Accessing the Web Page for a Phone" section, and then click the Ethernet hyperlink.
Table 7-3 describes the items in the Ethernet Statistics area.
Table 7-3 Ethernet Area Items
Item
|
Description
|
Tx Excessive Collisions
|
Indicates whether packets are being lost because of network congestion
|
Tx Frames
|
Total number of packets transmitted by the phone
|
Tx Broadcasts
|
Total number of broadcast packets transmitted by the phone
|
Tx Multicasts
|
Total number of multicast packets transmitted by the phone
|
Tx Collisions
|
Total number of collisions that occurred while a packet was being transmitted
|
Tx Deferred Abort
|
Total number of transmit packets aborted by the phone
|
Rx Overruns
|
Total number of received packets dropped because of buffer overruns
|
Rx Long/CRC
|
Total number of received packets dropped because of excessive length
|
Rx Frames
|
Total number of packets received by the phone
|
Rx CRC Errors
|
Total number of received packets dropped because of invalid CRC information
|
Rx Bad Preamble
|
Total number of received packets dropped because of bad Ethernet preamble information
|
Rx Runt
|
Total number of received packets dropped because of insufficient length
|
Rx Multicasts
|
Total number of multicast packets received by the phone
|
Rx Broadcasts
|
Total number of broadcast packets received by the phone
|
Rx Shorts
|
Total number of good packets received that are less than 64 bytes size
|
Rx Longs
|
Total number of good packets received that are greater than 1522 bytes in size
|
Port 1 (Network), Port 2 (Access), and Port 3 (Phone) Statistics
The following area on a phone's web page provide information about network traffic to and from ports on the phone:
•Port 1 (Network)—Provides information about the 10/100 SW port
•Port 2 (Access)—Provides information about the 10/100 PC port
•Port 3 (Phone)—Provides information about network traffic to and from the phone
To display any of these areas, access the web page for the phone as described in the "Accessing the Web Page for a Phone" section, and then click the Port 1 (Network), the Port 2 (Access), or the Port 3 (Phone) hyperlink.
Table 7-4 describes the items in the Port 1 (Network), Port 2 (Access), and Port 3 (Phone) areas.
Table 7-4 Port Statistics Area Items
Item
|
Description
|
Carrier Events
|
Indicates loss of carrier on the port
|
Rx totalPkt
|
Total number of packets received by the phone
|
Rx crcErr
|
Total number of packets received with CRC failed
|
Rx alignErr
|
Total number of packets received between 64 and 1522 bytes in length that have a bad FCS
|
Rx multicast
|
Total number of multicast packets received by the phone
|
Rx broadcast
|
Total number of broadcast packets received by the phone
|
Rx unicast
|
Total number of unicast packets received by the phone
|
Rx shortErr
|
Total number of FCS error packets or Align error packets received that are less than 64 bytes in size
|
Rx shortGood
|
Total number of good packets received that are less than 64 bytes size
|
Rx longGood
|
Total number of good packets received that are greater than 1522 bytes in size
|
Rx longErr
|
Total number of FCS error packets or Align error packets received that are greater than 1522 bytes in size
|
Rx size64
|
Total number of packets received, including bad packets, that are between 0 and 64 bytes in size
|
Rx size65to127
|
Total number of packets received, including bad packets, that are between 65 and 127 bytes in size
|
Rx size128to255
|
Total number of packets received, including bad packets, that are between 128 and 255 bytes in size
|
Rx size256to511
|
Total number of packets received, including bad packets, that are between 256 and 511 bytes in size
|
Rx size512to1023
|
Total number of packets received, including bad packets, that are between 512 and 1023 bytes in size
|
Rx size1024to1518
|
Total number of packets received, including bad packets, that are between 1024 and 1518 bytes in size
|
Rx size1519to1548
|
Total number of packets received, including bad packets, that are between 1519 and 1548 bytes in size
|
Rx tokenDrop
|
Total number of packets dropped due to lack of resources (for example, FIFO overflow)
|
Tx excessDefer
|
Total number of packets delayed from transmitting due to medium being busy
|
Tx lateCollision
|
Number of times that collisions occurred later than 512 bit times after the start of packet transmission
|
Tx totalGoodPkt
|
Total number of good packets (multicast, broadcast, and unicast) received by the phone
|
Tx Collisions
|
Total number of collisions that occurred while a packet was being transmitted
|
Tx fifoUnderrun
|
