Cisco Systems OL-14619-01 manual Exchange Considerations That Apply Only Exchange

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Chapter 4 Designing a Cisco Unity System with Exchange as the Message Store

Considerations for Customer-Provided Infrastructure

In a Voice Messaging configuration, to help prevent Exchange transaction logs from filling the hard disk, a wizard in Cisco Unity Setup prompts the installer to change the circular-logging setting for any message store in the forest for which circular logging is turned off. If the customer is using an Exchange-aware backup application to back up Exchange message stores and clear transaction logs, the installer can choose not to change the circular-logging setting.

Exchange Considerations That Apply Only Exchange 2007

Note the following Exchange 2007 considerations when a Cisco Unity implementation will use customer-provided Exchange 2007 infrastructure:

Exchange 2007 is supported as the message store only when Cisco Unity is configured as Unified Messaging.

The Cisco Unity Voice Connector for Microsoft Exchange, which is required for communicating with another voice-messaging system by using AMIS, the Cisco Unity Bridge, or VPIM, can only be installed on an Exchange 2000 or an Exchange 2003 server. A Voice Connector is not currently available for Exchange 2007. If the customer has already configured a pure Exchange 2007 environment, an Exchange 2000 or Exchange 2003 server cannot be added to the environment and, therefore, Cisco Unity functionality that requires the Voice Connector is not available.

Cisco Unity Mobile Message Access for BlackBerry is not supported for Exchange 2007.

Integrated messaging via IMAP with Exchange 2007 is supported when Cisco Unity voice messages are stored in Exchange 2000 or Exchange 2003.

With Exchange 2000 or Exchange 2003, you can store e-mail messages in one Exchange message store, store Cisco Unity voice messages in another message store, and view both types of messages in a Microsoft Outlook Inbox. In this configuration, known as integrated messaging, you:

Configure Outlook to use MAPI to communicate with the message store that contains e-mail (MAPI is required because the e-mail message store commonly also contains calendars and contacts).

Configure Outlook to use IMAP to communicate with the message store that contains Cisco Unity voice messages. (Outlook only supports one MAPI connection at a time.)

Enable Exchange rich-text format on Exchange servers, which converts IMAP to TNEF-encoded IMAP. (If you do not enable rich-text format, voice messages appear in the Outlook Inbox as e-mail messages, so ViewMail for Outlook is not available.)

Exchange 2007 does not support TNEF-encoded IMAP, but you can still use an integrated messaging configuration with Exchange 2007 if you store e-mail in Exchange 2007 and store Cisco Unity voice messages in Exchange 2000 or Exchange 2003.

For more information on Cisco Unity limitations when Exchange 2007 is the message store, see the subsection “Cisco Unity with Exchange: Exchange Server 2007” in the section “New and Changed Requirements and Support—Release 5.0(1)” in Release Notes for Cisco Unity Release 5.0(1) at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/voicesw/ps2237/prod_release_notes_list.html.

