We have a VLAN for Voice and a VLAN for Data. What is the best practice for intervlan routing so that the video on the desktop can attach to the phone. I am told that the UC500 can do intervlan routing. |
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UC500.comCisco Communication Manager Express, UC520, SMB VOIP reference and community |
If you have assigned IP
If you have assigned IP addresses to the VLANs then the UC500 will have no problem.... the system comes pre-programmed with seperate data and voice vlans (1 and 100)
Essentially the system is like a cut down ISR rather than a layer-3 switch, so routing is no issue (as long as you know command line)
From my understanding, best practice for video advantage is to have the PC linked into the network via the phone
[quote]From my
That is not just the "best" practice, but the *only* practice. ;) The pc has to be connected to an ip phone, or VT Advantage won't work.
VT Advantage uses CDP to detect a phone downstream.
Having said that, while this is required to make VT Advantage work, i'm not sure if the video stream travels through the data vlan, or that the phone 'intercepts' the video traffic and sends it over the voice vlan.
Update
I have a case open with TAC and Vista is a PITA. They cannot get it working on XP either. In order for this to work, you have to plug your desktop into your phone and the phone into the UC500.
From the command line type
From the command line type "show IP route". If you see routes listed, then IP Routing is enabled. If not, type "ip routing".
-Dapunisher
A+. Network+, MCP, CCNA, CCVP
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