2. Using the Tutorial Examples 3. Getting Started with Web Applications 5. JavaServer Pages Technology 7. JavaServer Pages Standard Tag Library 10. JavaServer Faces Technology 11. Using JavaServer Faces Technology in JSP Pages 12. Developing with JavaServer Faces Technology 13. Creating Custom UI Components 14. Configuring JavaServer Faces Applications 15. Internationalizing and Localizing Web Applications 16. Building Web Services with JAX-WS 17. Binding between XML Schema and Java Classes 19. SOAP with Attachments API for Java 21. Getting Started with Enterprise Beans 23. A Message-Driven Bean Example 24. Introduction to the Java Persistence API 25. Persistence in the Web Tier 26. Persistence in the EJB Tier 27. The Java Persistence Query Language 28. Introduction to Security in the Java EE Platform 29. Securing Java EE Applications Overview of Web Application Security Specifying Security Roles Using Annotations Specifying Security Roles Using Deployment Descriptor Elements Mapping Security Roles to Application Server Groups Checking Caller Identity Programmatically Declaring and Linking Role References Declaring Roles Using Annotations Declaring Roles Using Deployment Descriptor Elements Defining Security Requirements for Web Applications Declaring Security Requirements Using Annotations Using the@DeclareRoles Annotation Declaring Security Requirements in a Deployment Descriptor Specifying Security Constraints Specifying a Secure Connection Specifying an Authentication Mechanism Examples: Securing Web Applications Example: Using Form-Based Authentication with a JSP Page Creating a Web Client for Form-Based Authentication Creating the Login Form and the Error Page Specifying a Security Constraint Adding Authorized Roles and Users Mapping Application Roles to Application Server Groups Building, Packaging, and Deploying the Form-Based Authentication Example Using NetBeans IDE Building, Packaging, and Deploying the Form-Based Authentication Example Using Ant Testing the Form-Based Authentication Web Client Example: Basic Authentication with a Servlet Specifying the Security Constraint Adding Authorized Roles and Users Mapping Application Roles to Application Server Groups Building, Packaging, and Deploying the Servlet Basic Authentication Example Using NetBeans IDE Building, Packaging, and Deploying the Servlet Basic Authentication Example Using Ant Running the Basic Authentication Servlet Troubleshooting the Basic Authentication Example Example: Basic Authentication with JAX-WS Adding Security Elements to the Deployment Descriptor Building and Deployinghelloservice with Basic Authentication Using NetBeans IDE Building and Deployinghelloservice with Basic Authentication Using Ant Building and Running thehelloservice Client Application with Basic Authentication Using NetBeans IDE Building and Running thehelloservice Client Application with Basic Authentication Using Ant 31. The Java Message Service API 32. Java EE Examples Using the JMS API 36. The Coffee Break Application | Examples: Securing Web ApplicationsThere are several ways in which you can secure web applications. These includethe following options:
The following examples use annotations, programmatic security, and/or declarative security to demonstrate addingsecurity to existing web applications: The following examples demonstrate adding basic authentication to an EJB endpoint or enterprisebean: Example: Using Form-Based Authentication with a JSP PageThis example discusses how to use form-based authentication with a basic JSP page.With form-based authentication, you can customize the login screen and error pages thatare presented to the web client for authentication of their user name andpassword. When a user submits their name and password, the server determines ifthe user name and password are those of an authorized user and, ifauthorized, sends the requested web resource. If the topic of authentication is newto you, please refer to the sectionSpecifying an Authentication Mechanism. In general, the following steps are necessary for adding form-based authentication to anunsecured JSP page, such as the one described inWeb Modules. In theexample application included with this tutorial, many of these steps have been completedfor you and are listed here simply to show what needs to bedone should you wish to create a similar application. The completed version ofthis example application can be found in the directorytut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/web/hello1_formauth/. The following steps describe how to set up your system for runningthe example applications, describe the sample application, and provide the steps for compiling, packaging,deploying, and testing the example application.
