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package com.sun.enterprise.admin.util;
import com.sun.enterprise.config.serverbeans.Domain;
import com.sun.enterprise.config.serverbeans.SecureAdmin;
import com.sun.enterprise.security.store.AsadminSecurityUtil;
import com.sun.enterprise.util.io.ServerDirs;
import java.io.File;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.net.URL;
import java.security.KeyStore;
import java.security.KeyStoreException;
import java.security.NoSuchAlgorithmException;
import java.security.UnrecoverableKeyException;
import java.security.cert.Certificate;
import java.security.cert.CertificateException;
import java.util.logging.Level;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
import javax.net.ssl.KeyManager;
import javax.net.ssl.KeyManagerFactory;
import org.glassfish.hk2.api.ServiceLocator;
import org.glassfish.internal.api.Globals;
import org.jvnet.hk2.config.ConfigParser;
import org.jvnet.hk2.config.Dom;
import org.jvnet.hk2.config.DomDocument;
/**
* Encapsulates the implementation of secure admin.
*
* A process that needs to send admin messages to another server and might not
* have a user-provided username and password should inject this class and
* invoke {@link #initClientAuthentication(char[], boolean) } before it
* sends a message to the admin listener. The code which actually prepares
* the message can then retrieve the initialized information from this
* class in constructing the outbound admin message.
*
* The class offers static accessors to the important values so, for example,
* RemoteAdminCommand (which is not a service and it therefore not subject
* to injection) can retrieve what it needs to build the outbound admin
* request.
*
* This allows us to support CLI commands which need to connect to the DAS
* securely but will have neither a user-provided master password nor
* a human who we could prompt for the master password.
*
* @author Tim Quinn
*/
public class SecureAdminClientManager {
private static final Logger logger = AdminLoggerInfo.getLogger();
/**
* the hk2-managed instance - used only by the static accessors
*/
private static SecureAdminClientManager instance = null;
/**
* is cert-based secure admin enabled?
*/
private boolean isEnabled;
/**
* suitable for passing to SSLContext.init
*/
private KeyManager[] keyManagers = null;
/**
* suitable for setting as the value in an HTTP header to flag a
* message source as trusted to submit admin requests (only in the
* non-secure case)
*/
private String configuredAdminIndicator = null;
private Domain domain;
private SecureAdmin secureAdmin = null;
private String instanceAlias = null;
/**
* Returns KeyManagers which access the SSL key store for use in
* performing client cert authentication. The returned KeyManagers will
* most likely be passed to {@link SSLContext.init }.
* @return KeyManagers
*/
public static KeyManager[] getKeyManagers() {
return (instance == null ? null : instance.keyManagers());
}
/**
* Prepares the manager so SSL/TLS will provide the correct client cert
* when connecting to a remote admin port. The main result of invoking this method is to
* build an array of KeyManagers which can be passed to SSLContext.initClientAuthentication
* so SSL can use the managers to find certs that meet the requirements of
* the partner on the other end of the connection.
*
* This method opens the keystore, so it will need the master password. The calling
* command should pass the master password which the user specified in the
* file specified by the --passwordfile option (if any).
* Because the user-provided password might be
* wrong or missing, the caller also indicates whether a human user is present to
* respond to a prompt for the password. This will not be the case, for
* example, during an unattended start-up of an instance.
*
* The caller also provides at least one of the server name, the node directory,
* or the node. These are used to locate where the domain.xml file is
* that contains security config information we need.
*
* @param commandMasterPassword master password provided by the user on the command line; null if none
* @param isInteractive whether the caller is in a context where a human could be prompted to enter a password
* @param serverName name of the server where domain.xml resides
* @param nodeDir directory of the node where domain.xml resides
* @param node name of the node whose directory contains domain.xml
*/
public synchronized static void initClientAuthentication(
final char[] commandMasterPassword,
final boolean isInteractive,
final String serverName,
final String nodeDir,
final String node,
final File nodeDirRoot) {
/*
* The client/instance security information is common to a whole domain.
* So, once this manager is initialized the same settings will be used
* going forward. It does not matter whether a different server name
* or node directory or node is specified. They should all lead to the
* same, shared configuration for whether client/instance SSL security
* should be used or not.
*/
if (instance == null) {
instance = new SecureAdminClientManager(commandMasterPassword,
isInteractive, serverName, nodeDir, node, nodeDirRoot);
}
}
private SecureAdminClientManager(final char[] commandMasterPassword,
final boolean isInteractive,
final String serverName,
final String nodeDir,
final String node,
final File nodeDirRoot) {
domain = prepareDomain(serverName, nodeDir, node, nodeDirRoot);
if (domain == null) {
return;
}
secureAdmin = domain.getSecureAdmin();
isEnabled = SecureAdmin.Util.isEnabled(secureAdmin);
configuredAdminIndicator = SecureAdmin.Util.configuredAdminIndicator(secureAdmin);
if (isEnabled) {
instanceAlias = SecureAdmin.Util.instanceAlias(secureAdmin);
logger.fine("SecureAdminClientManager: secure admin is enabled");
} else {
logger.fine("SecureAdminClientManager: secure admin is disabled");
}
/*
* Store the static value of the admin indicator header so (for example)
* RemoteAdminCommand can get it using the static accessor to
* prepare the outbound admin request.
