Cisco Cisco Prime Collaboration Assurance 11.5 White Paper
© 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public Information.
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Provisioning Cisco Unified Communications Manager or other Cisco Unified Communications application:
During the actual time provisioning is being done, Cisco Prime Collaboration Provisioning uses the available
bandwidth to perform provisioning. Provisioning runs as a background process.
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Talking to routers: This traffic is Cisco IOS Software-oriented Telnet-type traffic, which comes in small
bursts and uses bandwidth that is available; 2400 to 9600 bps is sufficient.
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All other times: Little or no traffic occurs.
Timeout values are in multiple minutes, so loss of connectivity for short periods of time is tolerated. There are
no subsecond latency requirements to engineer into your network design to accommodate Cisco Prime
Collaboration Provisioning. Cisco Prime Collaboration Provisioning uses a two-phase commit to complete
orders, so if an order is in progress when a link failure occurs and subsequently times out, Cisco Prime
Collaboration Provisioning does not mark the order complete; rather it attempts to provision the order again;
when the link is reestablished, Cisco Prime Collaboration Provisioning starts the order again. When complete it
marks the order complete.
For More Information
For more information, please visit the following websites:
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Install Guide for Cisco Prime Collaboration:
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End-User Guide for Cisco Prime Collaboration Provisioning:
Printed in USA
C07-734299-00 05/15