Creating a Web Client for Form-Based AuthenticationThe web client in this example is a standard JSP page, andannotations are not used in JSP pages because JSP pages are compiled asthey are presented to the browser. Therefore, none of the code that addsform-based authentication to the example is included in the web client. The codefor the JSP page used in this example,hello1_formauth/web/index.jsp, is exactly the same asthe code used for the unsecured JSP page from the example application attut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/web/hello1/web/index.jsp. The information that adds form-based authentication to this example is specified in thedeployment descriptor. This information is discussed inSpecifying a Security Constraint. Creating the Login Form and the Error PageWhen using form-based login mechanisms, you must specify a page that contains theform you want to use to obtain the user name and password,as well as which page to display if login authentication fails. This section discussesthe login form and the error page used in this example. ThesectionSpecifying a Security Constraint shows how you specify these pages in the deployment descriptor. The login page can be an HTML page, a JSP page, ora servlet, and it must return an HTML page containing a form thatconforms to specific naming conventions (see the Java Servlet 2.5 specification for moreinformation on these requirements). To do this, include the elements that accept username and password information between<form></form> tags in your login page. The content ofan HTML page, JSP page, or servlet for a login page should becoded as follows: <form method=post action="j_security_check" > <input type="text" name= "j_username" > <input type="password" name= "j_password" ></form> The full code for the login page used in this example canbe found attut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/web/hello1_formauth/web/logon.jsp. An example of the running login form pageis shown later inFigure 30-6. Here is the code for this page: <html><head> <title>Login Page</title></head><h2>Hello, please log in:</h2><br><br><form action="j_security_check" method=post> <p><strong>Please Enter Your User Name: </strong><input type="text" name="j_username" size="25"> <p><p><strong>Please Enter Your Password: </strong><input type="password" size="15" name="j_password"> <p><p> <input type="submit" value="Submit"> <input type="reset" value="Reset"></form></html> The login error page is displayed if the user enters a username and password combination that is not authorized to access the protected URI.For this example, the login error page can be found attut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/web/hello1_formauth/web/logonError.jsp. Forthis example, the login error page explains the reason for receiving the errorpage and provides a link that will allow the user to try again.Here is the code for this page: <html><head> <title>Login Error</title></head><body> <c:url var="url" value="/index.jsp"/> <h2>Invalid user name or password.</h2> <p>Please enter a user name or password that is authorized to access this application. For this application, this means a user that has been created in the <code>file</code> realm and has been assigned to the <em>group</em> of <code>user</code>. Click here to <a href="${url}">Try Again</a></p></body></html>Specifying a Security ConstraintThis example takes a very simple JSP page-based web application and adds form-basedsecurity to this application. The JSP page is exactly the same as theJSP page used in the example described inWeb Modules. All security forthis example is declared in the deployment descriptor for the application. A securityconstraint is defined in the deployment descriptor that tells the server to senda login form to collect user data, verify that the user is authorizedto access the application, and, if so, display the JSP page to theuser. If this client were a web service endpoint and not a JSPpage, you could use annotations to declare security roles and to specify whichroles were allowed access to which methods. However, there is no resource injectionin JSP pages, so you cannot use annotations and must use the equivalentdeployment descriptor elements. Deployment descriptor elements are described inDeclaring Security Requirements in a Deployment Descriptor. The following sample code shows the deployment descriptor used in this example ofform-based login authentication, which can be found intut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/web/hello1_formauth/web/WEB-INF/web.xml. <!-- FORM-BASED LOGIN AUTHENTICATION EXAMPLE --><?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <web-app xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee" version="2.5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee/web-app_2_5.xsd"> <display-name>hello1_formauth</display-name> <servlet> <display-name>index</display-name> <servlet-name>index</servlet-name> <jsp-file>/index.jsp</jsp-file> </servlet> <security-constraint> <display-name>SecurityConstraint</display-name> <web-resource-collection> <web-resource-name>WRCollection</web-resource-name><url-pattern>/*</url-pattern> </web-resource-collection> <auth-constraint><role-name>loginUser</role-name> </auth-constraint> <user-data-constraint> <transport-guarantee>NONE</transport-guarantee> </user-data-constraint> </security-constraint> <login-config><auth-method>FORM</auth-method> <form-login-config><form-login-page>/logon.jsp</form-login-page><form-error-page>/logonError.jsp</form-error-page> </form-login-config> </login-config> <security-role> <role-name>loginUser</role-name> </security-role></web-app> More description of the elements that declare security in a deployment descriptor canbe found inSpecifying Security Constraints. Protecting Passwords with SSLPasswords are not protected for confidentiality with HTTP basic or form-based authentication, meaning thatpasswords sent between a client and a server on an unprotected session canbe viewed and intercepted by third parties. To overcome this limitation, you canrun these authentication protocols over an SSL-protected session and ensure that all messagecontent is protected for confidentiality. A<transport-guarantee> element indicates whether or not the protected resources should travel overprotected transport. For simplicity, this example does not require protected transport, but ina real world application, you would want to set this value toCONFIDENTIALto ensure that the user name and password are not observed during transmission. Whenrunning on protected transport, you can run the application over the secure SSLprotocol,https, and specify the secure port where your SSL connector is created(the default for the Application Server is8181). If you do notspecify the HTTPS protocol, the server will automatically redirect the application to thesecure port. Adding Authorized Roles and UsersTo authenticate a user and allow that user access to protected resources onthe Application Server, you must link the roles defined in the applicationto the users defined for the Application Server.
