SpectraLink NetLink Wireless Telephones Best Practices White Paper Wireless Telephone User Manual
Page 10

White Paper
Page 9
3.0 Network
Infrastructure
Considerations
3.1 Physical
Connections
The NetLink Wireless Telephone infrastructure components should 
connect to the facility’s local area network (LAN) using Ethernet 
switches, as opposed to Ethernet hubs, to provide adequate bandwidth 
and limit traffic collisions. 
Ethernet switches should be configured to negotiate the connection 
requirements automatically. NetLink Telephony Gateways require 
10Base-T, half-duplex transmission and the NetLink SVP Server utilizes 
10/100Base-T, half or full-duplex transmissions and can be set to 
automatically negotiate or be configured to a specific transmission 
configuration. 
Network wiring is an important component of any Ethernet based system 
and is subject to local and state building code specifications. Category 
5, 4-pair 10/100Base-T Ethernet cabling should be used for NetLink 
Wireless Telephone infrastructure equipment. 
3.2 Assigning
IP
Addresses
NetLink Wireless Telephones operate as LAN client devices and 
therefore require IP addresses to work with the network. IP addresses 
can be assigned statically through the configuration menus on the 
handsets, or dynamically using standard DHCP protocol. For dynamic 
IP addressing, a DHCP server must be available. 
NetLink Telephony Gateways and NetLink SVP Servers also require IP 
addresses and support either static or DHCP address assignment. 
When utilizing multiple NetLink SVP Servers with an IP telephony 
server, the master NetLink SVP server must be assigned a static IP 
address. When operating with an IP telephony server, the NetLink 
SVP Server also requires a range of IP addresses that covers the total 
number of Wireless Telephones supported by that NetLink SVP server. 
When a NetLink Wireless Telephone registers with the telephony server, 
one of the IP address within this range is used to communicate between 
the NetLink SVP Server and the telephony server. This IP address is 
used by the IP telephony server as an alias for the NetLink Wireless 
Telephone, but will not be equivalent to the handset’s IP address that 
was either statically assigned or obtained from the DHCP server. The 
range of alias IP addresses must not be used within any DHCP range or 
cover the IP address used by any other device. In the case where 
multiple NetLink SVP Servers are used for added capacity, an exclusive 
range of IP addresses equivalent to the number of total users each 
NetLink SVP Server can support is required per NetLink SVP Server. 
3.3 Software
Updates Using 
TFTP 
All NetLink components can be field-upgraded with new software to add 
features or capabilities and bug fixes. NetLink Wireless Telephones 
utilize a TFTP client to automatically download new code when 
available. NetLink Telephony Gateways have an integrated TFTP 
server to support Wireless Telephone and OAI Gateway software 
upgrades. For installations that do not use NetLink Telephony 
