160

I'm wondering what the current approach is regarding user authentication for a web application making use of JSF 2.0 (and if any components do exist) and Java EE 6 core mechanisms (login/check permissions/logouts) with user information hold in a JPA entity. The Oracle Java EE tutorial is a bit sparse on this (only handles servlets).

This is without making use of a whole other framework, like Spring-Security (acegi), or Seam, but trying to stick hopefully with the new Java EE 6 platform (web profile) if possible.

4 Answers 4

154

I suppose you want form based authentication using deployment descriptors and j_security_check.

You can also do this in JSF by just using the same predefinied field names j_username and j_password as demonstrated in the tutorial.

E.g.

<form action="j_security_check" method="post">
    <h:outputLabel for="j_username" value="Username" />
    <h:inputText id="j_username" />
    <br />
    <h:outputLabel for="j_password" value="Password" />
    <h:inputSecret id="j_password" />
    <br />
    <h:commandButton value="Login" />
</form>

You could do lazy loading in the User getter to check if the User is already logged in and if not, then check if the Principal is present in the request and if so, then get the User associated with j_username.

package com.stackoverflow.q2206911;

import java.io.IOException;
import java.security.Principal;

import javax.faces.bean.ManagedBean;
import javax.faces.bean.SessionScoped;
import javax.faces.context.FacesContext;

@ManagedBean
@SessionScoped
public class Auth {

    private User user; // The JPA entity.

    @EJB
    private UserService userService;

    public User getUser() {
        if (user == null) {
            Principal principal = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getExternalContext().getUserPrincipal();
            if (principal != null) {
                user = userService.find(principal.getName()); // Find User by j_username.
            }
        }
        return user;
    }

}

The User is obviously accessible in JSF EL by #{auth.user}.

To logout do a HttpServletRequest#logout() (and set User to null!). You can get a handle of the HttpServletRequest in JSF by ExternalContext#getRequest(). You can also just invalidate the session altogether.

public String logout() {
    FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getExternalContext().invalidateSession();
    return "login?faces-redirect=true";
}

For the remnant (defining users, roles and constraints in deployment descriptor and realm), just follow the Java EE 6 tutorial and the servletcontainer documentation the usual way.


Update: you can also use the new Servlet 3.0 HttpServletRequest#login() to do a programmatic login instead of using j_security_check which may not per-se be reachable by a dispatcher in some servletcontainers. In this case you can use a fullworthy JSF form and a bean with username and password properties and a login method which look like this:

<h:form>
    <h:outputLabel for="username" value="Username" />
    <h:inputText id="username" value="#{auth.username}" required="true" />
    <h:message for="username" />
    <br />
    <h:outputLabel for="password" value="Password" />
    <h:inputSecret id="password" value="#{auth.password}" required="true" />
    <h:message for="password" />
    <br />
    <h:commandButton value="Login" action="#{auth.login}" />
    <h:messages globalOnly="true" />
</h:form>

And this view scoped managed bean which also remembers the initially requested page:

@ManagedBean
@ViewScoped
public class Auth {

    private String username;
    private String password;
    private String originalURL;

    @PostConstruct
    public void init() {
        ExternalContext externalContext = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getExternalContext();
        originalURL = (String) externalContext.getRequestMap().get(RequestDispatcher.FORWARD_REQUEST_URI);

        if (originalURL == null) {
            originalURL = externalContext.getRequestContextPath() + "/home.xhtml";
        } else {
            String originalQuery = (String) externalContext.getRequestMap().get(RequestDispatcher.FORWARD_QUERY_STRING);

            if (originalQuery != null) {
                originalURL += "?" + originalQuery;
            }
        }
    }

    @EJB
    private UserService userService;

    public void login() throws IOException {
        FacesContext context = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance();
        ExternalContext externalContext = context.getExternalContext();
        HttpServletRequest request = (HttpServletRequest) externalContext.getRequest();

        try {
            request.login(username, password);
            User user = userService.find(username, password);
            externalContext.getSessionMap().put("user", user);
            externalContext.redirect(originalURL);
        } catch (ServletException e) {
            // Handle unknown username/password in request.login().
            context.addMessage(null, new FacesMessage("Unknown login"));
        }
    }

    public void logout() throws IOException {
        ExternalContext externalContext = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getExternalContext();
        externalContext.invalidateSession();
        externalContext.redirect(externalContext.getRequestContextPath() + "/login.xhtml");
    }

    // Getters/setters for username and password.
}

This way the User is accessible in JSF EL by #{user}.

