Well, Weblogic have been interfacing NT's users domain for last several versions now. So it CAN be done, but it probably takes a commercial vendor to implement bridging. zm.
-----Original Message----- From: A mailing list about Java Server Pages specification and reference [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Joe Cheng Sent: Sunday, January 06, 2002 5:32 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: taking NT Authentication for JSP App. Merrill's right, this technique absolutely won't work because the most it could do is get the username at the server, not the client. Maybe if you're using IIS as your webserver, you could set the directory security to enforce NT authentication, then see if the request has any security-related headers. I believe this works OK in ASP, not sure if I've ever heard of anyone doing it with JSP. =========================================================================== To unsubscribe: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "signoff JSP-INTEREST". For digest: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "set JSP-INTEREST DIGEST". Some relevant FAQs on JSP/Servlets can be found at: http://archives.java.sun.com/jsp-interest.html http://java.sun.com/products/jsp/faq.html http://www.esperanto.org.nz/jsp/jspfaq.jsp http://www.jguru.com/faq/index.jsp http://www.jspinsider.com =========================================================================== To unsubscribe: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "signoff JSP-INTEREST". For digest: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "set JSP-INTEREST DIGEST". Some relevant FAQs on JSP/Servlets can be found at: http://archives.java.sun.com/jsp-interest.html http://java.sun.com/products/jsp/faq.html http://www.esperanto.org.nz/jsp/jspfaq.jsp http://www.jguru.com/faq/index.jsp http://www.jspinsider.com
