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Java Web Application Security - Part IV: Programmatic Login APIs

Over the last month, I've posted a number of articles on implementing authentication with Java EE 6, Spring Security and Apache Shiro. One of the things I demonstrated in my live demos (at Utah's JUG Meetings) was programmatic authentication. I left this out of my screencasts and previous tutorials because I thought it'd fit better in a comparison article.

In this article, I'd like to show you how you can programmatically login to an application using the aforementioned security frameworks. To do this, I'll be using my ajax-login application that I wrote for Implementing Ajax Authentication using jQuery, Spring Security and HTTPS.

To begin, I implemented a LoginController as a Spring MVC Controller that returns JSON.

package org.appfuse.examples.webapp.security;

import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Autowired;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Qualifier;
import org.springframework.stereotype.Controller;
import org.springframework.web.bind.annotation.RequestMapping;
import org.springframework.web.bind.annotation.RequestMethod;
import org.springframework.web.bind.annotation.RequestParam;
import org.springframework.web.bind.annotation.ResponseBody;

@Controller
@RequestMapping("/api/login.json")
public class LoginController {

    @Autowired
    LoginService loginService;

    @RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.GET)
    @ResponseBody
    public LoginStatus getStatus() {
        return loginService.getStatus();
    }

    @RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.POST)
    @ResponseBody
    public LoginStatus login(@RequestParam("j_username") String username,
                             @RequestParam("j_password") String password) {

        return loginService.login(username, password);
    }
}

This controller delegates its logic to a LoginService interface.

package org.appfuse.examples.webapp.security;

public interface LoginService {

  LoginStatus getStatus();

  LoginStatus login(String username, String password);
}

The Client
The client for this controller is the same as mentioned in my previous article, but I'll post it again for your convenience. I used jQuery and jQuery UI to implement a dialog that opens the login page on the same page rather than redirecting to the login page. The "#demo" locator refers to a button in the page.

var dialog = $('<div></div>');

$(document).ready(function() {
    $.get('/login?ajax=true', function(data) {
        dialog.html(data);
        dialog.dialog({
            autoOpen: false,
	       title: 'Authentication Required'
        });
    });

    $('#demo').click(function() {
      dialog.dialog('open');
      // prevent the default action, e.g., following a link
      return false;
    });
});

The login page then has the following JavaScript to add a click handler to the "login" button that submits the request securely to the LoginController.

var getHost = function() {
    var port = (window.location.port == "8080") ? ":8443" : "";
    return ((secure) ? 'https://' : 'http://') + window.location.hostname + port;
};

var loginFailed = function(data, status) {
    $(".error").remove();
    $('#username-label').before('
Login failed, please try again.
'); }; $("#login").live('click', function(e) { e.preventDefault(); $.ajax({url: getHost() + "${ctx}/api/login.json", type: "POST", beforeSend: function(xhr) { xhr.withCredentials = true; }, data: $("#loginForm").serialize(), success: function(data, status) { if (data.loggedIn) { // success dialog.dialog('close'); location.href = getHost() + '${ctx}/users'; } else { loginFailed(data); } }, error: loginFailed }); });

The biggest secret to making this all work (the HTTP -> HTTPS communication, which is considered cross-domain), is the window.name Transport and the jQuery plugin that implements it. To make this plugin work with Firefox 3.6, I had to implement a Filter that adds Access-Control headers.

public class OptionsHeadersFilter implements Filter {

    public void doFilter(ServletRequest req, ServletResponse res, FilterChain chain)
            throws IOException, ServletException {
        HttpServletResponse response = (HttpServletResponse) res;

        response.setHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", "http://" + req.getServerName());
        response.setHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Methods", "GET,POST");
        response.setHeader("Access-Control-Max-Age", "360");
        response.setHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Headers", "x-requested-with");
        response.setHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Credentials", "true");

        chain.doFilter(req, res);
    }

    public void init(FilterConfig filterConfig) {
    }

    public void destroy() {
    }
}

Java EE 6 LoginService
Java EE 6 has a few new methods in HttpServletRequest:

  • authenticate(response)
  • login(user, pass)
  • logout()

In this example, I'll use the new login(username, password) method. The hardest part about getting this working was finding the right Maven dependency. At first, I tried the one that seemed to make the most sense:

<dependency>
    <groupId>javax</groupId>
    <artifactId>javaee-web-api</artifactId>
    <version>6.0</version>
</dependency>

Unfortunately, this resulted in a strange error that means the dependency has the interfaces, but not the implementation classes. I ended up using GlassFish's dependency instead (thanks to Stack Overflow for the tip).

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.glassfish</groupId>
    <artifactId>javax.servlet</artifactId>
    <version>3.0</version>
    <scope>provided</scope>
</dependency>

Since Servlet 3.0 doesn't appear to be in Maven Central, I had to add the GlassFish Repository to my pom.xml's <repositories> element.

<repository>
    <id>glassfish-repo</id>
    <url>http://download.java.net/maven/glassfish</url>
</repository>

After that, it was easy to implement the LoginService interface with a JavaEELoginService class:

package org.appfuse.examples.webapp.security;

import org.apache.commons.logging.Log;
import org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Autowired;
import org.springframework.stereotype.Service;

import javax.servlet.ServletException;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest;

@Service("javaeeLoginService")
public class JavaEELoginService implements LoginService {
    private Log log = LogFactory.getLog(JavaEELoginService.class);

    @Autowired
    HttpServletRequest request;

    public LoginStatus getStatus() {
        if (request.getRemoteUser() != null) {
            return new LoginStatus(true, request.getRemoteUser());
        } else {
            return new LoginStatus(false, null);
        }
    }

    @Override
    public LoginStatus login(String username, String password) {
        try {
            if (request.getRemoteUser() == null) {
                request.login(username, password);
                log.debug("Login succeeded!");
            }
            return new LoginStatus(true, request.getRemoteUser());
        } catch (ServletException e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
            return new LoginStatus(false, null);
        }
    }
}

I tried to use this with "mvn jetty:run" (with version 8.0.0.M2 of the jetty-maven-plugin), but I got the following error:

javax.servlet.ServletException
        at org.eclipse.jetty.server.Request.login(Request.java:1927)
        at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0(Native Method)
        at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(NativeMethodAccessorImpl.java:39)
        at sun.reflect.DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.java:25)
        at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:597)
        at org.springframework.beans.factory.support.AutowireUtils$ObjectFactoryDelegatingInvocationHandler.invoke(AutowireUtils.java:178)
        at $Proxy52.login(Unknown Source)
        at org.appfuse.examples.webapp.security.JavaEELoginService.login(JavaEELoginService.java:30)

This lead me to believe that Servlet 3 is not quite implemented, so I tried it with Tomcat 7.0.8. To support SSL and container-managed authentication, I had to create a certificate keystore and uncomment the SSL Connector in $CATALINA_HOME/conf/server.xml. I also had to add an "admin" user with roles="ROLE_ADMIN" to $CATALINA_HOME/conf/tomcat-users.xml.

<user username="admin" password="admin" roles="ROLE_ADMIN"/>

With Tomcat 7, I was able to login successfully, proven by the following logging.

DEBUG - JavaEELoginService.login(31) | Login succeeded!

However, in the UI, I still got a "Login failed, please try again." message. Recalling that I had some issues with ports previous, I configured Apache to proxy the default http/https ports to 8080/8443 and tried again. This time it worked!

Spring Security LoginService
Spring Security offers a programmatic API and I was able to implement its LoginService as follows:

package org.appfuse.examples.webapp.security;

import org.apache.commons.logging.Log;
import org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory;
import org.appfuse.model.User;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Autowired;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Qualifier;
import org.springframework.security.authentication.AuthenticationManager;
import org.springframework.security.authentication.BadCredentialsException;
import org.springframework.security.authentication.UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken;
import org.springframework.security.core.Authentication;
import org.springframework.security.core.context.SecurityContextHolder;
import org.springframework.stereotype.Service;

@Service("springLoginService")
public class SpringSecurityLoginService implements LoginService {
    private Log log = LogFactory.getLog(SpringSecurityLoginService.class);

    @Autowired(required = false)
    @Qualifier("authenticationManager")
    AuthenticationManager authenticationManager;

    public LoginStatus getStatus() {
        Authentication auth = SecurityContextHolder.getContext().getAuthentication();
        if (auth != null && !auth.getName().equals("anonymousUser") && auth.isAuthenticated()) {
            return new LoginStatus(true, auth.getName());
        } else {
            return new LoginStatus(false, null);
        }
    }

    public LoginStatus login(String username, String password) {
        UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken token = new UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken(username, password);
        User details = new User(username);
        token.setDetails(details);

        try {
            Authentication auth = authenticationManager.authenticate(token);
            log.debug("Login succeeded!");
            SecurityContextHolder.getContext().setAuthentication(auth);
            return new LoginStatus(auth.isAuthenticated(), auth.getName());
        } catch (BadCredentialsException e) {
            return new LoginStatus(false, null);
        }
    }
}

I then modified the LoginService dependency in LoginController so this implementation would be used.

@Autowired
@Qualifier("springLoginService")
LoginService loginService;

Since Spring's API doesn't depend on Servlet 3, I tried it in Jetty using "mvn jetty:run". Of course, I modified my web.xml accordingly for Spring Security before doing so. Interestingly enough, I found that the my SpringSecurityLoginService seemed to work:

DEBUG - SpringSecurityLoginService.login(39) | Login succeeded!

