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178 Avaya Application Solutions IP Telephony Deployment Guide
 
This discussion of the configuration, engineering, and deployment processes is intended as an 
overview that is suitable for a fairly general audience. One example that is designed to exercise 
all aspects of these processes continues throughout the chapter to present the finer points of 
network design.
Design inputs
This section summarizes the essential design elements that the customer must specify.
Topology
An Avaya Communication Manager system consists of a server and all of the equipment under 
that server’s control. Such equipment may be geographically dispersed among a variety of 
sites, and the equipment at each site may be segregated into distinct logical collections known 
as Network Regions. In cases where one server is insufficient for controlling all of the 
equipment, multiple Avaya systems can be networked together. So, a Network Region is a 
component of a site, which is a component of a system, which is a component of a network.
A single Avaya Communication Manager system is comprised of one or more Network Regions
Each Network Region is a logical grouping of endpoints, including stations, trunks, and Media 
Gateways. Customers can choose to establish various Network Regions on the basis of 
geography, business sectors, or any of a variety of other considerations. For example, a 
customer with facilities in both New York and Los Angeles might choose to use a single 
Communication Manager system, with one Network Region in each of the two cities. Another 
possibility is to assign two Network Regions to each city. In that case, each such geographical 
grouping of Network Regions is said to comprise a site.
Alternatively, that same customer might want to administer three Network Regions, where one 
region corresponds with Sales and Marketing, another with Customer Support and Services, 
and a third with Research and Development. In this case, the Network Regions are established 
independently of geographical considerations, because associates from each of the three 
distinct business sectors may be physically located in both cities. Yet another possibility is to 
construct Network Regions to correspond with IP subnets.
The various Network Regions within a Communication Manager system are interconnected by 
an IP network. An IP network can consist of local area networks (LANs), wide area networks 
(WANs), or a combination of both LANs and WANs. A common approach is to use a LAN at 
each site, and interconnect those LANs through a WAN. Because Network Regions are used to 
specify differences between the treatment of intrasite and intersite traffic, or to properly select 
localized media resources for optimal voice quality, Network Regions should not span multiple 
geographical locations.