The JavaTM Authentication
and Authorization Service (JAAS) was introduced as an optional package to the
JavaTM 2 SDK, Standard Edition (J2SDK), v 1.3.
JAAS has now been integrated into the J2SDK 1.4.
JAAS can be used for two purposes:
for authentication of users, to reliably
and securely determine who is currently executing Java code,
regardless of whether the code is running as an application, an applet,
a bean, or a servlet; and
for authorization of users to ensure they have the
access control rights (permissions) required to do the actions performed.
This section provides a basic tutorial for the authentication component.
The authorization component will be
described in the JAAS Authorization tutorial.
JAAS authentication is performed in a pluggable fashion.
This permits Java applications to remain independent from underlying
authentication technologies. New or updated
technologies can be plugged in without requiring
modifications to the application itself. An implementation for a
particular authentication technology to be used
is determined at runtime. The implementation is
specified in a login configuration file.
The authentication technology used for this tutorial is Kerberos.
(See Kerberos Requirements.)
The rest of this tutorial consists of the
following sections:
If you want to first see the tutorial code in action,
you can skip directly to
Running the Code
and then go back to the other sections to learn about
coding and configuration file details.
Our authentication tutorial code is contained in a single source
file, JaasAcn.java.
This file's main method
performs the authentication and then reports whether or not
authentication succeeded.
The code for authenticating the user is
very simple, consisting of just two steps:
First the basic code is shown, followed by a
complete listing
of the JaasAcn.java source file, complete with import statements
and error handling.
Instantiating a LoginContext
In order to authenticate a user, you first need a
javax.security.auth.login.LoginContext.
Here is the basic way to instantiate a LoginContext:
import javax.security.auth.login.*;
. . .
LoginContext lc =
new LoginContext(<config file entry name>,
<CallbackHandler to be used for user interaction>);
and here is the specific way our tutorial code does
the instantiation:
import javax.security.auth.login.*;
import com.sun.security.auth.callback.TextCallbackHandler;
. . .
LoginContext lc =
new LoginContext("JaasSample",
new TextCallbackHandler());
The arguments are the following:
The name of an entry in the JAAS login configuration file
This is the name for the LoginContext to use to look up an entry
for this application in the JAAS login configuration file, described
here. Such an entry specifies the class(es)
that implement the desired underlying authentication technology(ies).
The class(es) must implement the LoginModule interface, which is in the
javax.security.auth.spi package.
In our sample code, we use the Krb5LoginModule in the
com.sun.security.auth.module package, which
performs Kerberos authentication.
The entry in the login configuration file we
use for this tutorial (see jaas.conf)
has the name "JaasSample",
so that is the name we specify
as the first argument to the LoginContext constructor.
A CallbackHandler instance.
When a LoginModule needs to communicate with the user, for example
to ask for a user name and password, it does not do so directly.
That is because there are various ways of communicating with a
user, and it is desirable for LoginModules to remain independent of the
different types of user interaction. Rather, the LoginModule invokes
a CallbackHandler to perform the user interaction and obtain the requested
information, such as the user name and password.
(CallbackHandler is an interface in the
javax.security.auth.callback pkg.)
An instance of the particular
CallbackHandler to be used is specified as the second argument to
the LoginContext constructor.
The LoginContext forwards that instance to the underlying LoginModule
(in our case Krb5LoginModule).
An application typically provides its own CallbackHandler implementation.
Two simple CallbackHandlers, TextCallbackHandler and DialogCallbackHandler,
are provided in the com.sun.security.auth.callback package
as sample implementations. Our code uses the TextCallbackHandler,
which outputs information to and reads input from the command line.
Once we have a LoginContext lc,
we can call its login method to
carry out the authentication process:
lc.login();
The LoginContext instantiates a new empty
javax.security.auth.Subject object (which
represents the user or service being authenticated).
The LoginContext constructs the configured LoginModule
(in our case Krb5LoginModule) and initializes it with
this new Subject and TextCallbackHandler.
The LoginContext's login method then
calls methods in the Krb5LoginModule to
perform the login and authentication.
The Krb5LoginModule will utilize the TextCallbackHandler
to obtain the user name and password.
Then the Krb5LoginModule will use this information to get
the user credentials from the Kerberos KDC.
