My conclusion so far:

To do a login, first create an InitialContext using a plain old 
org.jnp.interfaces.NamingContextFactory as the initial context factory.  On the 
server side, have a bean called "LoginCheck" or something, which takes a 
username and password as args, and returns boolean.  On the client side, if 
that bean returns true, THEN it is time to create another InitalContext but 
this time using a JndiLoginInitialContextFactory, storing username and password 
credentials in it.  Then everything is good to go.

If this really is the only way to do it, that is retarded, and it's probably 
the fault of JAAS.  No matter how powerful the thing is, if it doesn't provide 
a reasonably good way for clients to be able to log in and display back to the 
user, "your password was incorrect", the whole thing is junk.  Yes it can be 
used, and I like the fact that I can put annotations on my beans to enforce 
roles on them, but how hard could it be to get this thing right?


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