Reputation: 906
I am creating a client to a Java soap web service, but am having trouble figuring out how to properly pass the password. Here is my "hardcoded" password example:
@Test
public void exploratorySecurityTest() {
String username = "user";
String password = "pwd";
UserStoryService service = new UserStoryService();
UserStoryServiceSoap port = service.getUserStoryServiceSoap();
//initialize security
org.apache.cxf.endpoint.Client client = ClientProxy.getClient(port);
org.apache.cxf.endpoint.Endpoint cxfEndpoint = client.getEndpoint();
Map<String, Object> outProps = new HashMap<String, Object>();
outProps.put(WSHandlerConstants.ACTION, WSHandlerConstants.USERNAME_TOKEN);
outProps.put(WSHandlerConstants.USER, username);
outProps.put(WSHandlerConstants.PASSWORD_TYPE, WSConstants.PW_TEXT);
outProps.put(WSHandlerConstants.PW_CALLBACK_CLASS, ClientPasswordCallback.class.getName());
WSS4JOutInterceptor wssOut = new WSS4JOutInterceptor(outProps);
cxfEndpoint.getOutInterceptors().add(wssOut);
int storyId = 33401;
UserStoryDTO userStoryDTO = port.getByID(storyId);
//success if no error
}
public class ClientPasswordCallback implements CallbackHandler {
@Override
public void handle(Callback[] callbacks) throws IOException, UnsupportedCallbackException {
WSPasswordCallback pc = (WSPasswordCallback) callbacks[0];
pc.setPassword("pwd");
}}
What I really want to do is to pass the password into the callback handler. The examples that I have seen in the CXF documentation implement the callback either "hardcoded" (as I did in this example) or as a function of the username:
if (pc.getIdentifier().equals("user"))
pc.setPassword("pwd");
Neither of these meet my needs. Is there a way that I can do something like the following:
@Test
public void exploratorySecurityTest() {
String username = "user";
String password = "pwd";
UserStoryService service = new UserStoryService();
UserStoryServiceSoap port = service.getUserStoryServiceSoap();
//initialize security
org.apache.cxf.endpoint.Client client = ClientProxy.getClient(port);
org.apache.cxf.endpoint.Endpoint cxfEndpoint = client.getEndpoint();
Map<String, Object> outProps = new HashMap<String, Object>();
outProps.put(WSHandlerConstants.ACTION, WSHandlerConstants.USERNAME_TOKEN);
outProps.put(WSHandlerConstants.USER, username);
//pass the password here?
outProps.put("password", password);
outProps.put(WSHandlerConstants.PASSWORD_TYPE, WSConstants.PW_TEXT);
outProps.put(WSHandlerConstants.PW_CALLBACK_CLASS, ClientPasswordCallback.class.getName());
WSS4JOutInterceptor wssOut = new WSS4JOutInterceptor(outProps);
cxfEndpoint.getOutInterceptors().add(wssOut);
// ...
}
Upvotes: 10
Views: 13030
Reputation: 22262
Your ClientPasswordCallback
class may be like that, with his own pwd field and the associated setter:
class ClientPasswordCallback implements CallbackHandler {
private String pwd;
public void setPassword(String pwd) {
passwd = pwd;
}
@Override
public void handle(Callback[] callbacks) {
WSPasswordCallback pc = (WSPasswordCallback) callbacks[0];
pc.setPassword(pwd);
}
}
Then you can instanciate it in your test, set its password and use PW_CALLBACK_REF
key to add it to the outProps
map:
@Test
public void exploratorySecurityTest() {
String username = "user";
String password = "pwd";
// ...
outProps.put(PASSWORD_TYPE, WSConstants.PW_TEXT);
ClientPasswordCallback handler = new ClientPasswordCallback();
handler.setPassword(passwd);
outProps.put(PW_CALLBACK_REF, handler);
WSS4JOutInterceptor wssOut = new WSS4JOutInterceptor(outProps);
// ...
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1
I have always used following way of adding properties to request context for http level authentication and CallbackHandler for adding message level username token.
org.apache.cxf.endpoint.Client client = ClientProxy.getClient(obj);
org.apache.cxf.endpoint.Endpoint cxfEndpoint = client.getEndpoint();
System.out.println("initialize security for user " + this.username);
outProps.put(WSHandlerConstants.USER, this.username);
outProps.put(WSHandlerConstants.PASSWORD_TYPE, WSConstants.PW_TEXT);
Map<String, Object> requestContext = ((BindingProvider) obj).getRequestContext();
//For message level authentication
requestContext.put("ws-security.username", "Ron");
requestContext.put("ws-security.callback-handler", "com.ws.cxf.client.callback.UTPasswordCallback");
//For endpoint level authentication, HTTP Basic/Digest
requestContext.put(BindingProvider.USERNAME_PROPERTY, username);
requestContext.put(BindingProvider.PASSWORD_PROPERTY, password);
class UTPasswordCallback implements CallbackHandler {
@Override
public void handle(Callback[] callbacks) throws IOException,
UnsupportedCallbackException {
for(Callback cb:callbacks){
WSPasswordCallback pcallback = (WSPasswordCallback)cb;
if(pcallback.getUsage()==WSPasswordCallback.USERNAME_TOKEN)
{
if(pcallback.getIdentifier().equals("Ron"))
pcallback.setPassword("noR");
}
}
}
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 906
I was also able to do the following:
org.apache.cxf.endpoint.Client client = ClientProxy.getClient(obj);
org.apache.cxf.endpoint.Endpoint cxfEndpoint = client.getEndpoint();
Map<String, Object> outProps = new HashMap<String, Object>();
outProps.put(WSHandlerConstants.ACTION, WSHandlerConstants.USERNAME_TOKEN);
System.out.println("initialize security for user " + this.username);
outProps.put(WSHandlerConstants.USER, this.username);
outProps.put(WSHandlerConstants.PASSWORD_TYPE, WSConstants.PW_TEXT);
Map<String, Object> ctx = ((BindingProvider) obj).getRequestContext();
ctx.put("password", this.password);
WSS4JOutInterceptor wssOut = new WSS4JOutInterceptor(outProps);
cxfEndpoint.getOutInterceptors().add(wssOut);
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 368
Use PW_CALLBACK_REF instead PW_CALLBACK_CLASS, and pass an instantiated object, instead of the static class. You can inject the password in said object.
Something like:
outProps.put(WSHandlerConstants.PASSWORD_TYPE, WSConstants.PW_TEXT);
CXFClientPasswordHandler handler = new CXFClientPasswordHandler();
handler.setPassword(password);
outProps.put(WSHandlerConstants.PW_CALLBACK_REF, handler);
Upvotes: 18