But in the UI, the login failed with a "Login failed, please try again." message. Using the standard ports with Apache in front of Jetty solved this issue.

Apache Shiro LoginService
Apache Shiro is nice enough to offer a programmatic API as well. I was able to implement a ShiroLoginService as follows:

package org.appfuse.examples.webapp.security;

import org.apache.commons.logging.Log;
import org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory;
import org.apache.shiro.SecurityUtils;
import org.apache.shiro.authc.AuthenticationException;
import org.apache.shiro.authc.UsernamePasswordToken;
import org.apache.shiro.subject.Subject;
import org.springframework.stereotype.Service;

@Service("shiroLoginService")
public class ShiroLoginService implements LoginService {
    private Log log = LogFactory.getLog(ShiroLoginService.class);

    public LoginStatus getStatus() {
        Subject currentUser = SecurityUtils.getSubject();
        if (currentUser.isAuthenticated()) {
            return new LoginStatus(true, currentUser.getPrincipal().toString());
        } else {
            return new LoginStatus(false, null);
        }
    }

    public LoginStatus login(String username, String password) {
        if (!getStatus().isLoggedIn()) {
            UsernamePasswordToken token = new UsernamePasswordToken(username, password);
            Subject currentUser = SecurityUtils.getSubject();
            try {
                currentUser.login(token);
                log.debug("Login succeeded!");
                return new LoginStatus(currentUser.isAuthenticated(),
                        currentUser.getPrincipal().toString());
            } catch (AuthenticationException e) {
                return new LoginStatus(false, null);
            }

        } else {
            return getStatus();
        }
    }
}

Then I modified the LoginService dependency in LoginController so this implementation would be used.

@Autowired
@Qualifier("shiroLoginService")
LoginService loginService;

Next, I modified my web.xml for Apache Shiro and tried "mvn jetty:run". Again, the login appeared to succeed (based on log messages) on the server, but failed in the UI. When using http://localhost instead of http://localhost:8080, everything worked fine.

Summary
This article has shown you how you can programmatically login using Java EE 6, Spring Security and Apache Shiro. Before Java EE 6 (and Servlet 3), there was no API to programmatically login, so this is a welcome addition. The fact that my Ajax login example didn't work when ports differed is because of browsers' same origin policy, which specifies the ports have to be the same. Specifying no ports (the defaults), seems to be the loophole.

On a related note, I've discovered some interesting articles recently from the AppSec Blog.

The 2nd article has an interesting paragraph:

... there's Apache Shiro (FKA JSecurity and then later as Apache Ki), another secure framework for Java apps. Although it looks simpler to use and understand than ESAPI and covers most of the main security bases (authentication, authorization, session management and encryption), it doesn't help take care of important functions like input validation and output encoding. And Spring users have Spring Security (Acegi) a comprehensive, but heavyweight authorization and authentication framework.

So according to this blog, the security frameworks discussed here aren't the best.

The most comprehensive, up-to-date choice for Java developers is OWASP's ESAPI Enterprise Security API especially now that the 2.0 release has just come out.

I haven't heard of many organizations adopting ESAPI over Java EE 6, Spring Security or Apache Shiro, but maybe I'm wrong. Is ESAPI something that's being used out there by companies?

Posted in Java at Jun 06 2011, 09:44:09 PM MDT 4 Comments

Upgraded to Roller 5.0 and added a Like Button

Apache Roller 4 was released in December 2007. After 3.5 years, Roller 5 has landed!

The major new feature in Roller 5.0 is Media Blogging, a set of enhancements to Roller's file upload and management capabilities. Also included in 5.0 are simple multi-site support, OpenID and OAuth support for Roller's AtomPub interface. All major dependencies have been updated and Roller now uses Maven for build and dependency management. You can find a summary of Roller 5.0's new features on the Roller wiki.

I upgraded to Roller 5.0, RC4 back in March and experienced a few issues. This morning, I upgraded to the final release and everything appears to working nice and smooth. To celebrate, I added a Facebook Like Button to each entry. Adding it was pretty straightforward. Below is the code I added to my _day.vm template:

<span id="fb-root"></span>
<script src="//connect.facebook.net/en_US/all.js#appId=226411374036019&xfbml=1"></script>
<fb:like href="$url.entry($entry.anchor)" send="false" show_faces="false" font="verdana"></fb:like>

I tried removing the <script> tag and putting it in my wro4j configuration file, but this caused the Like button to disappear. I also experimented with adding Twitter and LinkedIn buttons, but decided not to add them since it was difficult to get them all to align and look good together. However, if you'd like to add either of them to your Roller blog, you can do so with the following code:

<a href="http://twitter.com/share" class="twitter-share-button" 
    data-url="$url.entry($entry.anchor)" data-count="horizontal" data-via="mraible">Tweet</a>
<script type="text/javascript" src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js"></script>

<script type="text/javascript" src="//platform.linkedin.com/in.js"></script>
<script type="in/share" data-url="$url.entry($entry.anchor)" data-counter="right"></script>

Kudos to Dave for all his hard work on Roller throughout the years.

Posted in Roller at Jun 02 2011, 02:21:58 PM MDT Add a Comment

Java Web Application Security - Part III: Apache Shiro Login Demo

A couple weeks ago, I wrote a tutorial on how to implement security with Spring Security. The week prior, I wrote a similar tutorial for Java EE 6. This week, I'd like to show you how to implement the same features using Apache Shiro. As I mentioned in previous articles, I'm writing this because I told the audience at April's UJUG that I would publish screencasts of the demos.

Today, I've finished the third screencast showing how to implement security with Apache Shiro. Below is the presentation (with the screencast embedded on slide 22) as well as a step-by-step tutorial.


Apache Shiro Login Tutorial

Download and Run the Application
To begin, download the application you'll be implementing security in. This app is a stripped-down version of the Ajax Login application I wrote for my article on Implementing Ajax Authentication using jQuery, Spring Security and HTTPS. You'll need Java 6 and Maven installed to run the app. Run it using mvn jetty:run and open http://localhost:8080 in your browser. You'll see it's a simple CRUD application for users and there's no login required to add or delete users.

Implement Basic Authentication
The first step is to protect the list screen so people have to login to view users. To do this, you'll need to create a shiro.ini file Shiro's configuration. Create src/main/resources/shiro.ini and populate it with the contents below:

[main]

[users]
admin = admin, ROLE_ADMIN

[roles]
ROLE_ADMIN = *

[urls]
/app/users = authcBasic

You can see this file has four sections and is pretty simple to read and understand. For more information about what each section is for, check out Shiro's configuration documentation.

Next, open src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/web.xml and add Shiro's IniShiroFilter:

<filter>
    <filter-name>securityFilter</filter-name>
    <filter-class>org.apache.shiro.web.servlet.IniShiroFilter</filter-class>
    <!-- no init-param means load the INI config from classpath:shiro.ini -->
</filter>

And add its filter-mapping just after the rewriteFilter in the filter-mappings section (order is important!):

<filter-mapping>
    <filter-name>rewriteFilter</filter-name>
    <url-pattern>/*</url-pattern>
</filter-mapping>
<filter-mapping>
    <filter-name>securityFilter</filter-name>
    <url-pattern>/*</url-pattern>
    <dispatcher>REQUEST</dispatcher>
    <dispatcher>FORWARD</dispatcher>
    <dispatcher>INCLUDE</dispatcher>
</filter-mapping>

Then add Shiro's core and web dependencies to your pom.xml:

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.apache.shiro</groupId>
    <artifactId>shiro-core</artifactId>
    <version>1.1.0</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.apache.shiro</groupId>
    <artifactId>shiro-web</artifactId>
    <version>1.1.0</version>
</dependency>

At this point, if you restart Jetty (Ctrl+C and jetty:run again), you should be prompted to login when you click on the "Users" tab. Enter admin/admin to login. Apache Shiro is easier to configure than Spring Security out-of-the-box, mostly because it doesn't require XML.

After logging in, you can try to logout by clicking the "Logout" link in the top-right corner. This calls a LogoutController with the following code that logs the user out.

public void logout(HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {
    request.getSession().invalidate();
    response.sendRedirect(request.getContextPath()); 
}

NOTE: Shiro doesn't currently have a way to logout with its API. However, it will be added in the 1.2 release.

You'll notice that clicking this link doesn't log you out, even though the session is invalidated. The only way to logout with basic authentication is to close the browser. In order to get the ability to logout, as well as to have more control over the look-and-feel of the login, you can implement form-based authentication. Before you implement form-based authentication, I'd like to show you how easy it is to force SSL with Apache Shiro.

Force SSL
Apache Shiro allows you to force SSL on a URL by simply adding "ssl[port]" to a URL in the [urls] section. If you don't specify the port, it will use the default port (443). I'm not sure if it allows you to switch back to http like Spring Security's requires-channel, but I don't think it does. Modify the URLs section of your shiro.ini to have the following:

[urls]
/app/users = ssl[8443],authc

In order for this to work, you have to configure Jetty to listen on an SSL port. Add the following just after the jetty-maven-plugin's </webAppConfig> element in your pom.xml:

<connectors>
    <connector implementation="org.eclipse.jetty.server.nio.SelectChannelConnector">
        <forwarded>true</forwarded>
        <port>8080</port>
    </connector>
    <connector implementation="org.eclipse.jetty.server.ssl.SslSelectChannelConnector">
        <forwarded>true</forwarded>
        <port>8443</port>
        <maxIdleTime>60000</maxIdleTime>
        <keystore>${project.build.directory}/ssl.keystore</keystore>
        <password>appfuse</password>
        <keyPassword>appfuse</keyPassword>
    </connector>
</connectors>

The keystore must be generated for Jetty to start successfully, so add the keytool-maven-plugin just above the jetty-maven-plugin in pom.xml.

