Cisco CME 3.2 and later allow you to customize the set of softkeys displayed to the phone user in each stage of a phone call. For example, by default in the connected call state, a Cisco 7960 IP Phone shows the following six softkeys:
Because a Cisco 7960 IP Phone has only four physical softkey buttons, the phone displays a more softkey as the rightmost button to allow the phone user to scroll to access all the keys. Because the more softkey itself uses one of the physical buttons, the user sees the feature softkeys in two sets:
The softkey customization feature allows you to change this default behavior, and choose the set of keys you want to display. It also allows you to control the order of the keys so that you can move the more frequently used keys to the first page. For example, you may choose to remove the Acct and Flash keys from the connected state key set, leaving just the following four keys:
Because this reduces the number of keys to just four, there is no need for a more softkey, allowing you to use all four physical phone buttons and present the softkeys as a single page. The ephone-template command is used to provide this configuration, as shown in Example 5-35. The order of the command options determines the order in which the softkeys appear on the phone.
Example 5-35. ephone-template Command
router#show running-config ephone-template 1 soft-key connected hold trnsfr endcall confrn ephone 1 ephone-template 1
Cisco CME 3.2 and later allow you to create up to five different ephone templates. Each template lists the softkeys available for each of the four configurable call states:
The ringing call state for inbound calls cannot be configured because it offers only two softkeys: Answer and DND. As soon as you have created the ephone templates, you can apply them on a per-ephone basis. This allows you to optimize the soft key sets to support several different types of phone users. It also allows removal of softkeys in cases where you need to restrict access to certain functions for some phone users.
Table 5-1 shows the full set of customizations for all customizable call states.
Call State |
Available Softkeys |
---|---|
Idle |
Redial, CFwdAll, DND, PickUp, GPickUp, Newcall, Login |
Seized |
Redial, CFwdAll, PickUp, GPickUp, EndCall |
Alerting |
Acct, EndCall, CallBack |
Connected |
Acct, Confrn, Hold, Trnsfr, Endcall, Flash, Park |
The Seized call state is the initial dial tone state after going off-hook to place an outbound call. The Alerting state is the name of the call state after the telephone number has been dialed and the user is waiting for the called number to answer (or hears busy tone).
Configuring Call Transfer and Forward |
Part I: Cisco IP Communications Express Overview
Introducing Cisco IPC Express
Building a Cisco IPC Express Network
Cisco IPC Express Architecture Overview
Part II: Feature Operation and Applications
Cisco IP Phone Options
Cisco CME Call Processing Features
Cisco CME PSTN Connectivity Options
Connecting Multiple Cisco CMEs with VoIP
Integrating Cisco CME with Cisco CallManager
Cisco IPC Express Automated Attendant Options
Cisco IPC Express Integrated Voice Mail
Cisco CME External Voice Mail Options
Additional External Applications with Cisco CME
Part III: Administration and Management
Cisco IPC Express General Administration and Initial System Setup
Configuring and Managing Cisco IPC Express Systems
Cisco IPC Express System Configuration Example
Part IV: Maintenance and Troubleshooting
Troubleshooting Basic Cisco IPC Express Features
Troubleshooting Advanced Cisco CME Features
Troubleshooting Cisco CME Network Integration
Troubleshooting Cisco UE System Features
Troubleshooting Cisco UE Automated Attendant
Troubleshooting Cisco UE Integrated Voice Mail Features
Part V: Appendixes
Appendix A. Cisco IPC Express Features, Releases, and Ordering Information
Appendix B. Sample Cisco UE AA Scripts
Appendix C. Cisco Unity Express Database Schema
Index