When an application is deployed, the application-specific security roles are mapped to securityidentities in the runtime environment, such asprincipals (identities assigned to usersas a result of authentication) orgroups. Based on this mapping, auser who has been assigned a certain security role has associated access rightsto a web application deployed onto a server. As shown in the deployment descriptor for this example application, the security constraintspecifies that users assigned to the role ofloginUser are authorized toaccess any of the files in thehello1_formauth application. In this example,when a resource that is constrained by this same security constraint is accessed,for example,hello1_formauth/web/index.jsp, the Application Server sends the login form, receives thelogin information, and checks to see if the user is in a groupthat has been mapped to the role ofloginUser. If the user nameand password are those of an authorized user, access to the resource isgranted to the requester. To set up users for this example application, follow these steps:
Mapping Application Roles to Application Server GroupsMap the role ofloginUser defined in the application to the groupofuser defined on the Application Server by adding asecurity-role-mapping element to thesun-web.xml runtime deployment descriptor file. To deploy a WAR on the Application Server,the WAR file must contain a runtime deployment descriptor. The runtime deployment descriptoris an XML file that contains information such as the context root ofthe web application and the mapping of the portable names of an application’sresources to the Application Server’s resources. The runtime deployment descriptor for this example,tut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/web/hello1_formauth/web/WEB-INF/sun-web.xml, looks like this: <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><!DOCTYPE sun-web-app PUBLIC "-//Sun Microsystems, Inc.//DTD Application Server 9.0 Servlet 2.5//EN" "http://www.sun.com/software/appserver/dtds/sun-web-app_2_5-0.dtd"><sun-web-app> <context-root>/hello1_formauth</context-root><security-role-mapping><role-name>loginUser</role-name><group-name>user</group-name></security-role-mapping></sun-web-app> Building, Packaging, and Deploying the Form-Based Authentication Example Using NetBeans IDETo build, package, and deploy this application using NetBeans IDE, follow these steps:
Building, Packaging, and Deploying the Form-Based Authentication Example Using AntTo build, package, and deploy this application using the Ant tool, follow thesesteps:
Testing the Form-Based Authentication Web ClientTo run the web client, follow these steps:
Figure 30-6 Form-Based Login Page ![]() Figure 30-7 Running Web Application ![]() Figure 30-8 The Running Form-Based Authentication Example ![]() Note -For repetitive testing of this example, you may need to close and reopenyour browser. You should also run theant clean andant undeploy commandsto ensure a fresh build if using the Ant tool, or select Cleanand Build then Undeploy and Deploy if using NetBeans IDE. Example: Basic Authentication with a ServletThis example discusses how to use basic authentication with a servlet. With basicauthentication of a servlet, the web browser presents a standard login dialog thatis not customizable. When a user submits their name and password, the serverdetermines if the user name and password are those of an authorized userand sends the requested web resource if the user is authorized to viewit. If the topic of authentication is new to you, please referto the sectionSpecifying an Authentication Mechanism. In general, the following steps are necessary for adding basic authentication to anunsecured servlet, such as the one described inWeb Modules. In the exampleapplication included with this tutorial, many of these steps have been completed foryou and are listed here simply to show what needs to be doneshould you wish to create a similar application. The completed version of thisexample application can be found in the directorytut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/web/hello2_basicauth/. The following steps describe how to set up your system for runningthe example applications, describe the sample application, and provide the steps for compiling, packaging,deploying, and testing the example application.