<plugin>
    <groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
    <artifactId>keytool-maven-plugin</artifactId>
    <version>1.0</version>
    <executions>
        <execution>
            <phase>generate-resources</phase>
            <id>clean</id>
            <goals>
                <goal>clean</goal>
            </goals>
        </execution>
        <execution>
            <phase>generate-resources</phase>
            <id>genkey</id>
            <goals>
                <goal>genkey</goal>
            </goals>
        </execution>
    </executions>
    <configuration>
        <keystore>${project.build.directory}/ssl.keystore</keystore>
        <dname>cn=localhost</dname>
        <keypass>appfuse</keypass>
        <storepass>appfuse</storepass>
        <alias>appfuse</alias>
        <keyalg>RSA</keyalg>
    </configuration>
</plugin>

Now if you restart Jetty, go to http://localhost:8080 and click on the "Users" tab, you'll be prompted to accept the Untrusted Certificate and then redirected to https://localhost:8443/users after logging in.

Now let's look at how to have more control over the look-and-feel of the login screen, as well as how to make logout work with form-based authentication.

Implement Form-based Authentication
To change from basic to form-based authentication, you simply have to add a few lines to shiro.ini. First of all, since I'd rather not change the name of the input elements in login.jsp, override the default names in the [main] section:

# name of request parameter with username; if not present filter assumes 'username'
authc.usernameParam = j_username
# name of request parameter with password; if not present filter assumes 'password'
authc.passwordParam = j_password
authc.failureKeyAttribute = shiroLoginFailure

Then change the [urls] section to filter on login.jsp and use "authc" instead of "authcBasic":

[urls]
# The /login.jsp is not restricted to authenticated users (otherwise no one could log in!), but
# the 'authc' filter must still be specified for it so it can process that url's
# login submissions. It is 'smart' enough to allow those requests through as specified by the
# shiro.loginUrl above.
/login.jsp = authc
/app/users = ssl[8443],authc

Then change login.jsp so the form's action is blank (causing it to submit to itself) instead of j_security_check:

<form action="" id="loginForm" method="post">

Now, restart Jetty and you should be prompted to login with this JSP instead of the basic authentication dialog.

Store Users in a Database
To store your users in a database instead of file, you'll need to add a few settings to shiro.ini to define your database and tables to use. Open src/main/resources/shiro.ini and add the following lines under the [main] section.

jdbcRealm=org.apache.shiro.realm.jdbc.JdbcRealm
#jdbcRealm.permissionsLookupEnabled=false
# If not filled, subclasses of JdbcRealm assume "select password from users where username = ?"
jdbcRealm.authenticationQuery = select user_pass from users where user_name = ?
# If not filled, subclasses of JdbcRealm assume "select role_name from user_roles where username = ?"
jdbcRealm.userRolesQuery = select role_name from users_roles where user_name = ?

ds = com.mysql.jdbc.jdbc2.optional.MysqlDataSource
ds.serverName = localhost
ds.user = root
ds.databaseName = appfuse
jdbcRealm.dataSource = $ds

This configuration is similar to what I did with the Java EE 6 tutorial where I'm pointing to a database other than the H2 instance that's used by the application. I believe Shiro can talk to a DAO like Spring Security, but I have yet to explore that option.

While you're at it, add the following lines to enable password encryption.

sha256Matcher = org.apache.shiro.authc.credential.Sha256CredentialsMatcher
jdbcRealm.credentialsMatcher = $sha256Matcher

You'll need to install MySQL for this to work. After installing it, you should be able to create an "appfuse" database using the following command:

mysql -u root -p -e 'create database appfuse'

Then create the tables necessary and populate it with an 'admin' user. Login using "mysql -u root -p appfuse" and execute the following SQL statements:

create table users (
  user_name         varchar(30) not null primary key,
  user_pass         varchar(100) not null
);

create table user_roles (
  user_name         varchar(30) not null,
  role_name         varchar(30) not null,
  primary key (user_name, role_name)
);

insert into users values ('admin', '22f256eca1f336a97eef2b260773cb0d81d900c208ff26e94410d292d605fed8');
insert into user_roles values ('admin', 'ROLE_ADMIN');

Now if you restart Jetty, you should be able to login with admin/adminjdbc and view the list of users.

Summary
In this tutorial, you learned how to implement authentication using Apache Shiro 1.1.0. I don't have a lot of experience with Apache Shiro, but I was able to get the basics working without too much effort. This tutorial doesn't show how to do Remember Me because I couldn't figure it out in 5 minutes, which means I have 5 more minutes before it fails the 10-minute test. ;)

Shiro was formerly named JSecurity and has been an Apache project for less than a year. It seems to be more targeted towards non-web use, so its certainly something to look at if you're more interested in cryptography or non-web apps. I think there's a good chance this project will continue to grow and be used more as more developers learn about it. The Apache brand certainly doesn't hurt.

I didn't include a slide about the limitations I found with Shiro, mostly because I haven't used it much. I've used Java EE and Spring Security for several years. The main limitation I found was the lack of documentation, but I've heard it's improving rapidly.

In the next couple weeks, I'll post a Part IV on implementing programmatic login using the APIs of Java EE 6, Spring Security and Apache Shiro. I'll be presenting this topic at Jazoon as well as the long-form version (with hacking) at ÜberConf. Hopefully I'll see you at one of those conferences.

Update: Thanks to help from Les Hazlewood, I've figured out how to implement Remember Me with Apache Shiro. In the [urls] section of shiro.ini, the second url (shown below) says to Shiro "In order to visit the /app/users URL, you must be connecting via SSL on port 8443 and you must also be authenticated."

/app/users = ssl[8443],authc

Remembered users are not authenticated because their identity hasn't been proven during the current session. What I want Shiro to say is "In order to visit the /app/users URL, you must be connecting via SSL on 8443 and you must also be a known user. If you're not, you should login first." Where a known user is someone who has a recognized identity and has either authenticated during the current session or is known via RememberMe from a previous session. The documentation gives a good example with Amazon.com for why Shiro makes this distinction. It allows more control (usually necessary), but you can relax the control as you see fit.

So, to relax my configuration a bit to match what I want (known users), I updated shiro.ini's [urls] section to be as follows:

/app/users = ssl[8443],user

The key is that the /app/users url is now protected with the more relaxed user filter instead of the authc filter. However, you would typically want an account profile page (or credit card information page, or similar) protected with the authc filter instead to guarantee proof of identity for those sensitive operations.

Posted in Java at May 26 2011, 04:43:22 PM MDT 10 Comments

Java Web Application Security - Part II: Spring Security Login Demo

Last week, I wrote a tutorial on how to implement Security in Java EE 6. This week, I'd like to show you how to implement the same features using Spring Security. Before I begin, I'd like to explain my reason for writing this article.

Last month, I presented a talk on Java Web Application Security at the Utah JUG (UJUG). As part of that presentation, I did a number of demos about how to implement security with Java EE 6, Spring Security and Apache Shiro. I told the audience that I would post the presentation and was planning on recording screencasts of the various demos so the online version of the presentation would make more sense.

Today, I've finished the second screencast showing how to implement security with Spring Security. Below is the presentation (with the screencast embedded on slide 16) as well as a step-by-step tutorial.


Spring Security Login Tutorial

Download and Run the Application
To begin, download the application you'll be implementing security in. This app is a stripped-down version of the Ajax Login application I wrote for my article on Implementing Ajax Authentication using jQuery, Spring Security and HTTPS. You'll need Java 6 and Maven installed to run the app. Run it using mvn jetty:run and open http://localhost:8080 in your browser. You'll see it's a simple CRUD application for users and there's no login required to add or delete users.

Implement Basic Authentication
The first step is to protect the list screen so people have to login to view users. To do this, you'll need to create a Spring context file that contains Spring Security's configuration. Create src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/security.xml and populate it with the contents below:

  <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
  <beans:beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/security"
               xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
               xmlns:beans="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
               xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans-3.0.xsd
                http://www.springframework.org/schema/security http://www.springframework.org/schema/security/spring-security-3.0.xsd">

      <!-- New in Spring Security 3.1 -->
      <!-- <http pattern="/css/**" security="none"/> -->

      <http auto-config="true">
          <intercept-url pattern="/app/users" access="ROLE_USER,ROLE_ADMIN"/>
          <http-basic/>
      </http>

      <authentication-manager alias="authenticationManager">
          <authentication-provider>
              <password-encoder hash="sha"/>
              <user-service>
                  <user name="user" password="12dea96fec20593566ab75692c9949596833adc9" authorities="ROLE_USER"/>
                  <user name="admin" password="d033e22ae348aeb5660fc2140aec35850c4da997" authorities="ROLE_ADMIN"/>
              </user-service>
          </authentication-provider>
      </authentication-manager>

      <!-- Override userSecurityAdvice bean in appfuse-service to allow any role to update a user. -->
      <beans:bean id="userSecurityAdvice" class="org.appfuse.examples.webapp.security.UserSecurityAdvice"/>
  </beans:beans>

The last bean, userSecurityAdvice, is an aspect that's needed to override some behavior in AppFuse. You won't need this normally when implementing Spring Security.

