[asterisk-users] Cisco IP Phones and Skinny in asterisk

Robert-iPhone rhuddleston at gmail.com
Tue Jun 21 18:50:13 CDT 2011


wow I think someone needs to just spend some time reading and playing. Getting these phones working is not rocket science and there are similarities with how to do firmware / config pushes.

Not to sound mean but RTFM

Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 21, 2011, at 7:45 PM, Warren Selby <wcselby at selbytech.com> wrote:

> On Tue, Jun 21, 2011 at 5:35 PM, bilal ghayyad <bilmar_gh at yahoo.com> wrote:
> Dear Warren;
> 
> Please, keep all discussions to the list.  There's no need to email me personally about this. 
> 
> <snip>
>  
> cmterm-7942_7962-sip.9-2-1.cop.sgn (which is written that it is SIP IP Phone load) and cmterm-7942_7962-sip.9-2-1.zip which is written that it is SIP IP Phone firmware files only. So what is the difference between them "the load and the firmware"?
> 
> The .sgn file is basically just a zip container that the Cisco Call Manager uses.  You'll want to grab the zip file, extract the contents of the file into your tftp root directory.  The latest firmware that I've used was 8.5.2, in which most everything I needed worked for me.  I don't know specifics about the later versions of Cisco's SIP releases.
>  
> Now, when I need to do the upgrade for the Phone, then I have to determine in the xml files the needed firmware?
> 
> You should have, at least with firmware 8.5.2, the following files in your tftproot directory after unzipping the zip file:
> 
> apps41.8-5-2TH1-9.sbn
> cnu41.8-5-2TH1-9.sbn
> cvm41sip.8-5-2TH1-9.sbn
> dsp41.8-5-2TH1-9.sbn
> jar41sip.8-5-2TH1-9.sbn
> SIP41.8-5-2S.loads
> term41.default.loads
> term61.default.loads
> XMLDefault.cnf.xml
> SEP[_MAC-ADDR_].cnf.xml
> 
> I provide samples of the last two files on the blog post mentioned earlier.  The last file, that starts with SEP, should contain the actual mac address of the phone you are trying to provision.  So, for example, it would be SEP0003C9DD5624.cnf.xml, if the mac address of your phone was 0003.C9DD.5624.  The example files are pretty much all you need, just go through them and change any location specific variables (such as _USER_, _IPADDR_, or _PASSWD_) to the proper values for your environment.
> 
> Once you've got your tftp server setup properly with all of the appropriate config files, plug your phone in and follow the instructions at the bottom part of my blog post that explain how to get the phone reflashed to the SIP image and registered to your asterisk server.
> 
> 
> -- 
> Thanks,
> --Warren Selby, dCAP
> http://www.SelbyTech.com
> 
> --
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