Cisco
IP
Communications
solutions
provide
the
means
for
integrating
voice
and
data
allowing
users
to
take
advantage
of
services
such
as
IP
telephony,
integrated
services,
and
toll-bypass.
These
solutions
allow
enterprises,
managed
network
service
providers,
and
service
providers
to
reap
the
advantages
of
Unified
Communications
such
as
lower
operating
costs
and
increased
productivity.
Cisco
Unified
Communications
solutions
also
enable
packet
voice
technologies
including
voice
over
IP
(VoIP)
(including
H.323,
Media
Gateway
Control
Protocol
(MGCP),
and
Sessions
Initiation
Protocol
(SIP),
voice
over
Frame,
voice
over
ATM
(including
AAL2
and
AAL5
adaptation
layers).
The
IP
Communications
High-Density
Digital
Voice/Fax
Network
Modules
are
an
integral
part
of
the
Cisco
Unified
Communications
offering,
delivering
a
versatile
combination
of
digital
voice,
analog
voice,
and
data
capabilities
in
a
single
network
module
form
factor.
They
not
only
provide
the
IP
telephony
gateway
to
Cisco
UC
architectures
for
calls
to
and
from
the
PSTN
and
the
WAN,
but
also
allow
enterprises
to
deploy
networks
with
existing
traditional
telephony
equipment
until
they
are
ready
to
migrate
to
IP
telephony.
Features
include
high-density
digital
voice
and
WAN
connectivity
up
to
four
T1/E1
ports,
analog
voice
connectivity
up
to
four
ports,
and
up
to
50
conferencing
and
transcoding
sessions1.
Enterprises
can
now
deploy
all
these
rich
features
on
a
single
network
module,
enabling
connectivity
to
the
PSTN,
traditional
telephony
equipment
such
as
PBXs,
key
systems,
analog
telephones,
fax
machines,
and
the
enterprise
WAN.
This
product
supports
three
network
module
versions,
with
the
option
of
zero,
one,
or
two
built-in
T1/E1
ports,
as
shown
in
Table
2.
Each
built-in
port
can
be
conveniently
software-configured
to
support
either
T1
or
E1
operation.
Each
network
module
also
supports
a
single
VIC/VWIC
slot
that
can
be
fitted
with
a
Cisco
voice/WAN
interface
card
(VWIC)
or
voice
interface
card
(VIC).
The
Cisco
VICs
are
daughter
cards
that
install
into
the
network
modules
and
provide
the
interface
to
the
PSTN
and
to
telephony
equipment
(PBXs,
key
systems,
fax
machines,
phones).
The
Cisco
VWICs
are
daughter
cards
that
provide
the
interface
to
the
PBX,
PSTN,
and/or
WAN.
Figure
1
shows
a
NM-HDV2-2T1/E1
with
two
built-in
T1/E1
ports
and
a
VIC3-2FXS/DID
in
the
VIC/VWIC
slot.
Cisco
VWICs
supported
include
1-
and
2-port
T1
and
E1
interface
cards
with
optional
drop-and-insert
capability
along
with
a
G.703
interface
card
option.
These
cards
cover
a
full
range
of
digital
voice
and
WAN
connectivity
options.
A
variety
of
VIC
options
are
supported
including
2-port
foreign
exchange
station
(FXS),
direct
inward
dial
(DID),
foreign
exchange
office
(FXO),
E&M
(ear
and
mouth)
analog
interface
cards,
4-port
FXS
and
4-port
FXO
cards
and
a
2-port
ISDN
Basic
Rate
Interface
(BRI)
digital
interface
card
providing
-40V
phantom
power.
These
cards
cover
the
entire
range
of
analog
connectivity
options
along
with
user-side
and
network-side
digital
BRI
connections.
Please
see
Table
3
below
for
details
on
options
supported.
The
IP
Communications
High-Density
Digital
Voice/Fax
Network
Modules
are
used
with
the
PVDM2
Packet
Fax/Voice
DSP
modules,
providing
scalability
from
4
to
120
channels
and
featuring
the
latest
digital
signal
processing
technology.
A
maximum
of
four
PVDM2s
can
be
installed
on
each
NM-HDV2
network
module.
The
IP
Communications
High-Density
Digital
Voice/Fax
Network
Modules
that
are
deployed
on
the
Cisco
2811,
2821,
2851,
2911,
2921,
2951,
3825,
3845,
3925
and
3945
Unified
Communications
Routers
can
also
be
conveniently
used
with
the
onboard
PVDM2
DSP
modules
(on
the
2800
and
3800
Series
only).
The
PVDM2s
are
not
supported
on
the
Cisco
2900
and
3900
Series
motherboards.
Enterprises
can
conveniently
select
the
minimum
number
and
density-type
PVDM2s
depending
on
the
voice
channels
they
are
deploying,
and
scale
the
number
of
PVDMs
as
they
expand.
These
PVDM2
can
be
configured
for
high-,
medium-
or
flex
complexity
via
software.
Flex
complexity
is
the
default
configuration,
and
in
this
mode,
the
network
module
will
dynamically
negotiate
the
appropriate
codec
(medium
or
high)
on
a
call-by-call
basis
depending
on
the
PVDM2s
available.
Enhanced
Cisco
conferencing
and
transcoding
features
on
the
IP
Communications
High-Density
Digital
Voice/Fax
Network
Modules
are
available.
The
network
modules
provide
a
hardware-based
conference
resource
at
branch
offices
to
facilitate
multiparty
conferences,
thereby
reducing
the
costs
of
delivering
conferencing
resources
across
the
WAN.
Transcoding
resources
within
the
same
network
module
further
reduces
bandwidth
consumption
and
costs
by
compressing
traffic
across
the
WAN,
and
enabling
communications
between
devices
that
support
different
codecs.
Up
to
50
eight-party
G.711
ad-hoc
conferences,
and
up
to
32
eight-party
multicodec
(G.711/G.729)
ad-hoc
conferences
can
be
supported
on
a
single
IP
Communications
High-Density
Digital
Voice/Fax
Network
Module.
The
IP
Communications
High-Density
Digital
Voice/Fax
Network
Modules
are
integrated
in
the
Cisco
2811,
2821,
2851,
2911,
2931,
2951,
3825,
3845,
3925,
and
3945
Unified
Communications
routers
and
are
interoperable
with
the
full
range
of
Cisco
IP
Communications
solutions-including
Cisco
IP
phones,
Cisco
UCM,
Cisco
UCME,
Cisco
Unity
software,
Cisco
Unity
Express,
Cisco
IP
Contact
Center
(IPCC),
and
Cisco
IPCC
Express.
Up
to
four
network
modules
can
be
configured
in
a
Cisco
3845
and
3945
Unified
Communications
Router,
supporting
up
to
480
and
720
voice
channels
in
medium
complexity
codec
on
the
Cisco
3845
and
3945,
respectively.
The
IP
Communications
High-Density
Digital
Voice/Fax
Network
Module
combined
with
Survivable
Remote
Site
Telephony
(operating
with
Cisco
UCM)
or
Cisco
UCME
in
a
Unified
Communications
Router
makes
an
ideal
single-box
communications
solution
for
IP
telephony
in
branch
offices.
Table
5
lists
the
maximum
number
of
network
modules
that
are
supported
on
a
Unified
Communications
Router.