Declaring Security RolesThere are two annotations that can be used with servlets:@DeclareRoles and@RunAs. In this example, the@DeclareRoles annotation is used to specify whichroles are referenced in this example. The following section of thetut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/web/hello2_basicauth/src/servlets/GreetingServlet.java file contains the code necessary todeclare that the role ofhelloUser is used in this application: package servlets;import java.io.*;import java.util.*;import java.sql.*;import javax.servlet.*;import javax.servlet.http.*;import javax.annotation.security.DeclareRoles;/*** This is a simple example of an HTTP Servlet that can only be accessed* by an authenticated user. It responds to the GET* method of the HTTP protocol.*/@DeclareRoles("helloUser")public class GreetingServlet extends HttpServlet { public void doGet (HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOExceptionYou could also declare security roles using the<security-role> element in thedeployment descriptor. If you prefer to declare security roles this way, readDeclaring Roles Using Deployment Descriptor Elements. Specifying the Security ConstraintThis example takes a very simple servlet-based web application and adds basic authenticationto this application. The servlet is basically the same as the servlet usedin the example described inWeb Modules, with the exception of the annotationsadded and discussed inDeclaring Security Roles. The security constraint for this example is declared in the application deployment descriptor.The security constraint tells the server or browser to perform the following tasks:
Deployment descriptors elements are described inDeclaring Security Requirements in a Deployment Descriptor. The following sample code shows the security elements for the deployment descriptor usedin this example of basic authentication, which can be found intut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/web/hello2_basicauth/web/WEB-INF/web.xml. <security-constraint> <display-name>SecurityConstraint</display-name> <web-resource-collection> <web-resource-name>WRCollection</web-resource-name> <url-pattern>/greeting</url-pattern> </web-resource-collection> <auth-constraint> <role-name>helloUser</role-name> </auth-constraint> <user-data-constraint> <transport-guarantee>NONE</transport-guarantee> </user-data-constraint> </security-constraint> <login-config> <auth-method>BASIC</auth-method> <realm-name>file</realm-name> </login-config> More description of the elements that declare security in a deployment descriptor canbe found inSpecifying Security Constraints. Protecting Passwords with SSLPasswords are not protected for confidentiality with HTTP basic or form-based authentication, meaning thatpasswords sent between a client and a server on an unprotected session canbe viewed and intercepted by third parties. To overcome this limitation, you canrun these authentication protocols over an SSL-protected session and ensure that all messagecontent is protected for confidentiality. A<transport-guarantee> element indicates whether or not the protected resources should travel overprotected transport. For simplicity, this example does not require protected transport, but ina real world application, you would want to set this value toCONFIDENTIALto ensure that the user name and password are not observed during transmission. Whenrunning on protected transport, you need to use the secure SSL protocol,https, and specify the secure port where your SSL connector is created (thedefault for the Application Server is8181). Adding Authorized Roles and UsersTo authenticate a user and allow that user access to protected resources onthe Application Server, you must link the roles defined in the applicationto the users defined for the Application Server.
