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Licensing Carification RE: License MAC

gmgarrian
Level 4
Level 4

Can anyone shed some light on how the license MAC works?

I had a CUCM BE 6000 with CUCM 8.6 and UCONN 8.6 running as virtual machines.  I changed the NTP settings and this changed the license MAC with invalidated the licenses.  I had to call TAC to rehost them.

Then, I had a CUCM and UCONN, both 8.5 running as standard installs (non-VM) and changing the NTP settings did not change the license MAC and not rehosting was needed.

I'm going to need to do the NTP settings on a CUCM BE 5000, non-VM.  Will this invalidate the licenses?

Long story short (too late!): Is the license MAC the physical MAC of the machine and only changes when the server is a VM?

Thanks!

Greg

1 Accepted Solution

Accepted Solutions

Aaron Harrison
VIP Alumni
VIP Alumni

Hi

Yes, it's VM servers that use virtual MACs.

You can use the answer file generator to preview what MAC address you will get generated on a VM system. If you change NTP, you get a new MAC, if you change domain, new MAC... if you change the DNS server I don't think it does. Try it for yourself:

http://www.cisco.com/web/cuc_afg/index.html

Aaron Harrison

Principal Engineer at Logicalis UK

Please rate helpful posts...

Aaron Please remember to rate helpful posts to identify useful responses, and mark 'Answered' if appropriate!

View solution in original post

3 Replies 3

Aaron Harrison
VIP Alumni
VIP Alumni

Hi

Yes, it's VM servers that use virtual MACs.

You can use the answer file generator to preview what MAC address you will get generated on a VM system. If you change NTP, you get a new MAC, if you change domain, new MAC... if you change the DNS server I don't think it does. Try it for yourself:

http://www.cisco.com/web/cuc_afg/index.html

Aaron Harrison

Principal Engineer at Logicalis UK

Please rate helpful posts...

Aaron Please remember to rate helpful posts to identify useful responses, and mark 'Answered' if appropriate!

Thanks for the info!

Rob Huffman
Hall of Fame
Hall of Fame

Hi "G" - Greg,

Aaron has given the perfect answer here! +5 "A"

Here is the Cisco reference to this licensing change;

Customer Impact from New Licensing Procedures

#

Cisco Unified Communications Manager on VMware on Cisco UCS B-Series Blade Servers uses a different licensing model than Cisco Unified Communications Manager on an MCS server. The MAC address of the NIC card is no longer used to associate the license to the server.

#

Instead, the license gets associated to a license MAC, which is a 12 digit HEX value created by hashing the following parameters that you configure on the server:

#

Time zone

#

NTP server 1 (or "none")

#

NIC speed (or "auto")

#

Hostname

#

IP Address (or "dhcp")

#

IP Mask (or "dhcp")

#

Gateway Address (or "dhcp")

#

Primary DNS (or "dhcp")

#

SMTP server (or "none")

#

Certificate Information (Organization, Unit, Location, State, Country)

This hash of these fields is called the LICENSE MAC

Note : Once there is a change in any of the parameters that creates the License MAC, it will

give you 30 day grace period to generate a new license file for the CM based on new license

MAC.

http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/voice_ip_comm/cucm/install/8_0_2/install/cmins802.html#wp584709

Cheers!

Rob

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