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Cisco Unified IP Phone 7960G and 7940G Administration Guide for Release 8.0 (SIP)
OL-7890-01
Chapter 5 Monitoring Cisco SIP IP Phones
How to Use the Command-Line Interface to Monitor Phones
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command keywords (continued)
•
flash
—Flash memory information.
•
dspstate
—DSP status, including whether the DSP is
ready, the audio mode, whether keepalive pending is
turned on, and the ringer state.
•
rtp
—Packet statistics for the RTP streams.
•
tcp
—Status of TCP ports, including the state (listen or
closed) and the port number.
•
lsm
—Current status of the Line State Manager control
blocks.
•
fsm
—Current status of the Feature State Manager
function control blocks.
•
fsmdef
—Current status of the Default Feature State
Manager data control blocks.
•
fsmcnf
—Current status of the Conference Feature State
Manager call control blocks.
•
fsmxfr
—Current status of the Transfer Feature State
Manager transfer control blocks.
•
fim
—Current status of the Feature Interaction Manager
control blocks (interface control blocks and state control
blocks).
•
gsm
—Global State Manager status that includes these
parameters: vcm, lsm, fim, fsm, and gsm.
•
register
—Current registration status of SIP lines.
•
reset-log
—Debugging information about the internal
state of the phone at the time that it was last restarted.
•
network
—Network information, such as phone platform,
DHCP server, phone IP address and subnet mask, default
gateway, address of the TFTP server, phone MAC
address, domain name, and phone name.
•
config
—Current flash memory configuration, including
network information, phone label and password, SNTP
server address, DST information, time and date format,
and input and output port numbers.
•
personaldir
—Current contents of the personal directory.
This command can be used only if the telnet_level
parameter is set to allow privileged commands to be
executed.
•
dialplan
—Phone dial plan.
•
timers
—Current status of the platform timers.
•
(Optional)
running
—Shows the running configuration.
•
all
—Shows all.
Table 5-1
CLI Commands (continued)
Command
Purpose