Configure Java 2 security policy files

 

Overview

Java 2 security uses several policy files to determine the granted permissions for each Java programs. See the Dynamic policy article for the list of available policy files supported by WebSphere Application Server Version.

There are two types of policy files supported by WebSphere Application Server: dynamic policy files and static policy files. Static policy files provide the default permissions. Dynamic policy files provide application permissions. There are six dynamic policy files:

Policy file name Description
app.policy Contains default permissions for all of the enterprise applications in the cell.
was.policy Contains application-specific permissions for an WebSphere Application Server enterprise application. This file is packaged in an EAR file.
ra.xml Contains connector application specific permissions for a WebSphere Application Server enterprise application. This file is packaged in a resource adapter archive (RAR) file.
spi.policy Contains permissions for Service Provider Interface (SPI) or third-party resources embedded in WebSphere Application Server. The default contents grant everything. Update this file carefully when the cell requires more protection against SPI in the cell. This file is applied to all of the SPIs defined in the resources.xml file.
library.policy Contains permissions for the shared library of enterprise applications.
filter.policy Contains the list of permissions that require filtering from the was.policy file and the app.policy file in the cell. This filtering mechanism only applies to the was.policy and app.policy files.


Note: The Signed By keyword is not supported in the following policy files: app.policy, spi.policy, library.policy, was.policy, and filter.policy files. However, the Signed By keyword is supported in the following policy files:java.policy, server.policy, and client.policy files. The Java Authentication and Authorization Service (JAAS) is not supported in the app.policy, spi.policy, library.policy, was.policy, and filter.policy files. However, the JAAS principal keyword is supported in a JAAS policy file when it is specified by the Java Virtual Machine (JVM) system property, java.security.auth.policy. You can statically set the authorization policy files in java.security.auth.policy with auth.policy.url.n=URL where URL is the location of the authorization policy.

  1. Identify the policy file to update.

    If the permission is required by an application, update the static policy file. Refer to Configuring static policy files.

    If the permission is required by all of the WebSphere Application Server enterprise applications in the node, refer to Configuring spi.policy files.

    [V5.1 and later]If the permission is required only by specific WebSphere Application Server enterprise applications and the permission is required only by a connector, update the ra.xml file. Refer to Assembling resource adapter (connector) modules. Otherwise, update the was.policy file. Refer to Configuring was.policy files and Adding the was.policy file to applications.

    If the permission is required by shared libraries, refer to Configuring library.policy files.

    If the permission is required by SPI libraries, refer to Configuring spi.policy files.

    Note: It is recommended to pick up the policy file with the smallest scope. You can avoid giving an extra permission to the Java programs and protect the resources. You can update the ra.xml file or the was.policy file rather than the app.policy file. Use specific component symbols ($(ejbcomponent), ${webComponent},${connectorComponent} and ${jars}) than ${application} symbols. Update dynamic policy files than static policy files.

    Add any permission that should never be granted to the WebSphere Application Server enterprise application in the cell to the filter.policy file. Refer to Configuring filter.policy files.

  2. Restart the WebSphere Application Server enterprise application.

 

Results

The required permission is granted for the specified WebSphere Application Server enterprise application.

 

Example

java.security.AccessControlException: access denied (java.io.FilePermission 
C:\WebSphere\AppServer\java\jre\lib\ext\mail.jar read)

The previous two lines were split onto two lines because of the width of the page. However, the permission should be on one line.

When a Java program receives this exception and adding this permission is justified, add a permission to an adequate dynamic policy file, for example,

grant codeBase "file:<user client installed location>" { 
permission java.io.FilePermission 
"C:\WebSphere\AppServer\java\jre\lib\ext\mail.jar", "read";
};

The previous two lines were split onto two lines because of the width of the page. However, the permission should be on one line.

To decide whether to add a permission, refer to the article AccessControlException.


Related concepts
Java 2 security policy files
AccessControlException
Related tasks
Migrating security configurations from previous releases
Configuring static policy files
Related reference
Java 2 security