See the Kerberos
reference documentation.
If authentication is successful, the Krb5LoginModule
populates the Subject with (1) a Kerberos Principal representing the user and
(2) the user's credentials (TGT).
See Subjects, Principals, Authentication, and
Credentials for information on these terms.
The calling application can subsequently retrieve the
authenticated Subject by calling the
LoginContext's getSubject method, although doing so is not
necessary for this tutorial.
Now that you have seen the basic code required to authenticate the
user, we can put it all together into the full class in
JaasAcn.java, which includes relevant
import statements and error handling:
import javax.security.auth.*;
import javax.security.auth.callback.*;
import javax.security.auth.login.*;
import com.sun.security.auth.callback.TextCallbackHandler;
/**
* This JaasAcn application attempts to authenticate a user
* and reports whether or not the authentication was successful.
*/
public class JaasAcn {
public static void main(String[] args) {
// Obtain a LoginContext, needed for authentication. Tell
// it to use the LoginModule implementation specified by
// the entry named "JaasSample" in the JAAS login
// configuration file and to also use the specified
// CallbackHandler.
LoginContext lc = null;
try {
lc = new LoginContext("JaasSample",
new TextCallbackHandler());
} catch (LoginException le) {
System.err.println("Cannot create LoginContext. "
+ le.getMessage());
System.exit(-1);
} catch (SecurityException se) {
System.err.println("Cannot create LoginContext. "
+ se.getMessage());
System.exit(-1);
}
try {
// attempt authentication
lc.login();
} catch (LoginException le) {
System.err.println("Authentication failed: "
System.err.println(" " + le.getMessage());
System.exit(-1);
}
System.out.println("Authentication succeeded!");
}
}
JAAS authentication is performed in a pluggable fashion, so
applications can remain independent from underlying
authentication technologies. A system administrator determines
the authentication technologies, or LoginModules, to be used
for each application and configures them in a login Configuration.
The source of the configuration information
(for example, a file or a database) is up to the current
javax.security.auth.login.Configuration implementation.
The default Configuration implementation from Sun Microsystems
reads configuration information from configuration files, as described in
com.sun.security.auth.login.ConfigFile.html.
See JAAS Login Configuration
File for information as to what a login configuration file is, what it
contains, and how to specify which login configuration file should be used.
This entry is named "JaasSample" and that is the name that our
tutorial application, JaasAcn, uses to refer to this entry.
The entry specifies that the LoginModule to be used to do the
user authentication is the Krb5LoginModule in the
com.sun.security.auth.module package and that
this Krb5LoginModule is required to "succeed" in order for
authentication to be considered successful.
The Krb5LoginModule succeeds only if the name and password supplied
by the user are successfully used to log the user into the Kerberos KDC.
For information about all the possible options that can be
passed to Krb5LoginModule, see the
Krb5LoginModule documentation.
To execute our JAAS authentication tutorial code, all you
have to do is
Place the JaasAcn.java application
source file and the
jaas.conf login configuration file
into a directory.
Compile JaasAcn.java:
javac JaasAcn.java
Execute the JaasAcn application, specifying
by -Djava.security.krb5.realm=<your_realm> that
your Kerberos realm is the one specified. For example, if your realm is
"KRBNT-OPERATIONS.ABC.COM" you'd put
-Djava.security.krb5.realm=KRBNT-OPERATIONS.ABC.COM.
by -Djava.security.krb5.kdc=<your_kdc> that
your Kerberos KDC is the one specified. For example, if your KDC is
"samplekdc.abc.com" you'd put
-Djava.security.krb5.kdc=samplekdc.abc.com.
by -Djava.security.auth.login.config=jaas.conf that the
login configuration file to be used is jaas.conf.
The full command is below. Be sure to replace
<your_realm> with your Kerberos realm,
and <your_kdc> with your Kerberos KDC.
Type all that on one line. Multiple lines are used here for legibility.
You will be prompted for your Kerberos user name and password,
and the underlying Kerberos authentication mechanism
specified in the login configuration file will log you into
Kerberos. If your login is successful, you will see the following
message:
Authentication succeeded!