Total number of transmitted packets dropped because of FIFO underrun
|
Tx excessLength
|
Total number of packets not transmitted because the packet experienced 16 transmission attempts
|
Tx broadcast
|
Total number of broadcast packets transmitted by the phone
|
Tx multicast
|
Total number of multicast packets transmitted by the phone
|
Tx size64
|
Total number of packets transmitted, including bad packets, that are between 0 and 64 bytes in size
|
Tx size65to127
|
Total number of packets transmitted, including bad packets, that are between 65 and 127 bytes in size
|
Tx size128to255
|
Total number of packets transmitted, including bad packets, that are between 128 and 255 bytes in size
|
Tx size256to511
|
Total number of packets transmitted, including bad packets, that are between 256 and 511 bytes in size
|
Tx size512to1023
|
Total number of packets transmitted, including bad packets, that are between 512 and 1023 bytes in size
|
Tx size1024to1518
|
Total number of packets received, including bad packets, that are between 1024 and 1518 bytes in size
|
cos 0 Drop
|
Total number of packets with Class of Service 0 dropped because of threshold checking
|
cos 1 Drop
|
Total number of packets with Class of Service 1 dropped because of threshold checking
|
cos 2 Drop
|
Total number of packets with Class of Service 2 dropped because of threshold checking
|
cos 3 Drop
|
Total number of packets with Class of Service 3 dropped because of threshold checking
|
cos 4 Drop
|
Total number of packets with Class of Service 4 dropped because of threshold checking
|
cos 5 Drop
|
Total number of packets with Class of Service 5 dropped because of threshold checking
|
cos 6 Drop
|
Total number of packets with Class of Service 6 dropped because of threshold checking
|
cos 7 Drop
|
Total number of packets with Class of Service 7 dropped because of threshold checking
|
bpdu Drop
|
Total number of Bridge Protocol Data Unit frames dropped because of threshold checking
|
overflow Drop
|
Total number of packets dropped because of an internal queue overflow
|
Neighbor Device ID
|
Identifier of a device connected to this port
|
Neighbor IP Address
|
IP address of the neighbor device
|
Neighbor Port
|
Neighbor device port to which the phone is connected
|
Related Topic
•Configuring Settings on the Cisco Unified IP Phone
Device Logs
The Device Logs area on a phone's web page provide information you can use to help monitor and troubleshoot the phone:
•Debug Display area—Provides information that may be useful to the Cisco TAC if you require assistance with troubleshooting.
•Stack Statistics area—Displays information about the phone's stack tasks. See the "Stack Statistics" section for detailed information.
•Status Messages area—Displays up to the 10 most recent status messages that the phone has generated since it was last powered up. See the "Status Messages" section for detailed information.
Stack Statistics
The Debug Display area on a phone's web page displays information about the phone's stack tasks. This information may be useful to Cisco Technical Assistance Center personnel if you require assistance with troubleshooting.
To display the Stack Statistics area, access the web page for the phone as described in the "Accessing the Web Page for a Phone" section, and then click the Stack Statistics hyperlink.
Table 7-5 describes the items in the Stack Statistics area.
Table 7-5 Stack Statistics Area Items
Item
|
Description
|
Socket Task
|
Peak stack consumption for the Socket task
|
Phone Task
|
Peak stack consumption for the Phone task
|
DSPPoll Task
|
Peak stack consumption for the DPPoll task
|
RTP Task
|
Peak stack consumption for the RTP task
|
TLS Task
|
Peak stack consumption for the TLS task
|
Config Task
|
Peak stack consumption for the Config task
|
Display Task
|
Peak stack consumption for the Display task
|
CAST Task
|
Peak stack consumption for the CAST task
|
Sidecar Task
|
Peak stack consumption for the Sidecar task
|
Audit Task
|
Peak stack consumption for the Socket task
|
Undefined Mode
|
Peak stack consumption for the undefined mode
|
SVC Mode
|
Peak stack consumption for the SVC mode
|
IRQ Mode
|
Peak stack consumption for the IRQ mode
|
FIQ Mode
|
Peak stack consumption for the FIQ mode
|
SYS Mode
|
Peak stack consumption for the SYS mode
|
Status Messages
The Status Messages area on a phone's web page displays up to the 10 most recent status messages that the phone has generated since it was last powered up. You can also see this information from the Status Messages screen on the phone. Table 6-2 describes the status messages that can appear.
