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Posted to dev@qpid.apache.org by "Keith Wall (Assigned) (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2012/01/30 00:09:10 UTC

[jira] [Assigned] (QPID-3739) Java properties qpid.ssl.keyStoreCertType and qpid.ssl.trustStoreCertType have misleading names and would be better called qpid.ssl.[Key|Trust]ManagerFactory.algorithm

     [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/QPID-3739?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]

Keith Wall reassigned QPID-3739:
--------------------------------

    Assignee: Robbie Gemmell  (was: Keith Wall)

Hi Robbie, could you review this commit please?
                
> Java properties qpid.ssl.keyStoreCertType and qpid.ssl.trustStoreCertType have misleading names and would be better called qpid.ssl.[Key|Trust]ManagerFactory.algorithm
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: QPID-3739
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/QPID-3739
>             Project: Qpid
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: Documentation, Java Broker, Java Client
>    Affects Versions: 0.15
>            Reporter: Keith Wall
>            Assignee: Robbie Gemmell
>             Fix For: 0.15
>
>
> The Java client supports two system properties, {{qpid.ssl.trustStoreCertType}} and {{qpid.ssl.keyStoreCertType}} that the Programming-In-Apache-Qpid docbook describe as "the certificate type".   These properties are defaulted to {{SunX509}} in ConnectionSettings.java and SSLContextFactory.java.
> Similarly, the Java broker supports a configuration item {{connector/ssl/certType}} which is again defaulted to {{SunX509}} in ServerConfiguration.
> On all code paths, these values are passed down to {{javax.net.ssl.KeyManagerFactory
> #getInstance()}} and {{javax.net.ssl.TrustManagerFactory#getInstance()}}
> The confusion is that {{KeyManagerFactory#getInstance()}}/{{TrustManagerFactory#getInstance()}} do not accept a certificate type at all.  It accepts a key/trust manager factory algorithm name.
> It would be better if the existing property names were deprecated and a more accurate name used, such as
> qpid.ssl.KeyManagerFactory.algorithm/qpid.ssl.TrustManagerFactory.algorithm.  We would continue to support the existing properties, with a warning for a time period.
> I also notice that other projects tend to default the algorithm to Security.getProperty("ssl.KeyManagerFactory.algorithm" and only fallback to SunX509 if that is null.  This plays better with non Sun JDKs such as IBMs. See:  http://jira.codehaus.org/browse/JETTY-70

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