Next, open src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/web.xml and add Spring's DelegatingFilterProxy:

<filter>
    <filter-name>securityFilter</filter-name>
    <filter-class>org.springframework.web.filter.DelegatingFilterProxy</filter-class>
    <init-param>
        <param-name>targetBeanName</param-name>
        <param-value>springSecurityFilterChain</param-value>
    </init-param>
</filter>

And add its filter-mapping just after the rewriteFilter in the filter-mappings section (order is important!):

<filter-mapping>
    <filter-name>rewriteFilter</filter-name>
    <url-pattern>/*</url-pattern>
</filter-mapping>
<filter-mapping>
    <filter-name>securityFilter</filter-name>
    <url-pattern>/*</url-pattern>
    <dispatcher>REQUEST</dispatcher>
    <dispatcher>FORWARD</dispatcher>
    <dispatcher>INCLUDE</dispatcher>
</filter-mapping>

You don't need to add any dependencies in your pom.xml is because this project depends on AppFuse, which already contains these dependencies.

At this point, if you restart Jetty (Ctrl+C and jetty:run again), you should be prompted to login when you click on the "Users" tab. Enter admin/admin to login. Spring Security is a bit easier to configure than Java EE 6 out-of-the-box, mostly because it doesn't require you to configure your container.

After logging in, you can try to logout by clicking the "Logout" link in the top-right corner. This calls a LogoutController with the following code that logs the user out.

public void logout(HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {
    request.getSession().invalidate();
    response.sendRedirect(request.getContextPath()); 
}

NOTE: Spring Security has a way to configure "logout" to match a URL and get rid of a class like LogoutController. Since it was already in the project, I don't cover that in this tutorial.

You'll notice that clicking this link doesn't log you out, even though the session is invalidated. The only way to logout with basic authentication is to close the browser. In order to get the ability to logout, as well as to have more control over the look-and-feel of the login, you can implement form-based authentication. Before you implement form-based authentication, I'd like to show you how easy it is to force SSL with Spring Security.

Force SSL
Spring Security allows you to switch between secure (https) and non-secure (http) protocols using a simple requires-channel attribute on the <intercept-url> element. Possible values are "http", "https" and "any". Add requires-channel="https" to your security.xml file:

<intercept-url pattern="/app/users" access="ROLE_USER,ROLE_ADMIN" requires-channel="https"/>

In order for this to work, you have to configure Jetty to listen on an SSL port. Add the following just after the jetty-maven-plugin's </webAppConfig> element in your pom.xml:

<connectors>
    <connector implementation="org.eclipse.jetty.server.nio.SelectChannelConnector">
        <forwarded>true</forwarded>
        <port>8080</port>
    </connector>
    <connector implementation="org.eclipse.jetty.server.ssl.SslSelectChannelConnector">
        <forwarded>true</forwarded>
        <port>8443</port>
        <maxIdleTime>60000</maxIdleTime>
        <keystore>${project.build.directory}/ssl.keystore</keystore>
        <password>appfuse</password>
        <keyPassword>appfuse</keyPassword>
    </connector>
</connectors>

The keystore must be generated for Jetty to start successfully, so add the keytool-maven-plugin just above the jetty-maven-plugin in pom.xml.

<plugin>
    <groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
    <artifactId>keytool-maven-plugin</artifactId>
    <version>1.0</version>
    <executions>
        <execution>
            <phase>generate-resources</phase>
            <id>clean</id>
            <goals>
                <goal>clean</goal>
            </goals>
        </execution>
        <execution>
            <phase>generate-resources</phase>
            <id>genkey</id>
            <goals>
                <goal>genkey</goal>
            </goals>
        </execution>
    </executions>
    <configuration>
        <keystore>${project.build.directory}/ssl.keystore</keystore>
        <dname>cn=localhost</dname>
        <keypass>appfuse</keypass>
        <storepass>appfuse</storepass>
        <alias>appfuse</alias>
        <keyalg>RSA</keyalg>
    </configuration>
</plugin>

Now if you restart Jetty, go to http://localhost:8080 and click on the "Users" tab, you'll be prompted to accept the Untrusted Certificate and then redirected to https://localhost:8443/users after logging in. This is an improvement on Java EE's user-data-constraint for two reasons:

  • You can switch between http and https protocols. With Java EE, you can only force https. You have to write a custom filter to switch back to http.
  • Redirecting to https actually works. With Java EE (on Jetty at least), a 403 is returned instead of redirecting the request.

Now let's look at how to have more control over the look-and-feel of the login screen, as well as how to make logout work with form-based authentication.

Implement Form-based Authentication
To change from basic to form-based authentication, you simply have to add a <form-login> element in security.xml's <http> element:

<http auto-config="true">
    <intercept-url pattern="/app/users" access="ROLE_USER,ROLE_ADMIN" requires-channel="https"/>
    <form-login login-page="/login" authentication-failure-url="/login?error=true"
                login-processing-url="/j_security_check"/>
    <http-basic/>
</http>

You can leave the <http-basic> element since Spring Security is smart enough to serve up the form for browsers and use Basic Authentication for clients such as web services. The login.jsp page (that /login forwards to) already exists in the project, in the src/main/webapp directory. The forwarding is done by the UrlRewriteFilter with the following configuration in src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/urlrewrite.xml.

<rule>
    <from>/login</from>
    <to>/login.jsp</to>
</rule>

This JSP has 3 important elements: 1) a form that submits to "/j_security_check", 2) an input element named "j_username" and 3) an input element named "j_password". If you restart Jetty, you'll now be prompted to login with this JSP instead of the basic authentication dialog.

Add Remember Me
Remember Me is a feature you see in many web applications today. It's usually a checkbox on the login form that allows you to auto-login the next time you visit a site. This feature doesn't exist in Java EE security, but it does exist in Spring Security. To enable it, add the following just below <form-login> in security.xml:

<remember-me user-service-ref="userDao" key="e37f4b31-0c45-11dd-bd0b-0800200c9a66"/>

Next, open src/main/webapp/login.jsp and change the name of the "remember me" checkbox to be _spring_security_remember_me:

<input type="checkbox" name="_spring_security_remember_me" id="rememberMe"/>

After making these changes, you should be able to restart Jetty, go to http://localhost:8080/users, enter admin/adminjdbc, check the Remember Me checkbox and login. Then close your browser, and repeat the process. This time, you won't be prompted to login. For more information on this feature, see Spring Security's Remember Me documentation.

While storing usernames and passwords in a file is convenient for demos, it's not very real-world-ish. The next section shows you how to configure Spring Security to use a database for its user store.

Store Users in a Database
To store your users in a database instead of file, you'll need to add a user-service-ref attribute to the <authentication-provider> element. You can also delete the <user-service> element.

<authentication-manager alias="authenticationManager">
    <authentication-provider user-service-ref="userDao">
        <password-encoder hash="sha"/>
    </authentication-provider>
</authentication-manager>

The "userDao" bean is provided by AppFuse and its UserDaoHibernate.java class. This class implements Spring Security's UserDetailsService interface. With Java EE, I had to configure a database connection and make sure the JDBC Driver was in my container's classpath. With Spring Security, you can talk to the database you already have configured in your application.

Of course, you could do this with Java EE too. One thing I neglected to show in my last tutorial was that 1) the app uses H2 and 2) I had to configure Java EE's database to be MySQL. This was because when I tried to access my H2 instance, I got an error about two threads trying to access it at once.
2011-05-13 08:47:29.081:WARN::UserRealm Java EE Login could not connect to database; will try later
org.h2.jdbc.JdbcSQLException: Database may be already in use: "Locked by another process". 
        Possible solutions: close all other connection(s); use the server mode [90020-154]
	at org.h2.message.DbException.getJdbcSQLException(DbException.java:327)
	at org.h2.message.DbException.get(DbException.java:167)
	at org.h2.message.DbException.get(DbException.java:144)
	at org.h2.store.FileLock.getExceptionAlreadyInUse(FileLock.java:443)
	at org.h2.store.FileLock.lockFile(FileLock.java:338)
	at org.h2.store.FileLock.lock(FileLock.java:134)
	at org.h2.engine.Database.open(Database.java:535)
	at org.h2.engine.Database.openDatabase(Database.java:218)

The password for the "admin" user is configured in src/test/resources/sample-data.xml and it's loaded by DbUnit before the application starts. You can view your pom.xml and the dbunit-maven-plugin's configuration if you're interested in learning how this is done. The password is currently configured to "adminjdbc", but you can reset it by generating a new password and modifying sample-data.xml.

Now if you restart Jetty, you should be able to login with admin/adminjdbc and view the list of users.

Summary
In this tutorial, you learned how to implement authentication using Spring Security 3.0.5. In addition to the basic XML configuration, Spring Security also provides a AOP support and annotations you can use to secure methods. It also has many more features than standard Java EE Security. In my opinion, it's the most mature security framework we have in Java today. Currently, I think its reference documentation is the best place to learn more.

There are a few limitations I found with Spring Security:

  • The authentication mechanism (file, database, ldap, etc.) is contained in the WAR
  • Securing methods only works on Spring beans
  • Remember Me doesn't work in my screencast (because I forgot to rename the checkbox in login.jsp)

Of course, you can configure Spring to load its configuration from outside the WAR (e.g. a file or JNDI), but it's not as easy as including the configuration in your app.

