8
Using the Cisco 1040 Web Interface
You can open a web interface to view information stored on a Cisco 1040 as follows.
Step 1 In your browser, enter http://<IP address or DNS name> where IP address is the address of
your Cisco 1040 and DNS name is the DNS name for the Cisco 1040. For example:
http://Cisco-1040-sj
The Device Information window displays the following information:
• ID—Cisco 1040 ID.
• MAC Address—Cisco 1040 MAC address.
• Time stamp—Current time on the Cisco 1040.
• Status—Status of the Cisco 1040; one of the following:
–
operational—Cisco 1040 is receiving RTP streams, analyzing the data, and sending
syslog messages when required.
–
not communicating with receiver—The Service Monitor is unreachable.
• Current Service Monitor—IP address or DNS name of the service monitor to which the
Cisco 1040 is registered; this could be the primary or secondary service monitor.
• TFTP IP Address—IP address of the TFTP server from which the Cisco 1040 obtains a
configuration file and binary image file.
• Switch IP Address—Switch that this Cisco 1040 is connected to.
• Switch Port—Switch port that this Cisco 1040 is connected to.
• Software Version—Name of the binary image file installed on the Cisco 1040.
• Last Updated—The last time that the configuration for the Cisco 1040 was updated.
Step 2 To view the contents of the configuration file on the TFTP server for this Cisco 1040, enter
http://<IP address or DNS name>/Communication where IP address is the address of your
Cisco 1040 and DNS name is the DNS name for the Cisco 1040. For example:
http://Cisco-1040-sj/Communication
The Communication Log File window displays the following information, which is stored in
the configuration file on the TFTP server:
• Receiver—IP address or DNS name of each Service Monitor defined in the configuration
file—primary or secondary—separated by semicolons.
• ID—ID of the Cisco 1040 that uses this configuration file.
• Image—Name of the binary image file that the Cisco 1040 should download and run
from the TFTP server.