The goal of this exercise is to learn how to use the Java
Authentication and Authorization (JAAS) API to perform
authentication.
JAAS provides a standard pluggable authentication framework (PAM) for the Java platform. An application uses the JAAS API to perform authentication - the process of verifying the identity of the user who is using the application and gathering his identity information into a container called a subject. The application can then use the identity information in the subject along with the JAAS API to make authorization decisions, to decide whether the authenticated user is allowed to access protected resources or perform restricted actions. This exercise demonstrates JAAS Authentication. It does not demonstrate JAAS Authorization.
Subject.doAs will run the code defined in MyAction as the authenticated user [lines 14-15]. This serves two purposes. First, code in MyAction that requires identity information for authentication to a service could get it from the subject. This exercise demonstrates this use. Second, if MyAction accesses any protected resources/operations, the identity information in the current subject would be used to make the corresponding access control decision. This second aspect is not covered in this exercise.
Code listing for Jaas.java
.
|
%JAVA_HOME%/bin
is in the path,
and JDK pointed to by the %JAVA_HOME%
variable points
to Java SE 6.% cd auth/src % javac Jaas.javaYou will run this code in subsequent exercises after doing some set up. That ends this exercise.
This exercise introduced the main classes of the JAAS APIs:
LoginContext
and Subject
. You learned how
to use LoginContext
to authenticate a user and collect
its identity information in a Subject
. You then
learned how to use the Subject
to perform an action as
the authenticated user.
The goal of this exercise is to learn how to configure a JAAS application to use Kerberos for authentication.
Kerberos is an Internet standard protocol for trusted-third party authentication defined in RFC 4120. It is available on most modern computing platforms today, including Solaris, Windows XP, and Linux.
The Kerberos architecture is centered around a trusted
authentication service called the key distribution center, or KDC.
Users and services in a Kerberos environment are referred to as
principals; each principal shares a secret (such as a password)
with the KDC. A principal authenticates to Kerberos by
proving to the KDC that it knows the shared secret. If the
authentication is successful, the KDC issues a
ticket-granting-ticket (TGT) to the principal. When the principal
subsequently wants to authenticate to a service on the network,
such as a directory service or a file service, (thereby, acting as
a "client" of the service), it gives the TGT to the KDC to obtain a
service ticket to communicate with the service. Not only does the
service ticket indicate the identities of the client and service
principals, it also contains a session key that can be used by the
client and service to subsequently establish secure communication.
To authenticate to the service, the client sends the service ticket
to the service. When the service receives the ticket, it decodes it
using the secret it shares with the KDC.
In this architecture, a principal only authenticates directly
(once) to the KDC. It authenticates indirectly to all other
services via the use of service tickets. Service tickets are how
the KDC vouches for the identity of a principal. The ability of a
principal to access multiple secure services by performing explicit
authentication only once is called single sign-on.
JAAS Background for this exercise:
In JAAS, for a client principal, "logging into Kerberos" means
acquiring the TGT and placing it in the Subject
, so
that it can be used for authentication with services that the
client will access. For a service principal, "logging into
Kerberos" means obtaining the secret keys that the service needs to
decode incoming client authentication requests.
Resources for this exercise:
Steps to follow:
src/jaas-krb5.conf
This file contains two entries, one named "client" and one named
"server." The "client" entry indicates that the
LoginContext
must use the
com.sun.security.auth.module.Krb5LoginModule
.
The "server" entry indicates that the LoginContext must use the
same login module, and use keys from the
sample.keytab
file for the principal
host/machineName
.
Code listing for jaas-krb5.conf
.
|
Output for running the JAAS example using the client
entry from jaas-krb5.conf
:
|
Output for running JAAS example using "server" entry from
jaas-krb5.conf
.
|
Summary:
In this exercise, you learned how to configure a JAAS application to use a Kerberos login module, both as a client principal who enters his/her username/password interactively, and as a service principal who gets its keys from a keytab file.