Cisco Cisco MCS 7828-I3 Unified Communications Manager Appliance Merkblatt

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Note:   Cisco Business Edition 6000 (formerly Cisco Unified Communications Manager Business Edition 6000) is not supported on 7800 Series Media Convergence Servers; 
must be installed on a VMware virtual machine and is supported only on certain hardware platforms. For more details, please see the datasheet at 
 and documentation at 
Note:   Cisco Unified Communications Manager 10.0(1) Business Edition 6000 (formerly Cisco Unified Communications Manager Business Edition 6000) is not supported on 
7800 Series Media Convergence Servers; must be installed on a VMware virtual machine and is supported only on certain hardware platforms. For more details, please see 
the datasheet at 
 and documentation at 
For supported servers of Cisco Unified Communications Manager IM & Presence Service, see 
Servers are described in terms of models (such as MCS 7845 or UCS B200 or UCS C210), generations (such as MCS 7845-I2 vs. 7845-I3 or UCS B200 M1 vs. UCS B200 M2 
or UCS C210 M1 vs. UCS C210 M2) and configurations (denoted by a suffix such as -IPC1, -VCS1, -VCD1, etc.). 
For a virtualized deployment: 
● 
Business Edition 6000 server support can be found at 
● 
Otherwise use Table 1 to confirm that the desired software product and release is supported with virtualization, then consult 
details such as supported servers or hypervisor products 
● 
Please note our support policy in footnote 4 for virtualized deployments. Due to use of virtualization software, support of new server options may occur out of cycle with 
software product releases, so check this document frequently for updates 
● 
Se
 for all other details such as application co-residency support and virtualization feature support 
● 
You must deploy Cisco Unified Communications Manager on a supported Virtual Machine template. Se
For a non-virtualized deployment, use Table 1 to confirm that the desired server is supported by the desired software product release. 
Pay special attention to server support when planning software upgrades, hardware migrations, or server repurposing. If your server is not supported, you must replace it with a 
different or newer server if you want to run the target software release. A supported server may still require component changes such as memory expansion or hard disk 
replacement to support the new software release. Table 1 lists these additional requirements.