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I've spend hours installing a custom login service in embedded Jetty 9.1.0.v20131115 and RESTEasy 3.0.5.Final. My login service will look users up in a database and assign them roles. It looks something like this:

final Constraint restConstraint = new Constraint();
restConstraint.setName(Constraint.__BASIC_AUTH);
restConstraint.setRoles(new String[]{"user", "admin");
restConstraint.setAuthenticate(true);
final ConstraintMapping restConstraintMapping = new ConstraintMapping();
restConstraintMapping.setConstraint(restConstraint);
restConstraintMapping.setPathSpec("/api/*");
final ConstraintSecurityHandler restSecurityHandler = new ConstraintSecurityHandler();
final LoginService myLoginService = new MyLoginService();
restSecurityHandler.setAuthenticator(new BasicAuthenticator());
restSecurityHandler.setRealmName(myLoginService.getName());
restSecurityHandler.addConstraintMapping(restConstraintMapping);
restSecurityHandler.setLoginService(myLoginService);

I have users joe-user who has the role of user, and jane-admin who has both user and admin roles. I have a REST GET resource named my-resource marked with:

@RolesAllowed("admin")

When I do an HTTP GET on my-resource, the browser correctly requests credentials, and I can login as either joe-user or jane-admin. The problem is that either user is allowed to GET my-resource!!

I've traced through some of the Jetty code, and indeed, as a result of my login service above, Jetty asks the login user which roles is supported. Unfortunately, Jetty will accept any of the roles I've specified in restConstraint.setRoles(new String[]{"user", "admin"), regardless of the user.

Apparently it is the RESTEasy layer that is supposed to recognize the @RolesAllowed("admin") annotation and validate the user. But how do I get RESTEasy to do that?

1 Answer 1

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With a little help from the RESTEasy documentation, I found out that in order for RESTEasy to honor the @RolesAllowed annotations, one must turn on the resteasy.role.based.security context parameter switch in the web.xml file; or programatically, as I am doing:

final ServletHolder servletHolder = new ServletHolder(new HttpServlet30Dispatcher());
servletHolder.setInitParameter("javax.ws.rs.Application", MyApplication.class.getName());
servletHolder.setInitParameter("resteasy.role.based.security", String.valueOf(true));
contextHandler.addServlet(servletHolder, "/api/*");
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  • When you do not have a web.xml where would you put the code you posted in order to set it programmatically?
    – phe
    Dec 2, 2020 at 10:21
  • I don't have the code with me, but from reading my original question it appears I was using Jetty. You'll have to look at the documentation for embedding Jetty—then my code should make more sense. Dec 2, 2020 at 15:34

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