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I have a Tomcat application that requires multiple passwords on startup.
My current configuration uses a Java Properties object to load in the passwords from a password.conf file.

There's now a requirement that no passwords are allowed in 'the clear' on the system. I had suggested encrypting the password file, but this isn't an option.

It would be ideal if Tomcat's start-up script could simply read user keyed passwords from the command line and feed it to my application.

Since Tomcat is starting up as a Daemon, I don't think I can utilize any Java command line I/O like Scanner to read in a password.

Does anyone have any clever solutions?

Thanks PR

4 Answers 4

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Here are two solutions is one solution that I can think of:

Easy - set an environment variable in the shell script wrapper and read this as a system property. i.e.:

echo "What is the password"
stty -echo
read server_password
stty echo
# error check
export server_password

Then in java:

password = System.getenv("server_password");

Harder - encrypt the password using asymmetric encryption and then pass the password, you will then need to unencrypt it in your java code.

Just my off the cuff ideas.

EDIT Removed the encrypt the password idea because while it may stop someone from determining the password it doesn't stop someone from using encrypted password to start the application.

EDIT 2: incorporated stty -echo per @mpobrien suggestion

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  • I actually like your "Easy" suggestion. That'll be good to pass the new requirements.
    – praspa
    Dec 10, 2009 at 21:38
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    here's a tip for extra security - turn off character echoing when prompting for the password, using "stty -echo" More details here: askdavetaylor.com/…
    – mpobrien
    Dec 10, 2009 at 21:40
  • @mpobrien very good point. You should definitely turn off echoing.
    – jabbie
    Dec 10, 2009 at 21:48
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You can modify the start up script for tomcat to pass on command line arguments to the start command itself. These should probably be in the form of -Dkey=value. This will allow you to set system properties at start up. Your application can read these via System.getProperty(name) to get the passwords or to fail to start up if the property was not provided.

Please be advised that the start command for tomcat may be logged to disk on some systems so the -D flags will be logged as well, and your password with them. You will just need to make sure this is not logged.

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    This is a bad idea because this information will be passed in the clear. A simple ps -ef will display the password.
    – jabbie
    Dec 10, 2009 at 20:58
  • I had an instance of a similar requirement. We ended up being able to simply crypt the password into a text file and read it runtime. You can pass the password using two -D flags and perform some kind of operation on them to get the actual password. Just don't name them -DpasswordOne -DpasswordTwo. Security by obscurity for this one may do.
    – Gennadiy
    Dec 10, 2009 at 21:01
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Uhm, the clever solution is an encrypted password file, why did that get ruled out?

Another solution might be to read the passwords from a database or some other server.

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  • Not a good idea, if you need to get it out of an encrypted password file, then that means the key is going to be stored or hardcoded somewhere also, so that's not much better than storing them in the clear (unless you prompt the user for the key, but then you're back to the same problem). You'd have the same problem if you want to pull the password from a database - plus, then you'd have to make sure those data sources are secure as well....
    – mpobrien
    Dec 10, 2009 at 21:31
  • Evidently, there is a school of thought out there that claims an ecrypted password file is still "in the clear" ...
    – praspa
    Dec 10, 2009 at 21:31
  • If a file is encrypted but the key is somewhere within reach on the system, it should not be considered securely encrypted.
    – mpobrien
    Dec 10, 2009 at 21:42
  • Here is a use case against an encrypted password file. If the password was used to authenticate with another service and I have access to the java code that uses the encrypted password and the encrypted password, I can use this information to write my own code to authenticate against the service. In reality the encrypted password is just as useful to me if all I want to do is authenticate against another service.
    – jabbie
    Dec 11, 2009 at 0:45
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In response to the environment-variables suggestion above, environment variables under linux are available in:

/proc/[pid]/environ

Therefore, a plaintext password in an environment variable can be read trivially by root or the owner of the tomcat process.

For more information, see https://serverfault.com/questions/133147/proc-pid-environ-missing-variables

This post belongs as a comment to another answer. But I don't have the reputation yet to add comments; this is my first post. I apologize. I felt the security ramifications of a plaintext password in the environment warranted a response.

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