100 lines
4.6 KiB
Plaintext
100 lines
4.6 KiB
Plaintext
$Id$
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CAS requires HTTPS be used for all operations, with the certificate used
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having been signed by a certificate in the cacerts files shipped with Java.
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If you're using a HTTPS certificate signed by a well known authority
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(like Verisign), you can safely ignore the procedure below (although you
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might find the troubleshooting section at the end helpful).
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The following demonstrates how to create a self-signed certificate and add
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it to the cacerts file. If you just want to use the certificate we have
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already created and shipped with the Acegi Security System for Spring, you
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can skip directly to step 3.
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1. keytool -keystore keystore -alias acegisecurity -genkey -keyalg RSA -validity 9999 -storepass password -keypass password
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What is your first and last name?
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[Unknown]: localhost
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What is the name of your organizational unit?
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[Unknown]: Acegi Security System for Spring
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What is the name of your organization?
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[Unknown]: TEST CERTIFICATE ONLY. DO NOT USE IN PRODUCTION.
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What is the name of your City or Locality?
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[Unknown]:
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What is the name of your State or Province?
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[Unknown]:
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What is the two-letter country code for this unit?
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[Unknown]:
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Is CN=localhost, OU=Acegi Security System for Spring, O=TEST CERTIFICATE ONLY. D
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O NOT USE IN PRODUCTION., L=Unknown, ST=Unknown, C=Unknown correct?
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[no]: yes
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2. keytool -export -v -rfc -alias acegisecurity -file acegisecurity.txt -keystore keystore -storepass password
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3. copy acegisecurity.txt %JAVA_HOME%\lib\security
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4. copy keystore %YOUR_WEB_CONTAINER_LOCATION%
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NOTE: You will need to configure your web container as appropriate.
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We recommend you test the certificate works by visiting
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https://localhost:8443. When prompted by your browser, select to
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install the certificate.
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5. cd %JAVA_HOME%\lib\security
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6. keytool -import -v -file acegisecurity.txt -keypass password -keystore cacerts -storepass changeit -alias acegisecurity
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Owner: CN=localhost, OU=Acegi Security System for Spring, O=TEST CERTIFICATE ONL
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Y. DO NOT USE IN PRODUCTION., L=Unknown, ST=Unknown, C=Unknown
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Issuer: CN=localhost, OU=Acegi Security System for Spring, O=TEST CERTIFICATE ON
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LY. DO NOT USE IN PRODUCTION., L=Unknown, ST=Unknown, C=Unknown
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Serial number: 4080daf4
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Valid from: Sat Apr 17 07:21:24 GMT 2004 until: Tue Sep 02 07:21:24 GMT 2031
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Certificate fingerprints:
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MD5: B4:AC:A8:24:34:99:F1:A9:F8:1D:A5:6C:BF:0A:34:FA
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SHA1: F1:E6:B1:3A:01:39:2D:CF:06:FA:82:AB:86:0D:77:9D:06:93:D6:B0
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Trust this certificate? [no]: yes
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Certificate was added to keystore
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[Saving cacerts]
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7. Finished. You can now run the sample application as if you purchased a
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properly signed certificate. For production applications, of course you should
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use an appropriately signed certificate so your web visitors will trust it
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(such as issued by Thawte, Verisign etc).
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TROUBLESHOOTING
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* First of all, most CAS-Acegi Security problems are because of untrusted
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SSL certificates. So it's important to understand why. Most people can
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load the Acegi Security webapp, get redirected to the CAS server, then
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after login they get redirected back to the Acegi Security webapp and
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receive a failure. This is because the CAS server redirects to something
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like https://server3.company.com/webapp/j_acegi_cas_security_check?ticket=ST-0-ER94xMJmn6pha35CQRoZ
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which causes the "service ticket" (the "ticket" parameter) to be validated.
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net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.cas.ticketvalidator.CasProxyTicketValidator
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performs service ticket validation by delegation to CAS'
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ProxyTicketValidator class. The ProxyTicketValidator class will perform a
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HTTPS connection from the web server running the Acegi Security webapp
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(server3.company.com) above to the CAS server. If for some reason the
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web server keystore does not trust the HTTPS certificate presented by the
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CAS server, you will receive various failures as discussed below. NB: This
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has NOTHING to do with client-side (browser) certificates. You need to
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correct the trust between the two webserver keystores alone.
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* A "sun.security.validator.ValidatorException: No trusted certificate
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found" indicates the cacerts is not being used or it did not correctly
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import the certificate. To rule out your web container replacing or in
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some way modifying the trust manager, set the
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CasProxyTicketValidator.trustStore property to the full file system
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location to your cacerts file.
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* If your web container is ignoring your cacerts file, double-check it
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is stored in $JAVA_HOME\lib\security\cacerts. $JAVA_HOME might be
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pointing to the SDK, not JRE. In that case, copy
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$JAVA_HOME\jre\lib\security\cacerts to $JAVA_HOME\lib\security\cacerts
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