If the login is not successful (for example, if you misspell your
password), you will see
Authentication failed:
followed by a reason for the failure. For example, if you mistype
your user name, you may see a message like the following (where the
formatting is slightly modified here to increase legibility):
Authentication failed:
Kerberos Authentication Failed:
javax.security.auth.login.LoginException:
KrbException: Client not found in Kerberos database
When a Java program is run with a security manager installed,
the program is not allowed to access resources or otherwise perform
security-sensitive operations unless it is explicitly granted
permission to do so by the security policy in effect. In Java
platforms that are compatible with J2SE v 1.2 and later, the
permission must be granted by an entry in a
policy file.
Most browsers install a security manager, so applets typically run
under the scrutiny of a security manager. Applications, on the
other hand, do not, since a security manager is not automatically
installed when an application is running. Thus an application, like our
JaasAcn application, by default has full access to resources.
To run an application with a security manager, simply invoke the
interpreter with a -Djava.security.manager argument included
on the command line.
If you try invoking JaasAcn with a security manager but
without specifying any policy file, you will get the following (unless
you have a default policy setup elsewhere that grants the required
permissions or grants AllPermission):
As you can see, you get an AccessControlException, because
we haven't created and used a policy file granting our code the permission that
is required in order to be allowed to create a LoginContext.
Here are the complete steps required in order to be able to run our
JaasAcn application with a security manager installed.
You can skip the
first two steps if you have already done them, as described in
Running the Code.
Place the JaasAcn.java application
source file and the
jaas.conf login configuration file
into a directory.
Compile JaasAcn.java:
javac JaasAcn.java
Create a JAR file containing JaasAcn.class:
jar -cvf JaasAcn.jar JaasAcn.class
This command creates a JAR file, JaasAcn.jar, and
places the JaasAcn.class file inside it.
Create a policy file granting the code in the JAR file
the required permission.
The permission that is needed by code attempting to instantiate
a LoginContext is a javax.security.auth.AuthPermission with target
"createLoginContext.<entry name>". Here, <entry name>
refers to the name of the login configuration file entry that
the application references in its instantiation of LoginContext.
The name used by our JaasAcn application's LoginContext instantiation
is "JaasSample", as you can see in the code:
LoginContext lc =
new LoginContext("JaasSample",
new TextCallbackHandler());
Thus, the permission that needs to be granted to JaasAcn.jar is
Copy the policy file jaasacn.policy
to the same directory as that in which you stored JaasAcn.java,
etc. This
is a text file containing the following grant statement to
grant JaasAcn.jar (in the current directory)
the required permission:
grant codebase "file:./JaasAcn.jar" {
permission javax.security.auth.AuthPermission
"createLoginContext.JaasSample";
};
by an appropriate -classpath clause that classes should be
searched for in the JaasAcn.jar JAR file,
by -Djava.security.manager that a
security manager should be installed,
by -Djava.security.krb5.realm=<your_realm> that
your Kerberos realm is the one specified. For example, if your realm is
"KRBNT-OPERATIONS.ABC.COM" you'd put
-Djava.security.krb5.realm=KRBNT-OPERATIONS.ABC.COM.
by -Djava.security.krb5.kdc=<your_kdc> that
your Kerberos KDC is the one specified. For example, if your KDC is
"samplekdc.abc.com" you'd put
-Djava.security.krb5.kdc=samplekdc.abc.com.
by -Djava.security.policy=jaasacn.policy that
the policy file to be used is jaasacn.policy, and
by -Djava.security.auth.login.config=jaas.conf that the
login configuration file to be used is jaas.conf.
The full command is below. Be sure to replace
<your_realm> with your Kerberos realm,
and <your_kdc> with your Kerberos KDC.
Type all that on one line. Multiple lines are used here for legibility.
If the command is too long for your system, you may
need to place it in a .bat file (for Windows) or a .sh file
(for UNIX) and then run that file to execute the command.
Since the specified policy file contains an entry granting the
code the required permission, JaasAcn will be allowed to
instantiate a LoginContext and continue execution.
You will be prompted for your Kerberos user name and password,
and the underlying Kerberos authentication mechanism
specified in the login configuration file will log you into
Kerberos. If your login is successful, you will see the
message "Authentication succeeded!" and if not, you will see
"Authentication failed:" followed by a reason for the failure.