You are viewing a plain text version of this content. The canonical link for it is here.
Posted to issues@cxf.apache.org by "Christian Schneider (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2014/07/30 12:17:40 UTC

[jira] [Comment Edited] (CXF-5118) Create CXF interceptor which will use HTTPS client certificates to create JAAS SecurityContext

    [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-5118?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=14079146#comment-14079146 ] 

Christian Schneider edited comment on CXF-5118 at 7/30/14 10:17 AM:
--------------------------------------------------------------------

Sounds good. You can either start with a patch for just your interceptor code and the test as a second step or provide both in one patch. Btw. a github pull request may be even more convenient for you.


was (Author: chris@die-schneider.net):
Sounds good. You can either start with a patch for just your interceptor code and the test as a second step or provide both in one patch.

> Create CXF interceptor which will use HTTPS client certificates to create JAAS SecurityContext 
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CXF-5118
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-5118
>             Project: CXF
>          Issue Type: New Feature
>          Components: Core
>            Reporter: Sergey Beryozkin
>            Assignee: Christian Schneider
>
> Use case:
> The user authenticates against the webservice using an X509 client certificate. In case of successful authentication the JAAS security context should be populated with a Subject that stores the user name and the roles of the user. This is necessary to support Authorization at a later stage.
> Design ideas
> The SSL transport will be configured to only accept certain client certificates. So we can assume that the interceptor does not have to do a real authentication. Instead it has to map from the subjectDN of the certificate to the user name and then lookup the roles of that user. Both then has to be stored in the subject's principles.
> The mapping could be done inside a JAASLoginModule or before. Inside will give the user more flexibility.
> The next step to retrieve the roles should be done in one of the standard JAASLoginModules as the source of the roles can be quite diverse. So for example the LdapLoginModule allows to retrieve the roles from Ldap. At the moment these modules require the password of the user though which is not available when doing a cert based auth.
> So I see two variants to retrieve the roles:
> 1. Change the loginmodules like the LDAP one to be configureable to use a fixed ldap user for the ldap connect and not require the user password. So the module would have two modes: a) normal authentication and group gathering b) use a fixed user to just retrieve roles for a given user
> 2. Store the user password somewhere (e.g. in the mapping file). In this case the existing LDAPLoginModule could be used but the user password would be openly in a text file
> 3. Create new LoginModules with the desired behaviour (fixed user and only lookup of roles)



--
This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA
(v6.2#6252)