Thank you Les, think my situation is a little bit different. In this case, I'm 
building an API that allows a mobile application to talk to the server. We 
currently authenticate using the application user's credentials 
(username/password), using a /authenticate REST api endpoint. That responds 
with an authentication token that the application retains. Subsequent calls 
from the mobile app to the server use the authentication token to validate the 
user's login and authorize them for whatever action they wish to take…

This will definitely be exposed only over SSL, because I recognize that the 
token based approach could be vulnerable especially to session takeover attacks.

What we're currently doing is basically letting Shiro create a session and 
we're passing the session id back as the token via the /authenticate method. 
Then, we use that session id to retrieve the subject in later requests. So, 
we're just trying to figure out how to best implement this approach.  

--  
Sean Blaes
Sent with Sparrow (http://www.sparrowmailapp.com/?sig)


On Tuesday, August 7, 2012 at 2:14 PM, Les Hazlewood wrote:

> For web-scale scalability, most REST implementors prefer that REST APIs 
> should be stateless.  While you _can_ have REST APIs that use sessions, most 
> choose to remain stateless and authenticate on every request as a best 
> practice.
>  
> Assuming you'll authenticate every request, your token will be the data 
> you'll need to submit to Shiro on each request.   
>  
> In security circles, this is known as a 'bearer token' - the data isn't 
> actual authentication principals+credentials, instead it is a token that you 
> automatically assume that the presenter of the token (aka 'holder' or 
> 'bearer') is allowed to have it and you can trust it.  I should point out 
> that bearer tokens are less secure than other mechanisms, but I won't talk 
> about that here, as that is a different thread entirely.  But sometimes (e.g. 
> your case?) maybe they're the only mechanism that can be used.  
>  
> Assuming you want to perform bearer token authentication In Shiro, you can 
> implement the AuthenticationToken interface, e.g.:
>  
> public class BearerAuthenticationToken implements AuthenticationToken {  
>     public BearerAuthenticationToken(String token) {...}
>     ....
> }
>  
> You can then create a Realm implementation that 'supports' this 
> BearerAuthenticationToken implementation.  This ensures that only this Realm 
> will process these types of authentication attempts:  
>  
> public class BearerTokenRealm extends AuthorizingRealm /* or 
> AuthenticatingRealm */ {
>      
>     public BearerTokenRealm() {
>         //this makes the supports(...) method return true only if the token 
> is an instanceof BAT:
>         setAuthenticationTokenClass(BearerAuthenticationToken.class);
>     }
>  
>     public AuthenticationInfo doGetAuthenticationInfo(AuthenticationToken 
> token) throws AuthenticationException {  
>         BearerAuthenticationToken bearerToken = 
> (BearerAuthenticationToken)token;
>  
>         //assert the bearerToken, and if valid, look up the account data and 
> return
>         //an AuthenticationInfo instance representing that account.
>     }
> }
>  
> In my opinion, the String contents should be encrypted with AES-256 
> encryption using a private key known only to the application.  The 
> unencrypted value can be whatever you want - e.g. an account ID that you can 
> use to look up account information.  
>  
> Next, you'll need to create an AuthenticatingFilter implementation that knows 
> how to extract the token from the HTTP Headers and construct a 
> BearerAuthenticationToken instance, e.g.:
>  
> BearerTokenAuthenticatingFilter extends AuthenticatingFilter {
>      
>     @Override
>     public AuthenticationToken createToken(....) {
>  
>     }
>  
> }
>  
> You can look at the source code for Shiro's BasicHttpAuthenticationFilter 
> implementation to give you ideas when implementing your own BearerTokenFilter:
>  
> http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/shiro/trunk/web/src/main/java/org/apache/shiro/web/filter/authc/BasicHttpAuthenticationFilter.java
>   
>  
> Finally, you can set up the filter and filter chain definitions in shiro.ini 
> (or equivalent in Spring or Guice, etc):
>  
> [main]
>  
> bearerAuthc = com.company.shiro.web.filter.BearerTokenAuthenticatingFilter 
> (http://web.filter.BearerTokenAuthenticatingFilter)  
>  
> [urls]
>  
> /rest/** = ssl, noSessionCreation, bearerAuthc
>  
> I'd definitely use the SSL filter to enforce SSL to ensure the token cannot 
> be modified in transit.  This is one of a few security reasons why bearer 
> tokens must be secured in additional ways (e.g. they are not as strong as, 
> say, digest-based authentication that don't need SSL).  
>  
> HTH!
>  
> --
> Les Hazlewood | @lhazlewood
> CTO, Stormpath | http://stormpath.com | @goStormpath | 888.391.5282
> Stormpath wins GigaOM Structure Launchpad Award! http://bit.ly/MvZkMk
>  
>  
> On Mon, Aug 6, 2012 at 2:28 PM, Sean Blaes <[email protected] 
> (mailto:[email protected])> wrote:
> > I've been doing a ton of research on this and just want to validate the 
> > best approach before I move forward...
> >  
> > My requirement is that I do token based authentication for a REST/Jersey 
> > service that is also integrated with Spring. This means that there is an 
> > "authenticate" service to which the username/password will be posted, which 
> > will respond with a string token. That token can be whatever I want. All 
> > other method request will pass the token in an HTTP header. This is the 
> > requirement because we support several existing clients and cannot expect 
> > them to change at our whim, and this is how the current service works that 
> > is using a home-grown auth framework.  
> >  
> > I'm looking at disabling session creation, as described at:
> >  
> > https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/SHIRO/Session+Management#SessionManagement-StatelessApplications%28Sessionless%29
> >   
> >  
> > Specifically with  
> >  
> > /rest/** = noSessionCreation, anon   
> >  
> > The question then is how do I best store and retrieve the fact that the 
> > user with a given token has been authenticated? Should I just store it in 
> > ehcache and and retrieve it with a "remember me manager" upon each request? 
> > Or, do I need to implement a secondary realm that logs in by the stored 
> > auth token rather than the user/password. Lastly, I could keep sessions 
> > enabled but I really don't need anything from the session other than this 
> > token, I don't think.  
> >  
> > --  
> > Sean Blaes
> > Sent with Sparrow (http://www.sparrowmailapp.com/?sig)
> >  
>  

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