When an application is deployed, the application-specific security roles are mapped to securityidentities in the runtime environment, such asprincipals (identities assigned to usersas a result of authentication) orgroups. Based on this mapping, auser who has been assigned a certain security role has associated access rightsto a web application deployed onto a server. As shown in the deployment descriptor for this example application, the security constraintspecifies that users assigned to the role ofhelloUser are authorized toaccess the URL pattern/greeting. In this example, when this resource (because itis constrained by a security constraint) is accessed, the Application Server sends adefault login dialog, receives the login information, and checks to see if theuser is in a group that has been mapped to the role ofhelloUser. If the user name and password are those of an authorized user,access to the resource is granted to the requester. To set up users for this example application, follow these steps:
Mapping Application Roles to Application Server GroupsMap the role ofhelloUser defined in the application to the group ofuser defined on the Application Server by adding asecurity-role-mapping element to thesun-web.xml runtime deployment descriptor file. The runtime deployment descriptor is an XML file thatcontains information such as the context root of the web application and themapping of the portable names of an application’s resources to the Application Server’sresources. The runtime deployment descriptor for this example,tut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/web/hello2_basicauth/web/WEB-INF/sun-web.xml, looks like this: <sun-web-app> <context-root>/hello2_basicauth</context-root> <security-role-mapping> <role-name>helloUser</role-name> <group-name>user</group-name> </security-role-mapping></sun-web-app> Building, Packaging, and Deploying the Servlet Basic Authentication Example Using NetBeans IDETo build, package, and deploy theweb/hello2_basicauth example application using NetBeans IDE, followthese steps:
Building, Packaging, and Deploying the Servlet Basic Authentication Example Using AntTo build, package, and deploy theweb/hello2_basicauth example using the Ant tool, followthese steps:
Running the Basic Authentication ServletTo run the web client, follow these steps:
Figure 30-9 Running the Application ![]() Figure 30-10 The Running Basic Authentication Example ![]() Note -For repetitive testing of this example, you may need to close and reopenyour browser. You should also run theant clean andant undeploy targets orthe NetBeans IDE Clean and Build option to get a fresh start. Troubleshooting the Basic Authentication ExampleWhen doing iterative development with this web application, follow these steps if youare using NetBeans IDE:
Follow these steps if you are using the Ant tool:
Example: Basic Authentication with JAX-WSThis section discusses how to configure a JAX-WS-based web service for HTTP basicauthentication. When a service that is constrained byHTTP basic authentication is requested, theserver requests a user name and password from the client and verifies thatthe user name and password are valid by comparing them against a databaseof authorized users. If the topic of authentication is new to you, refer to thesection titledSpecifying an Authentication Mechanism. For an explanation of how basic authentication works, seeFigure 30-2. For this tutorial, you will add the security elements to the JAX-WS serviceand client; build, package, and deploy the service; and then build and runthe client application. This example service was developed by starting with an unsecured service,helloservice,which can be found in the directorytut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/jaxws/helloservice and is discussed inCreating a Simple Web Service and Client with JAX-WS. You build on this simple application by adding the necessary elements tosecure the application using basic authentication. The example client used in this applicationcan be found attut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/jaxws/simpleclient-basicauth, which only varies from the originalsimpleclientapplication in that it uses thehelloservice-basicauth endpoint instead of thehelloservice endpoint. Thecompleted version of the secured service can be found attut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/jaxws/helloservice-basicauth. In general, the following steps are necessary to add basic authentication to aJAX-WS web service. In the example application included with this tutorial, many ofthese steps have been completed for you and are listed here simply toshow what needs to be done should you wish to create asimilar application.
Annotating the ServiceIn this example, annotations are used to specify which users are authorized toaccess which methods of this service. In this simple example, the@RolesAllowedannotation is used to specify that users in the application role ofbasicUserare authorized access to thesayHello(String name) method. This application role must belinked to a group of users on the Application Server. Linking the rolesto groups is discussed inLinking Roles to Groups. The source code for the original/helloservice application was modified as shown inthe following code snippet (modifications inbold). This file can be foundin the following location: tut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/jaxws/helloservice-basicauth/src/java/helloservice/basicauth/endpoint/Hello.java The code snippet is as follows: package helloservice.basicauth.endpoint;import javax.jws.WebMethod;import javax.jws.WebService;import