Design Guide for Cisco Unity Release 5.x

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Contents Design Guide for Cisco Unity Americas HeadquartersDesign Guide for Cisco Unity Release N T E N T S Workstations Authentication Centralized Voice Messaging Configuration Viii Audience Document ConventionsSupport Policy for Optional Third-Party Software Cisco Product Security Overview Xii Product Area Design or Feature Documentation Design Guide OverviewDesign Guide for Cisco Unity Bridge at Page Design Guide Overview Design Guide for Cisco Unity Release Cisco Unity Concepts How Cisco Unity WorksUnified Messaging Voice MessagingHardware Components of a Cisco Unity System One or More Cisco Unity Servers Cisco Unity Supported Platforms List atNetwork Connection Optional for Some Configurations Where Cisco Unity Stores Data Software Components of a Cisco Unity SystemVoice Messages Are Stored in Domino or Exchange DominoExchange Enabling Cisco Unity Servers to Communicate with One Another Networking Guide for Cisco Unity at Some Configuration Settings Are Stored in the Registry Name Resolution Availability of Network ResourcesDomain Controller Access and Availability Availability of Message Store ServersUsing Firewalls with Cisco Unity Sizing and Scaling Cisco Unity ServersStorage Capacity for Voice Messages Number of Voice PortsAudio Codecs How Codecs Affect the File Size of Voice MessagesTTS, TTY, Pocket PCs, and Hand-Held Computers Interoperability Among Multiple Voice-Messaging SystemsAudio Codec Quality RatingDeployment Models Unified Messaging with Customer-Provided Infrastructure Voice Messaging with Customer-Provided Infrastructure Multi-Site WAN with Distributed MessagingPhysical Placement and Network Infrastructure Considerations for Customer-Provided Infrastructure Active Directory ConsiderationsDesign Guide for Cisco Unity Release Exchange Considerations All Versions Exchange Considerations That Apply Only Exchange Considerations for Cisco-Provided, Dedicated Infrastructure OL-14619-01 Overview of Cisco Unity with Domino and Notes Maximum Number of Cisco Unity Subscribers Domino Address Book TerminologyChanges That csAdmin Makes to the Domino Address Book Element NameChanges That csClient Makes to the Mail File Server Placement Windows Domains and Domino DomainsAuthentication Active Directory Accounts and PermissionsCisco Unity Subscribers and Domino Users Domino PermissionsDomino Clusters Client Access Licenses Cisco Unity and the Domino Address BookMessage Routing Backing Up and Restoring DataUnified Messaging, No Domino Cluster Unified Messaging ConfigurationsServers Requirements and Recommendations Criteria for a Supported Configuration Voice Messaging ConfigurationUnified Messaging, Domino Cluster Deploying Cisco Unity for Lotus Domino Administrative Access and Control Network ServicesDeployment Tasks for Unified Messaging Configurations Establishing Support PoliciesOperational Tasks Design Guide for Cisco Unity Release Integrating Cisco Unity with the Phone System OverviewHow an Integration Works Integration with Cisco Unified Communications Manager Lines and Cables to Make Physical ConnectionsDigital Integration with Digital Pimg Units Dtmf Integration with Analog Pimg Units Timg Integration LAN/WANDtmf Integration with Voice Cards Serial Integration with Voice CardsSettings in the Phone System and in Cisco Unity Connections for a Serial Integration by Using Voice CardsCall Control General Integration Issues Feature Sccp SIPIntegrating Cisco Unity with the Phone System Option Considerations Cisco Unified Communications Manager Security Features DescriptionDescription When Data Is Encrypted Setting EffectSettings for Individual Voice Messaging Ports Disabling and Re-Enabling SecurityPacketization Sccp Integrations Only Sccp SIP Cisco 11 Cisco Unified Communications Manager Fallback with Pstn Cisco Unity to a branch office will fail Integrating by Using SIP Cisco Unity Failover with SIP Trunks Supported SIP IntegrationsSIP Compliance Description of Pimg Integrations Dtmf Integration with Analog Pimg Units Description of Timg Integrations Setup and Configuration Firmware Updates Serial IntegrationsIncreasing Port Capacity Cisco Unity FailoverCisco Unity Failback Multiple Integration Support/Branch Office ConsolidationIntegrating with Multiple Phone Systems Using Sccp Phone Systems with Other Integrations Requirements for Integrations with Multiple Phone SystemsOptional Integration Features Alternate ExtensionsReasons to Use Alternate Extensions How Alternate Extensions WorkAlternate MWIs MWIs for Extensions on a Non-Integrated Phone SystemCentralized Voice Messaging OL-14619-01 OL-14619-01 Cisco Unity Failover and Standby Redundancy FailoverStandby Redundancy Cisco Unity Failover and Standby Redundancy Cisco Unity Failover and Standby Redundancy Diagram of a Standby Redundancy Configuration Pstn WANOL-14619-01 Voice-Recognition Access to Cisco Unity OL-14619-01 Migrating to Cisco Unity from Another Voice-Messaging System Migrating to Cisco Unity from Another Voice-Messaging System D E IN-2 IN-3 IN-4