On Mon, 3 Nov 2025 18:50:37 GMT, Nick Hall <[email protected]> wrote: >> _Purpose_ >> >> This PR allows Linux based applications using JAAS to acquire Kerberos TGTs >> natively using the local system's Kerberos libraries/configuration, building >> on existing support on Windows/MacOSX. >> >> _Rationale_ >> >> Currently the (pure java) JAAS codebase only supports file-based credential >> caches (ccaches). There are many other useful types of ccache accessible >> via the local system libraries; this change allows credentials to be >> acquired natively using those libraries, and thus adds support for all other >> ccache types supported by the local system (e.g. KCM, in-memory and kernel >> types), This support already exists on MacOSX and Windows. >> >> The code change here largely uses the MacOSX code, edited for Linux with >> associated build system changes. It also adds an appropriate jtreg test >> which uses some native test helper code to manufacture an in-memory cache, >> and then uses the new code to acquire these credentials natively. This has >> been tested on Linux/Mac and the jtreg test passes on each (I couldn't see >> any existing tests on MacOSX for this feature). >> >> Additionally this PR fixes a bug that's existed for a while (see L585-588 in >> `nativeccache.c`) - without this code, this is a 100% reproducible segfault >> on Linux (it's unclear why this hasn't affected the Mac JVMs up to now, >> probably just no calling code that provides an empty list of addresses). It >> also fixes a (non problem) typo in the variable name in a function prototype. >> >> _Implementation Detail_ >> >> Note that there were multiple possible ways of doing this: >> >> 1) Duplicate the MacOSX `nativeccache.c`, edit lightly for Linux and build a >> new library on Linux only (`liblinuxkrb5`), leaving MacOSX largely >> unchanged, but at the expense of this code duplication. >> >> 2) Create a new shared library used on both platforms with conditional >> compilation to manage the differences. This necessitates a library name >> change on MacOSX and potentially knock-on packaging changes on that >> platform, which seemed a potentially expensive side-effect. >> >> 3) Create a shared `nativeccache.c` (using `EXTRA_SRC` in the build) and >> build separate MacOSX/Linux libraries. This allows the MacOSX library name >> to remain unchanged, and only adds a new library in Linux. >> >> I tried all three options; 3 seemed to be the best compromise all around, >> although is one of the options that effectively introduces a "no-op" change >> on MacOSX as a result. Hopefully the additional jtreg test is sufficient to >> compensat... > > Nick Hall has updated the pull request incrementally with one additional > commit since the last revision: > > Address second set of @erikj79's build comments
@smemery have pushed fixes for your comments. I've tested the changes on Linux, but don't have a Mac here today to test the build changes - so will attend to anything that fails in the CI. ------------- PR Comment: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/28075#issuecomment-3521561415
