hi, yeah , these values are actual values used. And the security realm I use is written by me.
On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 7:14 AM, Ivan <[email protected]> wrote: > Are these properties the actual values used in your real environment ? And > which login moduel do you use, from Geronimo or written by yourself ? > > 2011/1/3 sanjay kumar <[email protected]> > > Hi, >> I am calling a realm by its name and passing the user name and password >> as principal and credentials. In the initializer method of login module of >> realm I am getting the username and password. But password is in encrypted >> form. I need the password to be in decrypted form. My code is given below >> about how I am passing the username and password and how I am getting them: >> >> Test client code:(only some portion, not full) >> >> Properties props = new Properties(); >> >> props.put("java.naming.factory.initial","org.apache.openejb.client.RemoteInitialContextFactory"); >> >> props.put("java.naming.provider.url", "127.0.0.1:4201"); >> props.put("java.naming.security.principal", "sanjay"); >> props.put("java.naming.security.credentials", "test"); >> ..................... >> ..................... >> ..................... >> >> >> the login module code in which I get the username and password: >> >> >> Callback[] callbacks = new Callback[2]; >> callbacks[0] = new NameCallback("username: "); >> callbacks[1] = new PasswordCallback("password: ", false); >> try{ >> handler.handle(callbacks); >> >> username = ((NameCallback)callbacks[0]).getName(); >> // This line prints the username as specified above code as principal. i.e >> sanjay >> System.out.println("@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@"+username); >> if(username == null) >> { >> throw new LoginException("No user specified"); >> } >> >> char[] tmpPassword >> =((PasswordCallback)callbacks[1]).getPassword(); >> //This line prints the password but in encrypted form. its something like >> this :[...@57a3ec8d. I need this to be as it is in credentials in test code >> i.e it should print "test". >> System.out.println("@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@"+tmpPassword); >> if (tmpPassword == null) >> { >> // treat null password as an empty password >> tmpPassword = new char[0]; >> } >> System.out.println("@@@@@@@@@@@"+tmpPassword); >> >> } >> >> >> >> >> >> I am using Geronimo 2.2. Any suggestions? >> >> >> >> >> >> >> -- >> Regards: >> Sanjay Kumar >> [email protected] >> Java Developer >> >> >> > > > -- > Ivan > -- Regards: Sanjay Kumar [email protected] Java Developer