In the next couple weeks, I'll post Part III of this series, where I'll show you how to implement this same set of features using Apache Shiro. In the meantime, please let me know if you have any questions.

I created the screencasts with Camtasia. For small screens, and embedding in the presentation, I created it at 50% and used the SmartFocus feature to zoom in and out during the demo. For larger screens, I published another screencast at 100%, in HD. If you have a preference for which screencast is better, I'd love to hear about it.

Posted in Java at May 13 2011, 09:20:51 AM MDT 10 Comments

The Basement Sauna Project

The Sauna under snow I grew up in a cabin in the backwoods of Montana. We had no electricity and no running water. We used an outhouse to do our business and bathed in a sauna. The Cabin was built by my great-grandpa Matti Hill, who had come to America by way of Finland and a Russian navy ship. Matti and his wife Ann received 120 acres from the Homesteading Act of 1862, and built a cabin and sauna on the property in 1917 and 1918, respectively.

When my sister and I started going to school, we started getting teased by the other kids because we smelled like goats. Since we had a whole bunch of goats, and they did smell, there's a good chance the kids were right. My sister and I told my parents, and they bumped the saunas up from once a week to twice a week.

I have many fond memories of the sauna in Montana. It has a huge 55-gallon stove; made from an oil barrel. A tub of water sits on the top of the stove and throughout my childhood, I developed the ability to make the water sing with a blazing fire. I've always loved that sauna, as well as most saunas. My parents built one in their basement in Oregon, but that went away last year when they my Mom retired and they moved back to Montana.

Basement Sauna in Salem Basement Sauna in Salem

I've always wanted to build a sauna in my own basement. When my parents visited for a few weeks this past February, I finally began the project. The prep work, installing a drain and getting 220-volt electricity installed, in the basement was the hardest part. Not from a "doing it" perspective, but from a "stomaching the cost" perspective.

Drain Installation Sump Pump New Drain Applewood Plumbing doing some nice work.

By the time my parents left at the end of February, the main infrastructure was completed. The framing was done, the stove was installed and the insulation was mostly finished.

Framing begins! Stove mounted Almost ready for Cedar Buying a bunch of Cedar

Over the next couple months, I spent a few hours here and there finishing the cedar walls, building benches and trimming to make it look good. We hired someone to do the tile work and build a custom cedar door. One of my favorite things we did was have a custom piece of glass made with the Montana Sauna's picture sandblasted in it.

Tile finished! Glad we hired someone to finish the tile. Looks great! Sauna door installed! The Dressing Room

I can't take credit for how good it looks in the end. That praise goes to Trish and her tile design, as well as her decorating of the dressing room. My favorite thing is the shower in the sauna. It's great for rinsing off after sweating the day's stresses away. When it gets up to 112°C (233°F), stress goes away pretty fast.

Benches I made from scratch Shower IN the sauna!

I'd like to thank my parents for raising me with a sauna and my Finnish ancestors for inventing the idea. I think Jack summed it up best when I asked him, "Isn't it great having a sauna in our basement?" His reply: "No Dad, it's not great ... it's AWESOME!". Well said son. :)

More Pictures » Flickr Set or Facebook Album.

Posted in General at May 12 2011, 09:35:00 AM MDT 6 Comments

Java Web Application Security - Part I: Java EE 6 Login Demo

Back in February, I wrote about my upcoming conferences:

In addition to Vegas and Poland, there's a couple other events I might speak at in the next few months: the Utah Java Users Group (possibly in April), Jazoon and ÜberConf (if my proposals are accepted). For these events, I'm hoping to present the following talk:

Webapp Security: Develop. Penetrate. Protect. Relax.
In this session, you'll learn how to implement authentication in your Java web applications using Spring Security, Apache Shiro and good ol' Java EE Container Managed Authentication. You'll also learn how to secure your REST API with OAuth and lock it down with SSL.

After learning how to develop authentication, I'll introduce you to OWASP, the OWASP Top 10, its Testing Guide and its Code Review Guide. From there, I'll discuss using WebGoat to verify your app is secure and commercial tools like webapp firewalls and accelerators.

Fast forward a couple months and I'm happy to say that I've completed my talk at the Utah JUG and it's been accepted at Jazoon and Über Conf. For this talk, I created a presentation that primarily consists of demos implementing basic, form and Ajax authentication using Java EE 6, Spring Security and Apache Shiro. In the process of creating the demos, I learned (or re-educated myself) how to do a number of things in all 3 frameworks:

  • Implement Basic Authentication
  • Implement Form-based Authentication
  • Implement Ajax HTTP -> HTTPS Authentication (with programmatic APIs)
  • Force SSL for certain URLs
  • Implement a file-based store of users and passwords (in Jetty/Maven and Tomcat standalone)
  • Implement a database store of users and passwords (in Jetty/Maven and Tomcat standalone)
  • Encrypt Passwords
  • Secure methods with annotations

For the demos, I showed the audience how to do almost all of these, but skipped Tomcat standalone and securing methods in the interest of time. In July, when I do this talk at ÜberConf, I plan on adding 1) hacking the app (to show security holes) and 2) fixing it to protect it against vulnerabilities.

I told the audience at UJUG that I would post the presentation and was planning on recording screencasts of the various demos so the online version of the presentation would make more sense. Today, I've finished the first screencast showing how to implement security with Java EE 6. Below is the presentation (with the screencast embedded on slide 10) as well as a step-by-step tutorial.


Java EE 6 Login Tutorial

Download and Run the Application
To begin, download the application you'll be implementing security in. This app is a stripped-down version of the Ajax Login application I wrote for my article on Implementing Ajax Authentication using jQuery, Spring Security and HTTPS. You'll need Java 6 and Maven installed to run the app. Run it using mvn jetty:run and open http://localhost:8080 in your browser. You'll see it's a simple CRUD application for users and there's no login required to add or delete users.

Implement Basic Authentication
The first step is to protect the list screen so people have to login to view users. To do this, add the following to the bottom of src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/web.xml:

<security-constraint>
    <web-resource-collection>
        <web-resource-name>users</web-resource-name>
        <url-pattern>/users</url-pattern>
        <http-method>GET</http-method>
        <http-method>POST</http-method>
    </web-resource-collection>
    <auth-constraint>
        <role-name>ROLE_ADMIN</role-name>
    </auth-constraint>
</security-constraint>

<login-config>
    <auth-method>BASIC</auth-method>
    <realm-name>Java EE Login</realm-name>
</login-config>

<security-role>
    <role-name>ROLE_ADMIN</role-name>
</security-role>

At this point, if you restart Jetty (Ctrl+C and jetty:run again), you'll get an error about a missing LoginService. This happens because Jetty doesn't know where the "Java EE Login" realm is located. Add the following to pom.xml, just after </webAppConfig> in the Jetty plugin's configuration.

<loginServices>
    <loginService implementation="org.eclipse.jetty.security.HashLoginService">
        <name>Java EE Login</name>
        <config>${basedir}/src/test/resources/realm.properties</config>
    </loginService>
</loginServices>

The realm.properties file already exists in the project and contains user names and passwords. Start the app again using mvn jetty:run and you should be prompted to login when you click on the "Users" tab. Enter admin/admin to login.

After logging in, you can try to logout by clicking the "Logout" link in the top-right corner. This calls a LogoutController with the following code that logs the user out.

public void logout(HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {
    request.getSession().invalidate();
    response.sendRedirect(request.getContextPath());
}

You'll notice that clicking this link doesn't log you out, even though the session is invalidated. The only way to logout with basic authentication is to close the browser. In order to get the ability to logout, as well as to have more control over the look-and-feel of the login, you can implement form-based authentication.

Implement Form-based Authentication
To change from basic to form-based authentication, you simply have to replace the <login-config> in your web.xml with the following:

<login-config>
    <auth-method>FORM</auth-method>
    <form-login-config>
        <form-login-page>/login.jsp</form-login-page>
        <form-error-page>/login.jsp?error=true</form-error-page>
    </form-login-config>
</login-config>

The login.jsp page already exists in the project, in the src/main/webapp directory. This JSP has 3 important elements: 1) a form that submits to "${contextPath}/j_security_check", 2) an input element named "j_username" and 3) an input element named "j_password". If you restart Jetty, you'll now be prompted to login with this JSP instead of the basic authentication dialog.

Force SSL
Another thing you might want to implement to secure your application is forcing SSL for certain URLs. To do this on the same <security-constraint> you already have in web.xml, add the following after </auth-constraint>:

<user-data-constraint>
    <transport-guarantee>CONFIDENTIAL</transport-guarantee>
</user-data-constraint>

To configure Jetty to listen on an SSL port, add the following just after </loginServices> in your pom.xml:

<connectors>
    <connector implementation="org.eclipse.jetty.server.nio.SelectChannelConnector">
        <forwarded>true</forwarded>
        <port>8080</port>
    </connector>
    <connector implementation="org.eclipse.jetty.server.ssl.SslSelectChannelConnector">
        <forwarded>true</forwarded>
        <port>8443</port>
        <maxIdleTime>60000</maxIdleTime>
        <keystore>${project.build.directory}/ssl.keystore</keystore>
        <password>appfuse</password>
        <keyPassword>appfuse</keyPassword>
    </connector>
</connectors>

The keystore must be generated for Jetty to start successfully, so add the keytool-maven-plugin just above the jetty-maven-plugin in pom.xml.

