You are viewing a plain text version of this content. The canonical link for it is here.
Posted to dev@beehive.apache.org by "Eddie O'Neil (JIRA)" <be...@incubator.apache.org> on 2005/05/10 14:44:14 UTC

[jira] Updated: (BEEHIVE-635) Tomcat PageflowValve does not check for security-constraints defined in web.xml

     [ http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/BEEHIVE-635?page=all ]

Eddie O'Neil updated BEEHIVE-635:
---------------------------------

    Fix Version: TBD

Same thing in 635 as with the fix version in 634:

  http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/BEEHIVE-635

This is definitely something we should support post 1.0; moving to fix in TBD.  

Abdessattar, looks like you're halfway to a patch here.  :)



> Tomcat PageflowValve does not check for security-constraints defined in web.xml
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>          Key: BEEHIVE-635
>          URL: http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/BEEHIVE-635
>      Project: Beehive
>         Type: Bug
>   Components: NetUI
>     Versions: V1Alpha, V1Beta, V1
>  Environment: Using beehive latest from SVN and Tomcat 5.5.7
>     Reporter: Abdessattar Sassi
>      Fix For: TBD

>
> The Tomcat implementation of the Pipeline for a Context is such that only one Valve which is also an Authenticator valve is added to the Pipeline. The standard Tomcat Authenticator valves (e.g. BasicAuthenticator) check for and honor all the security constraints specified in the webapp web.xml descriptor.
> The PageflowValve implementation part of tomcat-server under netui is an Authenticaor valve as it extends BasicAuthenticator, which means that it is mutually exclusive with the regular Tomcat authenticator valves (only one can be in the pipeline). It does not however keep the features that were part of the AuthenticatorBase and the BasicAuthentiocator invoke() method implementation. Such issue results for example in the user-data-constraint elements being completely ignored, and therefore pages who are supposed to be served only with SSL are always served without SSL.
> Following is an example of the code from the regular Tomcat authenticators that is missing from beehive adapter (please note that the code is from Tomcat 5.5.7 with which by the way beehive does not compile, but should give you a good idea of the missing features...):
>         // Enforce any user data constraint for this security constraint
>         if (log.isDebugEnabled()) {
>             log.debug(" Calling hasUserDataPermission()");
>         }
>         Realm realm = this.context.getRealm();
>         // Is this request URI subject to a security constraint?
>         SecurityConstraint [] constraints
>             = realm.findSecurityConstraints(request, this.context);
>         if (!realm.hasUserDataPermission(request, response,
>                                          constraints)) {
>             if (log.isDebugEnabled()) {
>                 log.debug(" Failed hasUserDataPermission() test");
>             }
>             /*
>              * ASSERT: Authenticator already set the appropriate
>              * HTTP status code, so we do not have to do anything special
>              */
>             return;
>         }

-- 
This message is automatically generated by JIRA.
-
If you think it was sent incorrectly contact one of the administrators:
   http://issues.apache.org/jira/secure/Administrators.jspa
-
For more information on JIRA, see:
   http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira