Yealink SIP-T19 E2 [13/401] Getting started

Yealink SIP-T23P [13/401] Getting started
Getting Started
3
This section provides instructions on how to get ready for auto provisioning. The auto
provisioning process discussed in this guide uses the TFTP server as the provisioning
server.
To begin the auto provisioning process, the following steps are required:
Obtaining Configuration Information
Managing Configuration Files
Before beginning provisioning, you need to obtain configuration files. There are two
configuration files both of which are CFG-formatted. We call these two files Common
CFG file and MAC-Oriented CFG file. The IP phone tries to download these CFG files
from the server during auto provisioning.
IP phones also support a local configuration file named as <MAC>-local.cfg. When a
user modifies configurations via web user interface or phone user interface, the
configurations will be automatically saved to the MAC-local CFG file on the IP phone.
The MAC-Oriented and MAC-local CFG files are only effectual for the specific phone.
They use the 12-digit MAC address of the IP phone as the file name. For example, if the
MAC address of the IP phone is 0015651130f9, the MAC-Oriented CFG and MAC-local
CFG files have to be named as 0015651130f9.cfg and 0015651130f9-local.cfg
respectively. However, the Common CFG file is effectual for all phones of the same
model. It uses a fixed name “y0000000000XX.cfg or y00000000000X.cfg as the file
name, where "XX" or X equals to the first two digits or the first digit (except 0 for
SIP-T28P) of the hardware version of the IP phone model.
The names of the Common CFG file for each phone model are:
Phone Model
Common CFG File
SIP-T28P
y000000000000.cfg
SIP-T26P
y000000000004.cfg
SIP-T22P
y000000000005.cfg
SIP-T20P
y000000000007.cfg
SIP-T48G
y000000000035.cfg

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