Operating Systems: i5/OS
             Personalize the table of contents and search results
Securing Web applications using an assembly tool
You can use three types of Web login authentication mechanisms
to configure a Web application: basic authentication, form-based authentication
and client certificate-based authentication. Protect Web resources in a Web
application by assigning security roles to those resources.
Overview
To secure Web applications, determine the Web resources that need
protecting and determine how to protect them.
Note: This procedure might not match the steps
that are required when using your assembly
tool, or match the version of the assembly tool that you are using.
You should follow the instructions for the tool and version that you are using.
The
following steps detail securing a Web application using an assembly tool:
Procedure
- In an assembly tool, import your WAR file or an application
archive (EAR) file that contains one or more Web modules.
For more information,
see "Importing WAR files" and "Importing an enterprise application
EAR file" in the Application Server Toolkit documentation.
- In the Project Explorer folder, locate your Web application.
- Right-click the deployment descriptor and click Open With >
Deployment Descriptor Editor. The Deployment Descriptor window
opens. To see online information about the editor, press F1 and click the
editor name. If you select a WAR file, a Web
deployment descriptor editor opens. If you select an enterprise application
(EAR) file, an application deployment descriptor editor opens.
- Create security roles either at the application level or at the
Web module level. If a security role is created at the Web module
level, the role also displays in the application level. If a security role
is created at the application level, the role does not display in all of the
Web modules. You can copy and paste a security role at the application level
to one or more Web module security roles.
- Create a role at a Web-module level. In a Web deployment descriptor
editor, click the Security tab. Under Security Roles, click Add..
Enter the security role name, describe the security role, and click Finish.
- Create a role at the application level. In an application deployment
descriptor editor, click the Security tab. Under the list of security roles,
click Add. In the Add Security Role wizard, name and describe the security
role and then click Finish.
- Create security constraints. Security constraints are a mapping
of one or more Web resources to a set of roles.
- On the Security tab of a Web deployment descriptor editor, click Security
Constraints. On the Security Constraints tab, you can do the
following actions:
- Under Security Constraints, click Add.
- Under Constraint name, specify a display name for the security
constraint and click Next.
- Type a name and description for the Web resource collection.
- Select one or more HTTP methods. The HTTP method
options are: GET, PUT, HEAD, TRACE, POST, DELETE, and OPTIONS.
- Beside the Patterns field, click Add.
- Specify a URL Pattern. For example, type - /*,
*.jsp, /hello. Consult the Servlet specification V2.4 for instructions
on mapping URL patterns to servlets. The security runtime uses the exact match
first to map the incoming URL with URL patterns. If the exact match is not
present, the security runtime uses the longest match. The wild card (*.,*.jsp)
URL pattern matching is used last.
- Click Finish.
- Repeat these steps to create multiple security constraints.
- Map security-role-ref and role-name elements to the role-link element.
During the development of a Web application, you can create the security-role-ref
element. The security-role-ref element contains only the role-name field.
The role-name field contains the name of the role that is referenced in the
servlet or JavaServer Pages code to determine if the caller is in a
specified role. Because security roles are created during the assembly stage,
the developer uses a logical role name in the Role-name field and provides
enough description in the Description field for the assembler to map the role
actual. The Security-role-ref element is at the servlet level. A servlet or
JavaServer Pages file can have zero or more security-role-ref elements.
- Go to the References tab of a Web deployment descriptor editor.
On the References tab, you can add or remove the name of an enterprise
bean reference to the deployment descriptor. You can define five types of
references on this tab:
- EJB reference
- Service reference
- Resource reference
- Message destination reference
- Security role reference
- Resource environment reference
- Under the list of Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB) references, click Add.
- Specify a name and a type for the reference in the Name and Ref
Type fields.
- Select either Enterprise Beans in the workplace or Enterprise
Beans not in the workplace.
- Optional: If you select Enterprise Beans not
in the workplace, select the type of enterprise bean in the Type field.
You can specify either an entity bean or a session bean.
- Optional: Click Browse to specify values
for the local home and local interface in the Local home and Local fields
before you click Next.
- Map every role-name that is used during development to the role
using the previous steps. Every role name that is used during development
maps to the actual role.
- Specify the RunAs identity for servlets and JSP files. The
RunAs identity of a servlet is used to invoke enterprise beans from within
the servlet code. When enterprise beans are invoked, the RunAs identity is
passed to the enterprise bean for performing an authorization check on the
enterprise beans. If the RunAs identity is not specified, the client identity
is propagated to the enterprise beans. The RunAs identity is assigned at the
servlet level.
- On the Servlets tab of a Web deployment descriptor editor, under Servlets
and JSP, click Add. The Add Servlet or JSP wizard opens.
- Specify the servlet or JavaServer Pages file settings,
including the name, initialization parameters, and URL mappings and click Next.
- Specify the class file destination.
- Click Next to specify additional settings or click Finish.
- Click Run As on the Servlets tab, select the security
role and describe the role.
- Specify a RunAs identity for each servlet and JSP file that
is used by your Web application.
- Configure the login mechanism for the Web module. This configured
login mechanism applies to all the servlets, JavaServer Pages files
and HTML resources in the Web module.
- Click the Pages tab of a Web deployment descriptor editor
and click Login. Select the required authentication method. Available
method values include: Unspecified, Basic, Digest, Form, and Client-Cert.
- Specify a realm name.
- If you select the Form authentication method, select a login
page and an error page Web address. For example, you might use /login.jsp or /error.jsp.
The specified login and error pages are present in the .war file.
- Install
the client certificate on the browser or Web client and place the client certificate
in the server trust keyring file, if ClientCert is selected.
- Close the deployment descriptor editor and, when prompted, click Yes to
save the changes.
Results
After securing a Web application, the resulting WAR
file contains security information in its deployment descriptor. The Web module
security information is stored in the web.xml file. When you work
in the Web deployment descriptor editor, you also can edit other deployment
descriptors in the Web project, including information on bindings and IBM
extensions in the ibm-web-bnd.xmi and ibm-web-ext.xmi files.
What to do next
After using an assembly tool to secure a Web application, you can
install the Web application using the administrative console. During the Web
application installation, complete the steps in Deploying secured applications to finish securing the Web application.
}
Role-based authorization
Web component security
Delegations
Portlet URL security
Related tasks
Deploying secured applications
Related Reference
Security: Resources for learning
  Â