javax.annotation.security.RolesAllowed;@WebService()public class Hello { private String message = new String("Hello, "); @WebMethod()@RolesAllowed("basicUser") public String sayHello(String name) { return message + name + "."; }}The@RolesAllowed annotation specifies that only users in the role ofbasicUser willbe allowed to access thesayHello (String name) method. An@RolesAllowed annotation implicitly declares a rolethat will be referenced in the application, therefore, no@DeclareRoles annotation is required. Adding Security Elements to the Deployment DescriptorTo enable basic authentication for the service, add security elements to the applicationdeployment descriptor,web.xml. The security elements that need to be added to thedeployment descriptor include the<security-constraint> and<login-config>elements. These security elements are discussed in moredetail inDeclaring Security Requirements in a Deployment Descriptor and in the Java Servlet Specification. The following code isadded to the original deployment descriptor to enable HTTP basic authentication. The resultingdeployment descriptor is located intut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/jaxws/helloservice-basicauth/web/WEB-INF/web.xml. <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><web-app xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee" version="2.5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee/web-app_2_5.xsd"> <display-name>HelloService</display-name> <listener> <listener-class> com.sun.xml.ws.transport.http.servlet.WSServletContextListener </listener-class> </listener> <servlet> <display-name>HelloService</display-name> <servlet-name>HelloService</servlet-name> <servlet-class>com.sun.xml.ws.transport.http.servlet.WSServlet</servlet-class> </servlet> <servlet-mapping> <servlet-name>HelloService</servlet-name> <url-pattern>/hello</url-pattern> </servlet-mapping> <session-config> <session-timeout>30</session-timeout> </session-config> <security-constraint> <display-name>SecurityConstraint</display-name> <web-resource-collection> <web-resource-name>WRCollection</web-resource-name> <url-pattern>/hello</url-pattern> </web-resource-collection> <auth-constraint> <role-name>basicUser</role-name> </auth-constraint> <user-data-constraint> <transport-guarantee>NONE</transport-guarantee> </user-data-constraint> </security-constraint> <login-config> <auth-constraint>BASIC</auth-constraint> <realm-name>file</realm-name> </login-config></web-app> Linking Roles to GroupsThe role ofbasicUser has been defined for this application, but there isno group ofbasicUser defined for the Application Server. To map the rolethat is defined for the application (basicUser) to a group that is definedon the Application Server(user), add a<security-role-mapping> element to the runtime deployment descriptor,sun-web.xml, as shown below (modifications from the original file are inbold). The resultingruntime deployment descriptor is located intut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/jaxws/helloservice-basicauth/web/WEB-INF/sun-web.xml. <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><!DOCTYPE sun-web-app PUBLIC "-//Sun Microsystems, Inc.//DTD Application Server 9.0 Servlet 2.5//EN" "http://www.sun.com/software/appserver/dtds/sun-web-app_2_5-0.dtd"><sun-web-app error-url=""> <context-root>/helloservice</context-root> <class-loader delegate="true"/><security-role-mapping><role-name>basicUser</role-name><group-name>user</group-name></security-role-mapping></sun-web-app> Building and Deployinghelloservice with Basic Authentication Using NetBeans IDETo build, package, and deploy thejaxws/helloservice-basicauth example using NetBeans IDE, follow thesesteps, or the steps described inBuilding, Packaging, and Deploying the Service.
Building and Deployinghelloservice with Basic Authentication Using AntTo build, package, and deploy thejaxws/helloservice-basicauth example using the Ant tool, followthese steps, or the steps described inBuilding, Packaging, and Deploying the Service.
You can test the service by selecting it in the Admin Consoleand choosing Test. For more information on how to do this, readTesting the Service without a Client. Building and Running thehelloservice Client Application with Basic Authentication Using NetBeans IDETo build and run the client application,simpleclient-basicauth, using NetBeans IDE, follow thesesteps. Thehelloservice-basicauth service must be deployed onto the Application Server before compilingthe client files. For information on deploying the service, readBuilding and Deployinghelloservice with Basic Authentication Using NetBeans IDE.
The client displays the following output: [echo] running application client container.[exec] Retrieving the port from the following service: helloservice.basicauth.endpoint.HelloService@c8769b[exec] Invoking the sayHello operation on the port.[exec] Hello, No Name. Building and Running thehelloservice Client Application with Basic Authentication Using AntTo build and run the client application,simpleclient-basicauth, using the Ant tool, followthese steps. The secured service must be deployed onto the Application Server beforeyou can successfully compile the client application. For more information on deploying theservice, readBuilding and Deployinghelloservice with Basic Authentication Using Ant.
The client displays the following output: [echo] running application client container.[exec] Retrieving the port from the following service: helloservice.basicauth.endpoint.HelloService@c8769b[exec] Invoking the sayHello operation on the port.[exec] Hello, No Name. Copyright © 2010, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Legal Notices |