IIRC (and I might not, since I'm no Java expert) OpenSSO was only being used
for the Passive STS, and there was a custom metro Active STS. If that is
correct, to get the trader client working sans OpenSSO, you would need to
configure it to use the .NET Passive STS, or the WSAS Passive STS. I haven't
been able to find specific emails discussing those scenarios (because the mail
volume is so large, and the keywords I would search so frequently occurring),
but I am certain that the trader_client would not have been removed if we could
either (a) show those scenarios working and/or (b) divorce the metro
trader_client entirely from its OpenSSO dependency.
I was looking at a slide deck from a presentation on Stonehenge (shortly before
the release of M2), and the known good compatibility was as follows:
.NET Passive STS -> Metro Active STS
.NET Web App -> Metro Active STS
.NET Web App -> Metro Business Service
.NET Business Service -> Metro Order Processor
.NET Business Service -> WSAS Order Processor
.NET Business Service -> .NET Order Processor
WSAS Passive STS -> .NET Web App
WSAS Business Service -> Metro Order Processor
WSAS Business Service -> .NET Order Processor
WSAS Business Service -> WSAS Order Processor
So the project did demonstrate interoperability, but also found some
incompatibilities that were not yet overcome.
- Nick Hauenstein
-----Original Message-----
From: Akopov, Sergei (GE Intelligent Platforms) [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, December 02, 2010 3:00 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: Error building java trader_client
Is it required to have OpenSSO setup to make metro trader-client to talk
to metro service, at least?
I am a bit confused, maybe I am asking the wrong questions but I thought
this was a project on interoperability. Is Microsoft still involved in
this project?
Serge.
-----Original Message-----
From: Nick Hauenstein [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, December 02, 2010 4:12 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: Error building java trader_client
I don't think that release ever made it out (due to the Sun/Oracle
merger). Another company forked OpenSSO, and released it under the name
OpenAM. OpenAM Snapshot 9 [1] *should* be the equivalent of OpenSSO 9
Express, but don't hold me to it.
We were all using a random nightly build that disappeared one day.
- Nick Hauenstein
[1]
https://wikis.forgerock.org/confluence/display/openam/OpenAM+Snapshot+9+
Release+Notes
-----Original Message-----
From: Akopov, Sergei (GE Intelligent Platforms)
[mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, December 02, 2010 12:57 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: Error building java trader_client
Nick,
The install list includes OpenSSO 9 Express deployment. I cannot find
the zip file on the web, does anyone have it?
Thanks,
Serge.