CHAPT ER
50-1
Cisco ASA 5500 Series Configuration Guide using the CLI
50
Configuring Cisco Mobility Advantage
This chapter describes how to configure the adaptive security appliance for Cisco Unified
Communications Mobility Advantage Proxy features.
This chapter includes the following sections:
Information about the Cisco Mobility Advantage Proxy Feature, page50-1
Licensing for the Cisco Mobility Advantage Proxy Feature, page50-6
Configuring Cisco Mobility Advantage, page50-6
Monitoring for Cisco Mobility Advantage, page50-10
Configuration Examples for Cisco Mobility Advantage, page50-11
Feature History for Cisco Mobility Advantage, page50-14

Information about the Cisco Mobility Advantage Proxy Feature

This section contains the following topics:
Cisco Mobility Advantage Proxy Functionality, page50-1
Mobility Advantage Proxy Deployment Scenarios, page50-2
Trust Relationships for Cisco UMA Deployments, page50-5

Cisco Mobility Advantage Proxy Functionality

To support Cisco UMA for the Cisco Mobility Advantage solution, the mobility advantage proxy
(implemented as a TLS proxy) includes the following functionality:
The ability to allow no client authentication during the handshake with clients.
Allowing an imported PKCS-12 certificate to server as a proxy certificate.
The ASA includes an inspection engine to validate the Cisco UMA Mobile Multiplexing Protocol
(MMP).
MMP is a data transport protocol for transmitting data entities between Cisco UMA clients and servers.
As shown in Figure 50-1, MMP must be run on top of a connection-oriented protocol (the underlying
transport) and is intended to be run on top of a secure transport protocol such as TLS. The Orative
Markup Language (OML) protocol is intended to be run on top of MMP for the purposes of data
synchronization, as well as the HTTP protocol for uploading and downloading large files.