2

I'm new to Java EE. I created a login form and servlet to authenticate a user's credentials, but when I check the remote user with getRemoteUser() method after authentication, my code doesn't display the user name.

My login servlet is :

String uname,pass;
PreparedStatement ps=null;
uname=request.getParameter("uname");
pass=request.getParameter("pass");

ResultSet rs = null;
Connection con = null;
try {
    con = prepareConnection();

    String Query="select uname,email from passmanager where pass=?";
    ps=con.prepareStatement(Query);

    ps.setString(1,pass);
    rs=ps.executeQuery();

    while(rs.next())
    {
        if (uname.equals(rs.getString("uname")) || uname.equals(rs.getString("email"))) 
        {
            rs.close();                                                              
            ps.close();                                                            
            ps = null;                                                             
            con.close();                                                            
            con = null;  
            HttpSession session = request.getSession(true); 
            session.setAttribute("currentSessionUser",uname); 
            RequestDispatcher dis = request.getRequestDispatcher("/user.html");
            dis.forward(request, response);
            break;
        }
    }
}
catch(Exception e)
{
    System.out.println(e);
}

If anything need to change/modify in it please tell me and help me..... thanks in advance.

3
  • The remote user will only be populated if you go through the container's way of authenticating users. If you implement it all by yourself, there's no way for the container to know that what you did was authenticating the user, and that the currentSessionUser session attribute contains the current user. See tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-7.0-doc/realm-howto.html for explanations and examples using Tomcat.
    – JB Nizet
    Feb 4, 2013 at 12:38
  • have you tried response.getheader? or response.getWriter or response.getoutputstream ? Feb 4, 2013 at 12:41
  • What's the application server you want to deploy the servlet to? Feb 5, 2013 at 13:19

3 Answers 3

8

The HttpServletRequest#getRemoteUser() is part of container managed authentication which is basically just a simple <security-constraint> XML configuration entry in web.xml.

But you've there a completely homegrown servlet which does actually also do a pretty bad job of DB interaction (it's performing the comparison in Java instead of in SQL by a WHERE clause on both the username and password; further it also leaks JDBC resources away by not closing them in finally).

You've basically 2 options:

  1. Don't homegrow authentication. Delete all that bad, inefficient and resource-leaking code and use container managed authentication. You can find a kickoff example in this answer: Restrict JSP/Servlet access to specific users only

  2. Just get the logged-in user by session.getAttribute("currentSessionUser") and/or ${currentSessionUser} instead and homegrow a servlet filter for access restriction. You can find a kickoff example in this answer: Authenticating the username, password by using filters in Java (contacting with database)

7
  • 2
    To be fair, he only loads the users with the same password. My main concern would be that passwords are stored in clear-text in the database. That will put the users at risk, rather than the health of the application.
    – JB Nizet
    Feb 4, 2013 at 12:46
  • When we using j_security_check we must specify the action="j_security_check" this means that we need to create the servlet named j_security_check. Tell me am i right or not.
    – James
    Feb 4, 2013 at 14:57
  • 1
    No. You don't need to create it yourself. It's already built into the container itself. All you need to create is a HTML login form which submits to predefined URL j_security_check with predefined parameters j_username and j_password.
    – BalusC
    Feb 4, 2013 at 15:00
  • I'm storing username and password in my database. For j_security_check i think it needs to store the username and password in xml file. then how it able to validate the user information.
    – James
    Feb 4, 2013 at 15:53
  • Just configure a database realm. See the link in answer for hints.
    – BalusC
    Feb 4, 2013 at 15:54
2

To add to @BalusC's response, there's another approach to container managed authentication using the security methods from javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest in Java Servlet 3.0 (part of Java EE 6) – login, logout and authenticate. They're new methods in a HttpServletRequest object and they came almost unnoticed (why should it have been different if it'd taken so much time to get to this Java EE version with these simplifications?).

Regardless of the approach - programmatic or declarative one - you will eventually have to configure a user repository in your application server (that part is container-specific) and likely define a realm to point to the user repo in a deployment descriptor web.xml (as defaults might not suit your needs - BASIC, FORM or CLIENT_CERT).

In your case, the servlet does too much - the part that's responsible for retrieving users should be a part of a application server's custom user registry handler (or better yet - reuse what's already available in an application server - WebSphere V8.5 Liberty Profile or WebSphere V8.5) and once it's defined use <security-constraint> in web.xml or the above new security methods.

0

You are not logging your user doing this way. What you did was setting a session attribute who is named "currentSessionUser" and the container is not recognizing this as a "Authenticated user".

Search for "Realm configuration (your container's name)" to see how to do this configuration. Each container has its way to do this. :)

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