31
  • 1
    I updated the question to include a disclaimer that dispatching into j_security_check might not work on all servletcontainers.
    – BalusC
    Feb 5, 2010 at 14:37
  • 1
    Link from the Java Tutorial on Using Programmatic Security with Web Applications: java.sun.com/javaee/6/docs/tutorial/doc/gjiie.html (using Servlets): On a servlet class you can use: @WebServlet(name="testServlet", urlPatterns={"/ testServlet "}) @ServletSecurity(@HttpConstraint(rolesAllowed = {"testUser", "admin”})) And on a per method level: @ServletSecurity(httpMethodConstraints={ @HttpMethodConstraint("GET"), @HttpMethodConstraint(value="POST", rolesAllowed={"testUser"})})
    – ngeek
    Feb 5, 2010 at 15:29
  • 3
    And your point being..? Whether this is applicable in JSF? Well, in JSF there's only one servlet, the FacesServlet and you can't (and don't want to) modify it.
    – BalusC
    Feb 5, 2010 at 15:58
  • 1
    @BalusC - When you say the above is the best way do you mean using j_security_check or a programmatic login?
    – simgineer
    Jun 18, 2012 at 18:59
  • 3
    @simgineer: the requested URL is available as a request attribute with the name as definied by RequestDispatcher.FORWARD_REQUEST_URI. Request attributes are in JSF available by ExternalContext#getRequestMap().
    – BalusC
    Jun 25, 2012 at 11:26
86

After searching the Web and trying many different ways, here's what I'd suggest for Java EE 6 authentication:

Set up the security realm:

In my case, I had the users in the database. So I followed this blog post to create a JDBC Realm that could authenticate users based on username and MD5-hashed passwords in my database table:

http://blog.gamatam.com/2009/11/jdbc-realm-setup-with-glassfish-v3.html

Note: the post talks about a user and a group table in the database. I had a User class with a UserType enum attribute mapped via javax.persistence annotations to the database. I configured the realm with the same table for users and groups, using the userType column as the group column and it worked fine.

Use form authentication:

Still following the above blog post, configure your web.xml and sun-web.xml, but instead of using BASIC authentication, use FORM (actually, it doesn't matter which one you use, but I ended up using FORM). Use the standard HTML , not the JSF .

Then use BalusC's tip above on lazy initializing the user information from the database. He suggested doing it in a managed bean getting the principal from the faces context. I used, instead, a stateful session bean to store session information for each user, so I injected the session context:

 @Resource
 private SessionContext sessionContext;

With the principal, I can check the username and, using the EJB Entity Manager, get the User information from the database and store in my SessionInformation EJB.

Logout:

I also looked around for the best way to logout. The best one that I've found is using a Servlet:

 @WebServlet(name = "LogoutServlet", urlPatterns = {"/logout"})
 public class LogoutServlet extends HttpServlet {
  @Override
  protected void service(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {
   HttpSession session = request.getSession(false);

   // Destroys the session for this user.
   if (session != null)
        session.invalidate();

   // Redirects back to the initial page.
   response.sendRedirect(request.getContextPath());
  }
 }

Although my answer is really late considering the date of the question, I hope this helps other people that end up here from Google, just like I did.

Ciao,

Vítor Souza

7
  • 15
    A small word of advice: you're using request.getSession(false) and calling invalidate() on that. request.getSession(false) may return null if there's no session. Better check if it's null first ;) Dec 24, 2010 at 17:43
  • @Vitor: Hi..Would you like to say something about when it is good to move from container based security to alternatives like shiro or others? See more focussed question here:stackoverflow.com/questions/7782720/… Oct 16, 2011 at 6:42
  • It seems like the Glassfish JDBC Realm does not support storing salted passwords hashes. Is it really best practice to use it in that case?
    – Lii
    Sep 19, 2014 at 9:42
  • Sorry, can't help you. I'm not a Glassfish expert. Maybe ask that question in a new thread to see what people say? Sep 24, 2014 at 17:26
  • 1
    Lii, you can work with salted using the glassfish container. Configure your healm not to use any hash. It'll compare the plain value you insert for password on HttpServletResponse#login(user, password), that way you can just get from DB the user's salt, iterations and whatever you use for salting, hash the password the user entered using that salt and then ask the container to authenticate with HttpServletResponse#login(user, password).
    – emportella
    Oct 8, 2014 at 16:24
7

It should be mentioned that it is an option to completely leave authentication issues to the front controller, e.g. an Apache Webserver and evaluate the HttpServletRequest.getRemoteUser() instead, which is the JAVA representation for the REMOTE_USER environment variable. This allows also sophisticated log in designs such as Shibboleth authentication. Filtering Requests to a servlet container through a web server is a good design for production environments, often mod_jk is used to do so.

4

The issue HttpServletRequest.login does not set authentication state in session has been fixed in 3.0.1. Update glassfish to the latest version and you're done.

Updating is quite straightforward:

glassfishv3/bin/pkg set-authority -P dev.glassfish.org
glassfishv3/bin/pkg image-update
1
  • 4
    link is broken. which issue were you referring to?
    – simgineer
    Jun 12, 2012 at 22:10

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