I am trying to imply the basic authentication process for a web service using JMeter. But everytime it throws out an error 401:Unauthorized. I tried using the HTTP Header manager to add a header Authorization and value to it. Still it does not work. I have also tried using the HTTP Authorization manager. Still no luck. Can someone help.
11 Answers
I've found through debugging requests coming in from JMeter that the HTTP Authorization Manager module doesn't encode the username and password correctly. It puts a newline character after the username.
To run a JMeter test against a Basic Auth protected endpoint, include the HTTP Header Manager and add the Basic Auth header yourself:
Manually Encoding Credentials
From MacOS or Linux:
echo -n "username:password" | base64
From Windows:
Go here and encode your "username:password" string
Adding the Authorization Header
In the HTTP Header Manager, add an entry with the name "Authorization" and the value "Basic [encoded credentials from above]"
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holy crap, thx for your answer. It worked for me, although, my only complaint is you need to dumb down your answer for guys like myself ;) I didn't initially understand what you were telling us to do but luckily thru trial and error and re-reading your answer, somehow stumbled to the correct commands. Jul 28, 2014 at 22:32
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1I use Postman for my initial testing. I just copied their Authorization header & the encoded value and put that into a HTTP Header Manager. It's nice to know there's a website out there that will do the encoding for you though!– AmberDec 4, 2015 at 18:49
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Edit 19 august 2017 for JMeter 3.2:
- Use answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/12563623/460802
Basically to bypass a Basic Authorization you need to add the Authorization header with the value Basic base64(username:password). The problem is that JMeter has no base64 function embedded.
The solution is :
Step1 Add BeanShell PreProcessor (PreProcessor --> BeanShell Preprocessor)
Step2 Add the following script to the PreProcessor
import org.apache.commons.codec.binary.Base64;
byte[] encodedUsernamePassword = Base64.encodeBase64("neo4j:1234".getBytes());
vars.put("base64HeaderValue",new String(encodedUsernamePassword));
Step3 Add HTTP Header Manager
Step4 Add Authorization header with correct value
header name Authorization
header value Basic ${base64HeaderValue} (base64HeaderValue variable is initialized by the BeanShell Preprocessor)
So in the end when you create a http request Authorization header will be passed to the server with base64 encoded string
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It works for me and its a great answer with many pictures :-). Thank you! Nov 18, 2016 at 14:04
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Not needed anymore since JMeter 3.2, see stackoverflow.com/a/12563623/460802 Aug 19, 2017 at 20:28
Do the following:
1/ Configure HTTP Authorization Manager correctly with all required fields
2/ Option 1 : Using HTTP 4 : (default)
it is possible since JMeter 3.2 without any further configuration using Authorization Manager
Option 2 : Using HTTP 3.1 : (deprecated)
in jmeter.properties , uncomment:
httpclient.parameters.file=httpclient.parameters
in httpclient.parameters, uncomment:
http.authentication.preemptive$Boolean=true
If you're looking to learn JMeter, this book by 3 developers of the project will help you
Make sure to provide a protocol for the base URL, i.e.: "http://localhost" instead of "localhost"
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That was why it was not working for me. I copied the base URL from my HTTP request where it also works without giving the protocol.– DirkAug 28, 2015 at 15:11
Like Ryan T said, in the HTTP Header Manager, add an entry with the name "Authorization"
and the value "Basic [encoded credentials from above]"
but without []
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I am using Jmeter 3.3
GO to Jmeter on User choose add then HTTP Authorization Manager
Then add ur url , userid,password
If response type is json then add HTTP Header manager
You can easily use JSON Extractor for authentication inside the auth request to store the token in a variable, then you will just need to use it whenever the token is needed, in order to use that you will need an HTTP header manager using that variable you can follow the screenshots for clear instructions.
JSON Extractor configuration: HTTP header manager configuration:
In reference to the first answer above, the incorrect encoding problem you mention must be now fixed, as Apache 3.1 does appear to encode the username:password correctly in HTTP Auth Manager
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Yes, I am using JMeter 3.2 and I only added the clear username and password in the 'HTTP Basic Authentication' which converts automatically to the standard 'Authorization Basic [base64 encoded username:password]' in the HTTP header. Jul 7, 2017 at 7:17
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Not needed anymore since JMeter 3.2, see stackoverflow.com/a/12563623/460802 Aug 19, 2017 at 20:28
Adding a slight variation of @yurko which uses the username & password from User defined variables. (for Jmeter prior to 3.2)
import org.apache.commons.codec.binary.Base64;
String username = vars.get("USERNAME");
String password = vars.get("PASSWORD");
String combineduserpass = username + ":" + password;
byte[] encodedUsernamePassword = Base64.encodeBase64(combineduserpass.getBytes());
vars.put("base64HeaderValue",new String(encodedUsernamePassword));
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1Not needed anymore since JMeter 3.2, see stackoverflow.com/a/12563623/460802 Aug 19, 2017 at 20:27
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Thanks for that! I haven't updated mine in several months. I'm so glad they made this easier. Aug 21, 2017 at 16:06
Updating good findings from your 2013 answers:
The HTTP4 option also works under current Jmeter version 2.13 after adding HTTP Header Manager row containing:
name="Authorization", value="Basic [base64-encoded user/password string]"
Verified on current host amazon linux having reverse proxy from apache 2.4 to tomcat8; tomcat8 recognized the user credentials instead of throwing 401 status.