*/
configuredAdminIndicator = SecureAdmin.Util.configuredAdminIndicator(secureAdmin);
if (isEnabled) {
try {
/*
* The keystore should contain certs for both the
* admin (DAS) and the instances (or clients).
* If we point SSL at that keystore then it could choose any
* public cert that matches what the server is asking for, which
* means it might choose to return the DAS cert - or some other
* cert the user might have added to the keystore. Because
* the admin code receiving the admin request is expecting us
* to use the instance cert, we need to make sure that happens.
* So, we'll create a temporary internal keystore containing
* the cert for the configured instance alias and we'll use that
* keystore for SSL.
*/
keyManagers = prepareKeyManagers(commandMasterPassword, isInteractive);
} catch (Exception ex) {
throw new RuntimeException(ex);
}
}
}
/**
* Reports whether the secure admin is enabled, according to the current
* configuration.
*
* @return if secure admin is enabled
*/
public boolean isEnabled() {
return isEnabled;
}
public KeyManager[] keyManagers() {
return keyManagers;
}
public String configuredAdminIndicatorValue() {
return configuredAdminIndicator;
}
private Domain prepareDomain(final String serverName,
final String nodeDir,
final String node,
final File nodeDirRoot) {
/*
* At least one of serverName, nodeDir, or node must be non-null.
* Otherwise we'll have no way of figuring out which domain.xml to
* look in to see if we should use client authentication. This will
* often be the case, for instance, if create-local-instance is
* run directly (not from another command). In such cases, if
* secure admin is enabled the user should provide --user and
* --passwordfile on the command line to authenticate to the DAS.
*/
if (serverName == null
&& nodeDir == null
&& node == null) {
return null;
}
final ServerDirsSelector selector;
try {
final String nodeDirToUse = (nodeDir != null
? nodeDir
: nodeDirRoot.getAbsolutePath());
selector = ServerDirsSelector.getInstance(null, serverName, nodeDirToUse, node);
} catch (Exception ex) {
throw new RuntimeException(ex);
}
/*
* If the caller did not pass any of the values we can use to locate
* the domain.xml, then we cannot run in client-cert mode.
*/
final ServerDirs dirs = selector.dirs();
if (dirs == null) {
return null;
}
final File domainXMLFile = dirs.getDomainXml();
if ( ! domainXMLFile.exists()) {
return null;
}
try {
ServiceLocator habitat = Globals.getStaticHabitat();
ConfigParser parser = new ConfigParser(habitat);
URL domainURL = domainXMLFile.toURI().toURL();
DomDocument doc = parser.parse(domainURL);
Dom domDomain = doc.getRoot();
Domain d = domDomain.createProxy(Domain.class);
return d;
} catch (Exception ex) {
throw new RuntimeException(ex);
}
}
private KeyManager[] prepareKeyManagers(final char[] commandMasterPassword,
final boolean isPromptable) throws KeyStoreException, NoSuchAlgorithmException, CertificateException, IOException, UnrecoverableKeyException {
/*
* The configuration specifies what alias we should use for SSL client
* authentication. Because the keystore on disk contains multiple certs,
* extract the required cert from the on-disk keystore and add it to a
* temporary key store so it's the only cert there.
*/
Certificate instanceCert = getCertForConfiguredAlias(
commandMasterPassword, isPromptable);
final KeyStore ks = instanceCertOnlyKS(instanceCert);
/*
* The caller will eventually need an array of KeyManagers to pass to
* SSLContext.initClientAuthentication. Create that array now from the internal, single-cert
* keystore so it's available later.
*/
final KeyManagerFactory kmf = KeyManagerFactory.getInstance("SunX509");
kmf.init(ks, new char[] {});
return kmf.getKeyManagers();
}
private KeyStore instanceCertOnlyKS(final Certificate instanceCert) throws KeyStoreException {
final KeyStore ks = KeyStore.getInstance("JKS");
ks.setCertificateEntry(instanceAlias, instanceCert);
return ks;
}
private Certificate getCertForConfiguredAlias(
final char[] commandMasterPassword,
final boolean isPromptable) throws KeyStoreException, NoSuchAlgorithmException, CertificateException, IOException {
final KeyStore permanentKS = AsadminSecurityUtil
.getInstance(commandMasterPassword, isPromptable)
.getAsadminKeystore();
Certificate cert = permanentKS.getCertificate(instanceAlias);
if (cert != null) {
logger.log(Level.FINER, "Found matching cert in keystore for instance alias {0}", instanceAlias);
} else {
logger.log(Level.FINER, "Could not find matching cert in keystore for instance alias {0}", instanceAlias);
}
return cert;
}
}