Engineering Guidelines
160
DEVICE LICENSING
The 3300 ICP requires a number of device licenses in order to operate. The following table lists
these licenses.
Table 42: Devices and licenses - MCD Release 4.0 and Earlier
DEVICE
LICENSE
IP phone
3
IP device license
User on IP phone
IP user license
User on SIP phone
SIP user license
Resilient User on SIP Phone
SIP user license
User on ONS Phone
Analog line license
4
CITELink phone
IP user and IP device licenses
User on DNI phone
No license, but counts against total number of users a system can handle
Wireless phone (SpectraLink)
IP user and IP device license
Wireless phone (IP DECT - EMEA)
IP user and IP device license
5602 or 5606 Wireless Handset (IP
DECT - Global)
SIP user license
Resilient phone on secondary
controller
IP device license
Hot Desk user
IP user license
External Hot Desk User
External hot Desk User License
Hot Desk phone
IP device license
Unified Communicator Mobile
One IP device license and one IP user license for each line monitor, call
agent, and TUI agent used in the Unified Communicator Mobile Server
MiCollab Client
None needed
MiCollab Client Softphone
IP user and IP device licenses
ACD Agent
ACD Agent license
Voice Mailbox
2
Voice Mailbox license (1 per user)
Basic Auto-Attendant
Voice Mailbox license
Multi-Level Auto-Attendant
Voice Mailbox license (1 per node in the tree)
Record-a-Call
Advanced Voice Mail license (system-wide)
Auto Forward to Email
Advanced Voice Mail license
Personal Contacts
Advanced Voice Mail license
Networked Voice Mail, VPIMv2
One Voice Mail Networking license per ICP
NuPoint
One IP device license and one IP user license per port to 3300 ICP
IP Networking (IP trunk)
One IP Networking license needed per ICP to enable IP Trunk calls
Digital trunk (PRI, etc.)
One Network Link license per digital trunk span
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Summary of Contents for MiVOICE BUSINESS
Page 1: ...Mitel MiVoice Business RELEASE 7 2 ENGINEERING GUIDELINES ...
Page 15: ...Chapter 1 ABOUT THIS DOCUMENT ...
Page 16: ......
Page 22: ...Engineering Guidelines 8 ...
Page 23: ...Chapter 2 SYSTEM OVERVIEW ...
Page 24: ......
Page 28: ...Engineering Guidelines 14 ...
Page 29: ...Chapter 3 TYPICAL CONFIGURATIONS ...
Page 30: ......
Page 73: ...Chapter 4 PHONES AND VOICE APPLICATIONS ...
Page 74: ......
Page 95: ...Phones and Voice Applications 81 Figure 9 ICP Connection Paths and Limitations ...
Page 100: ...Engineering Guidelines 86 ...
Page 101: ...Chapter 5 POWER ...
Page 102: ......
Page 128: ...Engineering Guidelines 114 ...
Page 129: ...Chapter 6 PERFORMANCE ...
Page 130: ......
Page 135: ...Chapter 7 APPLICATIONS ...
Page 136: ......
Page 142: ...Engineering Guidelines 128 ...
Page 143: ...Chapter 8 EMERGENCY SERVICES ...
Page 144: ......
Page 151: ...Chapter 9 IP NETWORKING ...
Page 152: ......
Page 167: ...Chapter 10 LICENSING ...
Page 168: ......
Page 183: ...Chapter 11 BANDWIDTH CODECS AND COMPRESSION ...
Page 184: ......
Page 209: ...Chapter 12 NETWORK CONFIGURATION CONCEPTS ...
Page 210: ......
Page 244: ...Engineering Guidelines 230 ...
Page 245: ...Chapter 13 NETWORK CONFIGURATION SPECIFICS ...
Page 246: ......
Page 309: ...Appendix A CAT 3 WIRING ...
Page 310: ......
Page 315: ...CAT 3 Wiring 301 Figure 55 CX MX MXe AX and LX Minimum Cable Standard ...
Page 316: ...Engineering Guidelines 302 ...
Page 317: ...Appendix B INSTALLATION EXAMPLES ...
Page 318: ......
Page 335: ...Appendix C LLDP AND LLDP MED CONFIGURATION EXAMPLES ...
Page 336: ......
Page 347: ...Appendix D VOIP AND VLANS ...
Page 348: ......
Page 353: ...Appendix E VOIP SECURITY ...
Page 354: ......
Page 381: ... ...