Honeywell International Inc. 9500LUP 用户手册

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Dolphin® 9500 Series Mobile Computer User’s Guide - Preliminary Rev (d) 12/17/04
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Typical Message Exchange Using TTLS and PEAP
The above graphic shows a typical message flow for a TTLS transaction. TTLS authentication comprises two phases. In Phase 
1, TLS is used to authenticate the TTLS server to the client. The TTLS server may optionally request authentication of the client's 
certificate, but by default the client verifies only the server's certificate. The TLS handshake is negotiated between the client and 
the TTLS server. Following the TLS handshake, Phase 2 may proceed using a secure channel (tunnel) provided by the TLS 
record layer. The secure tunnel is then used to exchange information for the negotiation of the following legacy protocols: EAP-
MD5, PAP, CHAP, MS-CHAP, or MS-CHAPV2 (subject to support by the AAA server). A TTLS server may perform the 
authentication, or the information may be de-tunneled and passed on to an AAA server. The AAA server is the server in the user's 
home domain where authentication and authorization are administered.   
PEAP works in the same manner as TTLS. However, supports different legacy protocols within the encrypted Phase 2 tunnel. 
Currently the tunneled protocols are EAP-MSChapV2 and EAP-TLS/SmartCard. Like TTLS, the use of a client certificate is 
optional, if one is used, the same certificate is used for Phase 1 and Phase 2. The client certificate is optional for both phases.