Chapter 5 Designing a Cisco Unity System with Domino as the Message Store
Overview of Cisco Unity with Domino and Notes
For additional firewall requirements, see the section “Network Requirements” in the System
Requirements for Cisco Unity at
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/voicesw/ps2237/prod_installation_guides_list.html:
•A single Cisco Unity server can service both local and remote subscribers, especially when
Cisco Unity is integrated with Cisco Unified Communications Manager (CM) (formerly known as Cisco Unified CallManager), and when Cisco Unity is configured for Unified Messaging. In a Voice Messaging configuration, the message store server must be in the same location as the Cisco Unity server.
•If Cisco Unity is integrated with a
Active Directory Accounts and Permissions
Cisco Unity requires that three Active Directory domain accounts be created during installation, as described in the Cisco Unity installation guide. One account is used to install Cisco Unity, another is the account that most Cisco Unity services log on as, and the third is used to access the Cisco Unity Administrator. (Some services, including the Text to Speech service and the service that controls Cisco Unity licensing, log on as the local system account.)
The permissions required by each of the accounts are set by the Cisco Unity Permissions Wizard. The account that Cisco Unity services log on as can be used by more than one Cisco Unity server in the same domain. For detailed information on the permissions required, see the Help file Permissions Granted by the Cisco Unity 5.0(1)+ Permissions Wizard at http://ciscounitytools.com/HelpFiles/PW501/PWHelpPermissionsSet_ENU.htm.
These accounts and permissions are required for Cisco
Domino users who are Cisco Unity subscribers do not need Active Directory accounts, and Cisco Unity administrators and subscribers are not required to use Windows authentication.
Authentication
Cisco Unity subscribers whose class of service (COS) allows them access to the Cisco Unity Administrator can log on to the Cisco Unity Administrator by using Domino authentication, Integrated Windows authentication, or Anonymous authentication, depending on how the system is configured. Subscribers whose COS allows them access to the Cisco Unity Assistant must log on to the Cisco Unity Assistant by using Domino authentication.
For more information, see:
•The “Managing Cisco Unity Administrator Accounts” chapter in the System Administration Guide for Cisco Unity Release 5.x (With IBM Lotus Domino) at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/voicesw/ps2237/prod_maintenance_guides_list.html.
•The “Accessing and Using the Cisco Unity Administrator” chapter, also in the System Administration Guide for Cisco Unity Release 5.x (With IBM Lotus Domino).
•The “Authentication for Cisco Unity Applications” chapter in the Security Guide for Cisco Unity Release 5.x (With IBM Lotus Domino), also at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/voicesw/ps2237/prod_maintenance_guides_list.html.
Design Guide for Cisco Unity Release 5.x
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