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Java™ Platform Standard Ed. 6 |
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See:
Description
Interface Summary | |
---|---|
GSSContext | This interface encapsulates the GSS-API security context and provides the security services that are available over the context. |
GSSCredential | This interface encapsulates the GSS-API credentials for an entity. |
GSSName | This interface encapsulates a single GSS-API principal entity. |
Class Summary | |
---|---|
ChannelBinding | This class encapsulates the concept of caller-provided channel binding information. |
GSSManager | This class serves as a factory for other important GSS-API classes and also provides information about the mechanisms that are supported. |
MessageProp | This is a utility class used within the per-message GSSContext methods to convey per-message properties. |
Oid | This class represents Universal Object Identifiers (Oids) and their associated operations. |
Exception Summary | |
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GSSException | This exception is thrown whenever a GSS-API error occurs, including any mechanism specific error. |
This package presents a framework that allows application developers to make use of security services like authentication, data integrity and data confidentiality from a variety of underlying security mechanisms like Kerberos, using a unified API. The security mechanisms that an application can chose to use are identified with unique object identifiers. One example of such a mechanism is the Kerberos v5 GSS-API mechanism (object identifier 1.2.840.113554.1.2.2). This mechanism is available through the default instance of the GSSManager class.
The GSS-API is defined in a language independent way in RFC 2743. The Java language bindings are defined in RFC 2853
An application starts out by instantiating a GSSManager
which then serves as a factory for a security context. An application
can use specific principal names and credentials that are also created
using the GSSManager; or it can instantiate a
context with system defaults. It then goes through a context
establishment loop. Once a context is established with the
peer, authentication is complete. Data protection such as integrity
and confidentiality can then be obtained from this context.
The GSS-API does not perform any communication with the peer. It merely produces tokens that the application must somehow transport to the other end.
Subject
in the
current access control context. The Kerberos v5
mechanism will search for the required INITIATE and ACCEPT credentials
(KerberosTicket
and
KerberosKey
) in
the private credential set where as some other mechanism might look
in the public set or in both. If the desired credential is not
present in the appropriate sets of the current Subject, the GSS-API
call must fail.This model has the advantage that credential management is simple and predictable from the applications point of view. An application, given the right permissions, can purge the credentials in the Subject or renew them using standard Java API's. If it purged the credentials, it would be sure that the JGSS mechanism would fail, or if it renewed a time based credential it would be sure that a JGSS mechanism would succeed.
This model does require that a JAAS login
be performed in order to
authenticate and populate a Subject that the JGSS mechnanism can later
utilize. However, applications have the ability to relax this
restiction by means of a system property:
javax.security.auth.useSubjectCredsOnly
. By default
this system property will be assumed to be true
(even when
it is unset) indicating that providers must only use the credentials
that are present in the current Subject. However, if this property is
explicitly set to false by the application, then it indicates that
the provider is free to use any credentials cache of its choice. Such
a credential cache might be a disk cache, an in-memory cache, or even
just the current Subject itself.
For an online tutorial on using Java GSS-API, please see Introduction to JAAS and Java GSS-API.
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Java™ Platform Standard Ed. 6 |
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