48-49
Cisco ASA 5500 Series Configuration Guide using the CLI
Chapter48 Configuring the Cisco Phone Proxy
Configuration Examples for the Phone Proxy
crypto ca trustpoint ldc_server
enrollment self
proxy_ldc_issuer
fqdn my-ldc-ca.exmaple.com
subject-name cn=FW_LDC_SIGNER_172_23_45_200
keypair ldc_signer_key
crypto ca enroll ldc_server
tls-proxy my_proxy
server trust-point _internal_PP_myctl
client ldc issuer ldc_server
client ldc keypair phone_common
client cipher-suite aes128-sha1 aes256-sha1
media-termination my_mediaterm
address 192.0.2.25 interface inside
address 10.10.0.25 interface outside
phone-proxy mypp
media-termination my_mediaterm
tftp-server address 192.0.2.101 interface inside
tls-proxy mytls
ctl-file myctl
cluster-mode mixed
class-map sec_sccp
match port tcp 2443
class-map sec_sip
match port tcp eq 5061
policy-map pp_policy
class sec_sccp
inspect skinny phone-proxy mypp
class sec_sip
inspect sip phone-proxy mypp
service-policy pp_policy interface outside
Example 5: LSC Provisioning in Mixed-mode Cisco UCM cluster; Cisco UCM and TFTP Server on Publisher
Figure 48-6 shows an example of the configuration for a mixed-mode Cisco UCM cluster where LSC
provisioning is required using the following topology.
Note Doing LSC provisioning for remote IP phones is not recommended because it requires that the IP phones
first register and they have to register in nonsecure mode. Having the IP phones register in nonsecure
mode requires the Administrator to open the nonsecure signaling port for SIP and SCCP on the ASA. If
possible, LSC provisioning should be done inside the corporate network before giving the IP phones to
the end-users.
In this sample, you create an access list to allow the IP phones to contact the TFTP server and to allow
the IP phones to register in nonsecure mode by opening the nonsecure port for SIP and SCCP as well as
the CAPF port for LSC provisioning.
Additionally, you create the CAPF trustpoint by copying and pasting the CAPF certificate from the Cisco
UCM Certificate Management software.