<plugin>
    <groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
    <artifactId>keytool-maven-plugin</artifactId>
    <version>1.0</version>
    <executions>
        <execution>
            <phase>generate-resources</phase>
            <id>clean</id>
            <goals>
                <goal>clean</goal>
            </goals>
        </execution>
        <execution>
            <phase>generate-resources</phase>
            <id>genkey</id>
            <goals>
                <goal>genkey</goal>
            </goals>
        </execution>
    </executions>
    <configuration>
        <keystore>${project.build.directory}/ssl.keystore</keystore>
        <dname>cn=localhost</dname>
        <keypass>appfuse</keypass>
        <storepass>appfuse</storepass>
        <alias>appfuse</alias>
        <keyalg>RSA</keyalg>
    </configuration>
</plugin>

Now if you restart Jetty, go to http://localhost:8080 and click on the "Users" tab, you'll get a 403. What the heck?! When this first happened to me, it took me a while to figure out. It turns out that Jetty doesn't redirect to HTTPS when using Java EE authentication, so you have to manually type in https://localhost:8443/ (or add a filter to redirect for you). If you deployed this same application on Tomcat (after enabling SSL), it would redirect for you.

Store Users in a Database
Finally, to store your users in a database instead of file, you'll need to change the <loginService> in the Jetty plugin's configuration. Replace the existing <loginService> element with the following:

<loginServices>
    <loginService implementation="org.eclipse.jetty.security.JDBCLoginService">
        <name>Java EE Login</name>
        <config>${basedir}/src/test/resources/jdbc-realm.properties</config>
    </loginService>
</loginServices>

The jdbc-realm.properties file already exists in the project and contains the database settings and table/column names for the user and role information.

jdbcdriver = com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
url = jdbc:mysql://localhost/appfuse
username = root
password =
usertable = app_user
usertablekey = id
usertableuserfield = username
usertablepasswordfield = password
roletable = role
roletablekey = id
roletablerolefield = name
userroletable = user_role
userroletableuserkey = user_id
userroletablerolekey = role_id
cachetime = 300

Of course, you'll need to install MySQL for this to work. After installing it, you should be able to create an "appfuse" database and populate it using the following commands:

mysql -u root -p -e 'create database appfuse'
curl https://gist.github.com/raw/958091/ceecb4a6ae31c31429d5639d0d1e6bfd93e2ea42/create-appfuse.sql > create-appfuse.sql
mysql -u root -p appfuse < create-appfuse.sql

Next you'll need to configure Jetty so it has MySQL's JDBC Driver in its classpath. To do this, add the following dependency just after the <configuration> element (before <executions>) in pom.xml:

<dependencies>
    <!-- MySQL for JDBC Realm -->
    <dependency>
        <groupId>mysql</groupId>
        <artifactId>mysql-connector-java</artifactId>
        <version>5.1.14</version>
    </dependency>
</dependencies>

Now run the jetty-password.sh file in the root directory of the project to generate a password of your choosing. For example:

$ sh jetty-password.sh javaeelogin
javaeelogin
OBF:1vuj1t2v1wum1u9d1ugo1t331uh21ua51wts1t3b1vur
MD5:53b176e6ce1b5183bc970ef1ebaffd44

The last two lines are obfuscated and MD5 versions of the password. Update the admin user's password to this new value. You can do this with the following SQL statement.

UPDATE app_user SET password='MD5:53b176e6ce1b5183bc970ef1ebaffd44' WHERE username = 'admin';

Now if you restart Jetty, you should be able to login with admin/javaeelogin and view the list of users.

Summary
In this tutorial, you learned how to implement authentication using standard Java EE 6. In addition to the basic XML configuration, there's also some new methods in HttpServletRequest for Java EE 6 and Servlet 3.0:

  • authenticate(response)
  • login(user, pass)
  • logout()

This tutorial doesn't show you how to use them, but I did play with them a bit as part of my UJUG demo when implementing Ajax authentication. I found that login() did work, but it didn't persist the authentication for the users session. I also found that after calling logout(), I still needed to invalidate the session to completely logout the user. There are some additional limitations I found with Java EE authentication, namely:

  • No error messages for failed logins
  • No Remember Me
  • No auto-redirect from HTTP to HTTPS
  • Container has to be configured
  • Doesn’t support regular expressions for URLs

Of course, no error messages indicating why login failed is probably a good thing (you don't want to tell users why their credentials failed). However, when you're trying to figure out if your container is configured properly, the lack of container logging can be a pain.

In the next couple weeks, I'll post Part II of this series, where I'll show you how to implement this same set of features using Spring Security. In the meantime, please let me know if you have any questions.

Posted in Java at May 05 2011, 04:58:00 PM MDT 9 Comments

Be careful when switching MySQL to UTF-8

Earlier this week, I noticed a couple strange issues on this blog and sent an email to the roller-user mailing list. I figured both issues were caused by my upgrade to Roller 5. Basically, my tag cloud wasn't working and I noticed a bunch of blog entries that had truncated data. I'd provide links to the truncated posts, but I believe I've fixed them, so links would be useless. This post is to make others aware of something I wasn't: be careful when switching MySQL to UTF-8.

The first issue, 404s from my tag cloud links, was something my theme was missing. It seems the tagIndex action is new in Roller 5 and required for tag clouds to work. To fix this issue, I had to add the following XML to my theme's theme.xml file.

<template action="tagsIndex">
    <name>TagsIndex</name>
    <description>Tag index page</description>
        <link></link>
    <navbar>false</navbar>
    <hidden>true</hidden>
    <templateLanguage>velocity</templateLanguage>
    <contentType>text/html</contentType>
    <contentsFile>Weblog.vm</contentsFile>
</template>

Since I wanted to replicate Roller 4's behavior, pointing the contentsFile to Weblog.vm worked just fine. The nice thing is I can always change it to another page and customize it to show more information about the selected tag.

The 2nd issue, data truncation, was a bit trickier. I thought it might've been something Roller did when upgrading my database from Roller 4 to 5. I didn't suspect upgrading from MySQL 3 to 5 would cause it. From my previous upgrade post:

At this point, I figured my database might be slightly hosed, but since it was simply creating tables, I was probably OK. I restarted Tomcat and left the old version in place while I waited for a MySQL 5 database instance from my hosting provider, KGB Internet. Once I got the new instance, I imported my backed-up database, ran the upgrade script and everything worked just peachy.

Keith at KGB looked into my issue and thought the problem was the charset. My old MySQL 3.x database used latin1 while my MySQL 5.x database uses UTF-8. The symptom looked familiar:

Be careful when switching to UTF-8. Once you have converted your data, any program/webapp that uses the database will have to check that the data they are sending to the database is valid UTF-8. If it isn't then MySQL will silently truncate the data after the invalid part, which can cause all sorts of problems.

Luckily, I had a backup of my pre-upgrade database and was able to convert and recover everything successfully with a little iconv, perl and numerous mysqldump and mysql import commands. Of course, it's possible there's still some jacked entries and comments. If you noticed any truncation, please let me know and I'll get them fixed.

Posted in Roller at Apr 28 2011, 08:11:40 PM MDT 2 Comments

Adding Search to AppFuse with Compass

Over 5 years ago, I recognized that AppFuse needed to have a search feature and entered an issue in JIRA. Almost 4 years later, a Compass Tutorial was created and shortly after Shay Banon (Compass Founder), sent in a patch. From the message he sent me:

A quick breakdown of enabling search:

  1. Added Searchable annotations to the User and Address.
  2. Defined Compass bean, automatically scanning the model package for mapped searchable classes. It also automatically integrates with Spring transaction manager, and stores the index on the file system ([work dir]/target/test-index).
  3. Defined CompassTemplate (similar in concept to HibernateTemplate).
  4. Defined CompassSearchHelper. Really helps to perform search since it does pagination and so on.
  5. Defined CompassGps, basically it allows for index operation allowing to completely reindex the data from the database. JPA and Hiberante also automatically mirror changes done through their API to the index. iBatis uses AOP.

Fast forward 2 years and I finally found the time/desire to put a UI on the backend Compass implementation that Shay provided. Yes, I realize that Compass is being replaced by ElasticSearch. I may change to use ElasticSearch in the future; now that the search feature exists, I hope to see it evolve and improve.

Since Shay's patch integrated the necessary Spring beans for indexing and searching, the only thing I had to do was to implement the UI. Rather than having an "all objects" results page, I elected to implement it so you could search on an entity's list screen. I started with Spring MVC and added a search() method to the UserController:

@RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.GET)
public ModelAndView handleRequest(@RequestParam(required = false, value = "q") String query) throws Exception {
    if (query != null && !"".equals(query.trim())) {
        return new ModelAndView("admin/userList", Constants.USER_LIST, search(query));
    } else {
        return new ModelAndView("admin/userList", Constants.USER_LIST, mgr.getUsers());
    }
}

public List<User> search(String query) {
    List<User> results = new ArrayList<User>();
    CompassDetachedHits hits = compassTemplate.findWithDetach(query);
    log.debug("No. of results for '" + query + "': " + hits.length());
    for (int i = 0; i < hits.length(); i++) {
        results.add((User) hits.data(i));
    }
    return results;
}

At first, I used compassTemplate.find(), but got an error because I wasn't using an OpenSessionInViewFilter. I decided to go with findWithDetach() and added the following search form to the top of the userList.jsp page:

<div id="search">
<form method="get" action="${ctx}/admin/users" id="searchForm">
    <input type="text" size="20" name="q" id="query" value="${param.q}"
           placeholder="Enter search terms"/>
    <input type="submit" value="<fmt:message key="button.search"/>"/>
</form>
</div>

NOTE: I tried using HTML5's <input type="search">, but found Canoo WebTest doesn't support it.

