Interaction Media Server Appliance Installation and Configuration Guide
15
6.
Click
OK
. The
Windows Security
dialog opens.
7.
In the
User name
and
Password
fields, type the appropriate credentials and click
OK
. The
Computer Name/Domain Changes
displays a message, welcoming you to the domain.
8.
Click
OK
. The
Computer Name/Domain Changes
dialog displays a message indicating that
you must restart the computer to apply the changes.
9.
Click
OK
.
10.
On the
System Properties
dialog, click
OK
. The
Microsoft Windows
dialog opens, and
displays a message, again indicating that you must restart the computer to apply the changes.
11.
Click
Restart Now
.
View Network Fault Tolerant (NFT) network interface controller
teams
When a user logs onto Interaction Media Server for the first time, the HP Network Configuration
Utility automatically creates a Network Fault Tolerant NIC (Network Interface Controller) team
using all available NICs for the particular server. Interaction Media Server teams available NICs to
provide redundancy for reliability purposes if a network link fails.
Note
: An Interaction Center Media Server, or any server that deals with real time audio across the
network, may only use certain forms of adapter teaming. Some vendors may use varying terms for
different teaming models, but the basic rule is that only fault-tolerant configurations are supported.
Interactive Intelligence software does not support a teaming method that employs load balancing
due to increased jitter incidence in the RTP audio streams that Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
solutions use. The stream's assembly becomes less reliable, resulting in packet loss or latency as
the jitter buffer attempts to handle out of sequence packets. The only teaming type to use for
audio and signaling is a fault tolerant type.
You can view NIC teams in the HP Network Configuration Utility (NCU).