Casting the result of getPeerCertificates() to X509Certificate[] mirrors
what is done in the ActiveMQ "Classic" code-base.
A few tests which were imported from ActiveMQ "Classic" to verify our
OpenWire implementation were removed as they relied on a "stub"
implementation of javax.net.ssl.SSLSession that never would have worked
across multiple JDKs once javax.security.cert.X509Certificate[] was
removed. Furthermore, the tests appeared to be related to the OpenWire
*client* and not relevant to our broker-side implementation.
Previously, when during reconnect one session couldn't be transferred
to the new connection, we instantly returned and didn't execute failover
for the other sessions. This produced the issue that for sessions
where no failover was executed, their channels were still present on the
old connection. When the old connection was then destroyed, these channels
were closed although the reconnect was still ongoing, which lead to
"dead" sessions.
Now, if a session failover fails, for the remaining sessions the "client-side" part
of failover is executed, which removes the sessions from the old connection so that
they are not closed when the old connection is closed afterwards.
In 73c4e399d9 a description is added to DiskStoreUsage. It incorrectly describes the diskStoreUsage as a percentage. This commit changes it to a fraction which it is (also before the description change). A percentage would be better, since MaxDiskUsage is also specified as percentage.
The provider of an SSL key/trust store is different from that store's
type. However, the broker currently doesn't differentiate these and uses
the provider for both. Changing this *may* potentially break existing
users who are setting the provider, but I don't see any way to avoid
that. This is a bug that needs to be fixed in order to support use-cases
like PKCS#11.
Change summary:
- Added documentation.
- Consolidated several 2-way SSL tests classes into a single
parameterized test class. All these classes were essentially the same
except for a few key test parameters. Consolidating them avoided
having to update the same code in multiple places.
- Expanded tests to include different providers & types.
- Regenerated all SSL artifacts to allow tests to pass with new
constraints.
- Improved logging for when SSL handler initialization fails.
Change summary:
- Remove the existing Xalan-based XPath evaluator since Xalan appears
to be no longer maintained.
- Implement a JAXP XPath evaluator (from the ActiveMQ 5.x code-base).
- Pull in the changes from https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/AMQ-5333
to enable configurable XML parser features.
- Add a method to the base Message interface to make it easier to get
the message body as a string. This relieves the filter from having
to deal with message implementation details.
- Update the Qpid JMS client to get the jms.validateSelector parameter.
If an application wants to use a special key/truststore for Artemis but
have the remainder of the application use the default Java store, the
org.apache.activemq.ssl.keyStore needs to take precedence over Java's
javax.net.ssl.keyStore. However, the current implementation takes the
first non-null value from
System.getProperty(JAVAX_KEYSTORE_PATH_PROP_NAME),
System.getProperty(ACTIVEMQ_KEYSTORE_PATH_PROP_NAME),
keyStorePath
So if the default Java property is set, no override is possible. Swap
the order of the JAVAX_... and ACTIVEMQ_... property names so that the
ActiveMQ ones come first (as a component-specific overrides), the
standard Java ones comes second, and finally a local attribute value
(through Stream.of(...).firstFirst()).
(In our case the application uses the default Java truststore location
at $JAVA_HOME/lib/security/jssecacerts, and only supplies its password
in javax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword, and then uses a dedicated
truststore for Artemis. Defining both org.apache.activemq.ssl.trustStore
and org.apache.activemq.ssl.trustStorePassword now makes Artemis use the
dedicated truststore (javax.net.ssl.trustStore is not set as we use the
default location, so the second choice
org.apache.activemq.ssl.trustStore applies), but with the Java default
truststore password (first choice javax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword
applies instead of the second choice because it is set for the default
truststore). Obviously, this does not work unless both passwords are
identical!)
Replaces direct jdbc connections with dbcp2 datasource. Adds
configuration options to use alternative datasources and to alter the
parameters. While adding slight overhead, this vastly improves the
management and pooling capabilities with db connections.