Next, I wrote a unit test to verify everything worked as expected. I found I had to call compassGps.index() as part of my test to make sure my index was created and up-to-date.

public class UserControllerTest extends BaseControllerTestCase {
    @Autowired
    private CompassGps compassGps;
    @Autowired
    private UserController controller;

    public void testSearch() throws Exception {
        compassGps.index();
        ModelAndView mav = controller.handleRequest("admin");
        Map m = mav.getModel();
        List results = (List) m.get(Constants.USER_LIST);
        assertNotNull(results);
        assertTrue(results.size() >= 1);
        assertEquals("admin/userList", mav.getViewName());
    }
}

After getting this working, I started integrating similar code into AppFuse's other web framework modules (Struts, JSF and Tapestry). When I was finished, they all looked pretty similar from a UI perspective.

Struts:

<div id="search">
<form method="get" action="${ctx}/admin/users" id="searchForm">
    <input type="text" size="20" name="q" id="query" value="${param.q}"
           placeholder="Enter search terms..."/>
    <input type="submit" value="<fmt:message key="button.search"/>"/>
</form>
</div>

JSF:

<div id="search">
<h:form id="searchForm">
    <h:inputText id="q" name="q" size="20" value="#{userList.query}"/>
    <h:commandButton value="#{text['button.search']}" action="#{userList.search}"/>
</h:form>
</div>

Tapestry:

<div id="search">
<t:form method="get" t:id="searchForm">
    <t:textfield size="20" name="q" t:id="q"/>
    <input t:type="submit" value="${message:button.search}"/>
</t:form>
</div>

One frustrating thing I found was that Tapestry doesn't support method="get" and AFAICT, neither does JSF 2. With JSF, I had to make my UserList bean session-scoped or the query parameter would be null when it listed the results. Tapestry took me the longest to implement, mainly because I had issues figuring out how it's easy-to-understand-once-you-know onSubmit() handlers worked and I had the proper @Property and @Persist annotations on my "q" property. This tutorial was the greatest help for me. Of course, now that it's all finished, the code looks pretty intuitive.

Feeling proud of myself for getting this working, I started integrating this feature into AppFuse's code generation and found I had to add quite a bit of code to the generated list pages/controllers.

So I went on a bike ride...

While riding, I thought of a much better solution and added the following search method to AppFuse's GenericManagerImpl.java. In the code I added to pages/controllers previously, I'd already refactored to use CompassSearchHelper and I continued to do so in the service layer implementation.

@Autowired
private CompassSearchHelper compass;

public List<T> search(String q, Class clazz) {
    if (q == null || "".equals(q.trim())) {
        return getAll();
    }

    List<T> results = new ArrayList<T>();

    CompassSearchCommand command = new CompassSearchCommand(q);
    CompassSearchResults compassResults = compass.search(command);
    CompassHit[] hits = compassResults.getHits();

    if (log.isDebugEnabled() && clazz != null) {
        log.debug("Filtering by type: " + clazz.getName());
    }

    for (CompassHit hit : hits) {
        if (clazz != null) {
            if (hit.data().getClass().equals(clazz)) {
                results.add((T) hit.data());
            }
        } else {
            results.add((T) hit.data());
        }
    }

    if (log.isDebugEnabled()) {
        log.debug("Number of results for '" + q + "': " + results.size());
    }

    return results;
}

This greatly simplified my page/controller logic because now all I had to do was call manager.search(query, User.class) instead of doing the Compass login in the controller. Of course, it'd be great if I didn't have to pass in the Class to filter by object, but that's the nature of generics and type erasure.

Other things I learned along the way:

  • To index on startup, I added compassGps.index() to the StartupListener..
  • In unit tests that leveraged transactions around methods, I had to call compassGps.index() before any transactions started.
  • To scan multiple packages for searchable classes, I had to add a LocalCompassBeanPostProcessor.

But more than anything, I was reminded it always helps to take a bike ride when you don't like the design of your code. ;-)

This feature and many more will be in AppFuse 2.1, which I hope to finish by the end of the month. In the meantime, please feel free to try out the latest snapshot.

Posted in Java at Mar 15 2011, 05:11:12 PM MDT 1 Comment

WebSockets with Johnny Wey at Denver JUG

This evening, I attended Denver JUG to hear Johnny Wey talk about WebSockets. This month, the location moved and even though I had a nice bike ride to the meeting, I showed up about 20 minutes late. Johnny's talk lasted about 40 minutes, so I missed the first half.

When I arrived, he was talking about workarounds for implementing push applications in browsers. He had a slide that talked about Comet and iframes as the common implementation, and the other major option being ActionScript's XMLSocket. The biggest issues with XMLSocket (according to Johnny) are:

  • Not available on many modern mobile platforms.
  • Flash and managing / detecting plugin versions can add unwanted complexity.
  • Many would consider Flash solutions deprecated.

The biggest issue with implementing push on a client is managing it all, especially if you need to support older browsers. Socket.IO is one possible solution. It rides on the coattails of node.js. Features of Socket.IO include:

  • Abstracts socket methods into a unified API.
  • Open source (MIT) with active community.
  • Multiple server implementations (including Java) with the "reference" implementation developed in node.js.

The client API looks as follows:

var socket = new io.Socket(); 
socket.on('connect', function(){ 
  socket.send('hi!'); 
}) 
socket.on('message', function(data){ 
  alert(data);
})
socket.on('disconnect', function(){}) 

jWebSocket is another solution and it's where a lot of the Java WebSocket development is ending up right now. Highlights about the project include:

  • Open source (LGPL) with relatively active community.
  • Servlet-like API.
  • More "enterprisey" than Socket.IO.

Other options include CometD, which is a Dojo-driven Comet implementation that uses a specification called Bayeux. Jetty and GlassFish both support WebSockets in various forms of functionality and stability. Finally, there's Pusher (a SaaS implementation of push with a RESTful API) and Atmosphere (a container-agnostic framework).

How do you scale web sockets? The same way you make a webapp scale:

  • Go stateless
  • Use short request / response cycle
  • Use the smallest payload possible
  • Cache as much as possible

Scaling challenges with web sockets:

  • Connections have intrinsic state (they never close!)
  • Communications pipeline to your app server
  • Some sort of introspection on LB side (JMX)

There's also some existing controversy in the WebSockets Community, mostly around using Upgrade vs. CONNECT with HTTP. An (IETF) experiment found Upgrade portion of HTTP protocol was often improperly implemented by proxy servers and other network hardware. This seems to have caused Google Chrome to deprecate using Upgrade in favor of CONNECT. CONNECT used in this manner is seen by many as an abuse of the web.

Other useful links that Johnny provided were What can I use… to find out native support across browsers. For example, you can see which browsers support websockets. He also pointed out that websocket.org provides a good intro to WebSockets.

I'm glad I attended Johnny's talk. I've been a little leery of using WebSockets in my applications because of older browsers. Now that I'm aware of frameworks (like Socket.IO) that solve this problem, I'm eager to try it when the need arises.

Related: Dojo/Comet support in Java Web Frameworks

Posted in Java at Mar 09 2011, 07:10:12 PM MST Add a Comment

Upgrading to JSF 2

Last week, I spent a few hours upgrading AppFuse from JSF 1.2 to JSF 2.0. In reality, I upgraded from MyFaces 1.2.7 to 2.0.4, but all JSF implementations should be the same, right? All in all, it was a pretty easy upgrade with a few minor AppFuse-specific things. My goal in upgrading was to do the bare minimum to get things working and to leave integration of JSF 2 features for a later date.

In addition to upgrading MyFaces, I had to upgrade Tomahawk by changing the dependency's artifactId to tomahawk20. I was also able to remove the following listener from my web.xml:

<listener>
    <listener-class>org.apache.myfaces.webapp.StartupServletContextListener</listener-class>
<listener>

After that, I discovered that MyFaces uses a new URI (/javax.faces.resource/) for serving up some of its resource files. I kindly asked Spring Security to ignore these requests by adding the following to my security.xml file.