Related Topic
•Configuring Settings on the Cisco Unified IP Phone
•Status Menu
Streaming Statistics
A phone streams information when it is on a a call or running a service that sends or receives audio or data. The Stream 1 area on a phone's web page provides information about this stream. Table 7-6 describes the items in this area.
To display a network statistics area, access the web page for the phone as described in the "Accessing the Web Page for a Phone" section, and then click the Stream 1 hyperlink.
Table 7-6 Streaming Statistics Area Items
Item
|
Description
|
Domain
|
Domain of the phone
|
Remote Address
|
IP address of the destination of the stream
|
Local Address
|
IP address of the phone
|
Sender Joins
|
Number of times the phone has started transmitting a stream
|
Receiver Joins
|
Number of times the phone has started receiving a stream
|
Byes
|
Number of times the phone has stopped transmitting a stream
|
Start Time
|
Internal time stamp indicating when Cisco Unified CallManager requested that the phone start transmitting packets
|
Row Status
|
Whether the phone is streaming
|
Host Name
|
Host name of the phone
|
Sender Packets
|
Total number of packets sent by the phone
|
Sender Octets
|
Total number of octets sent by the phone
|
Sender Tool
|
Type of audio encoding used for the stream
|
Sender Reports
|
Number of times this streaming statistics report has been accessed from the web page (resets when the phone resets)
|
Sender Report Time
|
Internal time stamp indicating when this streaming statistics report was generated
|
Sender Start Time
|
Time that the stream started
|
Rcvr Lost Packets
|
Total number of packets lost
|
Rcvr Jitter
|
Maximum jitter of stream
|
Receiver Tool
|
Type of audio encoding used for the stream
|
Rcvr Reports
|
Number of times this streaming statistics report has been accessed from the web page (resets when the phone resets)
|
Rcvr Report Time
|
Internal time stamp indicating when this streaming statistics report was generated
|
Rcvr Packets
|
Total number of packets received by the phone
|
Rcvr Octets
|
Total number of octets received by the phone
|
Rcvr Start Time
|
Internal time stamp indicating when Cisco Unified CallManager requested that the phone start receiving packets
|
Voice Quality Metrics
|
MOS LQK
|
Score that is an objective estimate of the mean opinion score (MOS) for listening quality (LQK) that rates from 5 (excellent) to 1 (bad). This score is based on audible concealment events due to frame loss in the preceding 8-second interval of the voice stream. For more information, see the "Monitoring the Voice Quality of Calls" section.
Note The MOS LQK score can vary based on the type of codec that the Cisco Unified IP Phone uses.
|
Avg MOS LQK
|
Average MOS LQK score observed for the entire voice stream.
|
Min MOS LQK
|
Lowest MOS LQK score observed from start of the voice stream.
|
Max MOS LQK
|
Baseline or highest MOS LQK score observed from start of the voice stream.
These codecs provide the following maximum MOS LQK score under normal conditions with no frame loss:
•G.711 gives 4.5
•G.729 A /AB gives 3.7
|
MOS LQK Version
|
Version of the Cisco proprietary algorithm used to calculate MOS LQK scores.
|
Cmltve Conceal Ratio
|
Total number of concealment frames divided by total number of speech frames received from start of the voice stream.
|
Interval Conceal Ratio
|
Ratio of concealment frames to speech frames in preceding 3-second interval of active speech. If using voice activity detection (VAD), a longer interval might be required to accumulate 3 seconds of active speech.
|
Max Conceal Ratio
|
Highest interval concealment ratio from start of the voice stream.
|
Conceal Secs
|
Number of seconds that have concealment events (lost frames) from the start of the voice stream (includes severely concealed seconds).
|
Severely Conceal Secs
|
Number of seconds that have more than 5 percent concealment events (lost frames) from the start of the voice stream.
|
Related Topics
•Call Statistics Screen
•Monitoring the Voice Quality of Calls