Chapter 6 Integrating Cisco Unity with the Phone System

Sample Path for a Call from the Phone System to a Subscriber

If the phone system sends the necessary information and if Cisco Unity is configured correctly, an integration can provide the following integration functionality:

Call forward to personal greeting

Call forward to busy greeting

Caller ID

Easy message access (a subscriber can retrieve messages without entering an ID because Cisco Unity identifies the subscriber based on the extension from which the call originated; a password may be required)

Identified subscriber messaging (Cisco Unity identifies the subscriber who leaves a message during a forwarded internal call, based on the extension from which the call originated)

Message waiting indication (MWI)

Call Control

The phone system uses a set of signals to set up, monitor, and release connections for a call. Cisco Unity monitors call control signals to determine the state of the call, and uses these signals to respond appropriately to phone system actions and to communicate with the phone system. For example, a caller who is recording a message might hang up, so Cisco Unity detects that the call has ended and stops recording.

Depending on the phone system, the following types of call control signals are used:

Cisco Unified

For Skinny Call Control Protocol (SCCP) integrations, Cisco Unified

Communications

Communications Manager generates SCCP messages, which are translated by the

Manager

Cisco Unity-CM TSP into TAPI that Cisco Unity uses. Cisco Unity

 

actions—such as hook flash for transferring calls—are translated by the

 

Cisco Unity-CM TSP into the SCCP messages that Cisco Unified CM uses.

 

For SIP trunk integrations, Cisco Unified CM sends SIP messages, and

 

Cisco Unity sends SIP responses when a call is set up or terminated.

 

 

Circuit-switched

For PIMG/TIMG integrations, the phone system sends messages to the PIMG or

phone system

TIMG units, which send the applicable SIP messages to Cisco Unity. Cisco Unity

 

sends SIP responses when a call is set up or terminated, and the PIMG or TIMG

 

units communicate with the phone system.

 

For voice card integrations, the phone system generates and responds to in-band

 

signaling (for example, busy, disconnect, DTMF, and hook flash). The signaling

 

tones are translated by the Dialogic TSP into TAPI events that Cisco Unity can

 

use. Cisco Unity makes a telephony request such as “transfer,” which is translated

 

by the Dialogic TSP into the signal (hook flash) that the phone system can use.

 

 

Sample Path for a Call from the Phone System to a Subscriber

The following steps give an overview of a sample path that an external call can take when traveling from the phone system to a subscriber.

1.For Cisco Unified Communications Manager, when an external call arrives, the gateway sends the call over the LAN or WAN to Cisco Unified CM.

Design Guide for Cisco Unity Release 5.x

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OL-14619-01

 

 

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Cisco Systems OL-14619-01 manual Call Control