<intercept-url pattern="/javax.faces.resource/**" filters="none"/>

Since JSF 2 includes Facelets by default, I tried removing Facelets as a dependency. After doing this, I received the following error:

ERROR [308855416@qtp-120902214-7] ViewHandlerWrapper.fillChain(158) | Error instantiation parent Faces ViewHandler
java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: com.sun.facelets.FaceletViewHandler
        at org.codehaus.plexus.classworlds.strategy.SelfFirstStrategy.loadClass(SelfFirstStrategy.java:50)
        at org.codehaus.plexus.classworlds.realm.ClassRealm.loadClass(ClassRealm.java:244)
        at org.codehaus.plexus.classworlds.realm.ClassRealm.loadClass(ClassRealm.java:230)
        at org.mortbay.jetty.webapp.WebAppClassLoader.loadClass(WebAppClassLoader.java:401)
        at org.mortbay.jetty.webapp.WebAppClassLoader.loadClass(WebAppClassLoader.java:363)
        at org.ajax4jsf.framework.ViewHandlerWrapper.fillChain(ViewHandlerWrapper.java:144)
        at org.ajax4jsf.framework.ViewHandlerWrapper.calculateRenderKitId(ViewHandlerWrapper.java:68)
        at org.apache.myfaces.lifecycle.DefaultRestoreViewSupport.isPostback(DefaultRestoreViewSupport.java:179)
        at org.apache.myfaces.lifecycle.RestoreViewExecutor.execute(RestoreViewExecutor.java:113)
        at org.apache.myfaces.lifecycle.LifecycleImpl.executePhase(LifecycleImpl.java:171)
        at org.apache.myfaces.lifecycle.LifecycleImpl.execute(LifecycleImpl.java:118)
        at javax.faces.webapp.FacesServlet.service(FacesServlet.java:189)

Figuring this was caused by the following element in my web.xml ...

<context-param>
    <param-name>org.ajax4jsf.VIEW_HANDLERS</param-name>
    <param-value>com.sun.facelets.FaceletViewHandler</param-value>
</context-param>

... I removed it and tried again. This time I received a NoClassDefFoundError:

java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError: com/sun/facelets/tag/TagHandler
        at java.lang.ClassLoader.defineClass1(Native Method)
        at java.lang.ClassLoader.defineClassCond(ClassLoader.java:632)
        at java.lang.ClassLoader.defineClass(ClassLoader.java:616)
        at java.security.SecureClassLoader.defineClass(SecureClassLoader.java:141)
        at java.net.URLClassLoader.defineClass(URLClassLoader.java:283)
        at java.net.URLClassLoader.access$000(URLClassLoader.java:58)
        at java.net.URLClassLoader$1.run(URLClassLoader.java:197)
        at java.security.AccessController.doPrivileged(Native Method)
        at java.net.URLClassLoader.findClass(URLClassLoader.java:190)
        at org.mortbay.jetty.webapp.WebAppClassLoader.loadClass(WebAppClassLoader.java:392)
        at org.mortbay.jetty.webapp.WebAppClassLoader.loadClass(WebAppClassLoader.java:363)
        at java.lang.Class.forName0(Native Method)
        at java.lang.Class.forName(Class.java:247)
        at org.apache.myfaces.shared_impl.util.ClassUtils.classForName(ClassUtils.java:184)
        at org.apache.myfaces.view.facelets.util.ReflectionUtil.forName(ReflectionUtil.java:67)

Since everything seemed to work with Facelets in the classpath, I decided to save this headache for a later date. I entered two issues in AppFuse's JIRA, one for removing Facelets and one for replacing Ajax4JSF with RichFaces.

The next issue I encountered was redirecting from AppFuse's password hint page. The navigation-rule for this page is as follows:

<navigation-rule>
    <from-view-id>/passwordHint.xhtml</from-view-id>
    <navigation-case>
        <from-outcome>success</from-outcome>
        <to-view-id>/login</to-view-id>
        <redirect/>
    </navigation-case>
</navigation-rule>

With JSF 2.0, the rule changes the URL to /login.xhtml when redirecting (where it was left as /login with 1.2) and it was caught by the security setting in my web.xml that prevents users from viewing raw templates.

<security-constraint>
    <web-resource-collection>
        <web-resource-name>Protect XHTML Templates</web-resource-name>
        <url-pattern>*.xhtml</url-pattern>
    </web-resource-collection>
    <auth-constraint/>
</security-constraint>

To solve this issue, I had to make a couple of changes:

  • Comment out the security-constraint in web.xml and move it to Spring Security's security.xml file.
    <intercept-url pattern="/**/*.xhtml" access="ROLE_NOBODY"/>
    
  • Add a rule to urlrewrite.xml that redirects back to login (since login.xhtml doesn't exist and I'm using extensionless URLs).
    <rule match-type="regex">
        <from>^/login.xhtml$</from>
        <to type="redirect">%{context-path}/login</to>
    </rule>
    

After getting the Password Hint feature passing in the browser, I tried running the integration tests (powered by Canoo WebTest). The Password Hint test kept failing with the following error:

[ERROR] /Users/mraible/dev/appfuse/web/jsf/src/test/resources/web-tests.xml:51: JavaScript error loading
page http://localhost:9876/appfuse-jsf-2.1.0-SNAPSHOT/passwordHint?username=admin: syntax error (http://
localhost:9876/appfuse-jsf-2.1.0-SNAPSHOT/javax.faces.resource/oamSubmit.js.jsf?ln=org.apache.myfaces#122)

Figuring this was caused by my hack to submit the form when the page was loaded, I turned to Pretty Faces, which allows you to call a method directly from a URL. After adding the Pretty Faces dependencies to my pom.xml, I created a src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/pretty-config.xml file with the following XML:

<url-mapping>
    <pattern value="/editProfile"/>
    <view-id value="/userForm.jsf"/>
    <action>#{userForm.edit}</action>
</url-mapping>

<url-mapping>
    <pattern value="/passwordHint/#{username}"/>
    <view-id value="/passwordHint.jsf"/>
    <action>#{passwordHint.execute}</action>
</url-mapping>

This allowed me to remove both editProfile.xhtml and passwordHint.xhtml, both of which simply auto-submitted forms.

At this point, I figured I'd be good to go and ran my integration tests again. The first thing I discovered was that ".jsf" was being tacked onto my pretty URL, most likely by the UrlRewriteFilter. Adding the following to my PasswordHint.java class solved this.

if (username.endsWith(".jsf")) {
    username = username.substring(0, username.indexOf(".jsf"));
}

The next thing was a cryptic error that took me a while to figure out.

DEBUG [1152467051@qtp-144702232-0] PasswordHint.execute(38) | Processing Password Hint...
2011-03-05 05:48:52.471:WARN::/passwordHint/admin
com.ocpsoft.pretty.PrettyException: Exception occurred while processing <:#{passwordHint.execute}> null
        at com.ocpsoft.pretty.faces.beans.ActionExecutor.executeActions(ActionExecutor.java:71)
        at com.ocpsoft.pretty.faces.event.PrettyPhaseListener.processEvent(PrettyPhaseListener.java:214)
        at com.ocpsoft.pretty.faces.event.PrettyPhaseListener.afterPhase(PrettyPhaseListener.java:108)
        at org.apache.myfaces.lifecycle.PhaseListenerManager.informPhaseListenersAfter(PhaseListenerManager.java:111)
        at org.apache.myfaces.lifecycle.LifecycleImpl.executePhase(LifecycleImpl.java:185)
        at org.apache.myfaces.lifecycle.LifecycleImpl.execute(LifecycleImpl.java:118)
        at javax.faces.webapp.FacesServlet.service(FacesServlet.java:189)

Digging into the bowels of MyFaces, I discovered a class was looking for a viewId with an extension and no view-id was being set. Adding the following to the top of my execute() method solved this.

getFacesContext().getViewRoot().setViewId("/passwordHint.xhtml");

After making this change, all AppFuse's integration tests are passing and the upgrade seems complete. The only other issues I encountered were logging-related. The first is an error about Tomahawk that doesn't seem to affect anything.

Mar 5, 2011 6:44:01 AM com.sun.facelets.compiler.TagLibraryConfig loadImplicit
SEVERE: Error Loading Library: jar:file:/Users/mraible/.m2/repository/org/apache/myfaces/tomahawk/tomahawk20/1.1.10/tomahawk20-1.1.10.jar!/META-INF/tomahawk.taglib.xml
java.io.IOException: Error parsing [jar:file:/Users/mraible/.m2/repository/org/apache/myfaces/tomahawk/tomahawk20/1.1.10/tomahawk20-1.1.10.jar!/META-INF/tomahawk.taglib.xml]: 
        at com.sun.facelets.compiler.TagLibraryConfig.create(TagLibraryConfig.java:410)
        at com.sun.facelets.compiler.TagLibraryConfig.loadImplicit(TagLibraryConfig.java:431)
        at com.sun.facelets.compiler.Compiler.initialize(Compiler.java:87)
        at com.sun.facelets.compiler.Compiler.compile(Compiler.java:104)

The second is excessive logging from MyFaces. As far as I can tell, this is because MyFaces switched to java.util.logging instead of commons logging. With all the frameworks that AppFuse leverages, I think it has all the logging frameworks in its classpath now. I was hoping to fix this by posting a message to the mailing list, but haven't received a reply yet.

[WARNING] [talledLocalContainer] Mar 5, 2011 6:50:25 AM org.apache.myfaces.config.annotation.TomcatAnnotationLifecycleProvider newInstance
[WARNING] [talledLocalContainer] INFO: Creating instance of org.appfuse.webapp.action.BasePage
[WARNING] [talledLocalContainer] Mar 5, 2011 6:50:25 AM org.apache.myfaces.config.annotation.TomcatAnnotationLifecycleProvider destroyInstance
[WARNING] [talledLocalContainer] INFO: Destroy instance of org.appfuse.webapp.action.BasePage

After successfully upgrading AppFuse, I turned to AppFuse Light, where things were much easier.

Now that AppFuse uses JSF 2, I hope to start leveraging some of its new features. If you're yearning to get started with them today, I invite you to grab the source and start integrating them yourself.

Posted in Java at Mar 07 2011, 01:24:53 PM MST 3 Comments