Security planning overview

When you access information on the Internet, you connect through Web servers and product servers to the enterprise data at the back end. This section examines some typical configurations and common security practices.

This section also examines the security protection that is offered by each security layer and common security practice for good quality of protection in end-to-end security. The following figure illustrates the building blocks that comprise the operating environment for security within WebSphere Application Server:

The following information describes each of the components of WebSphere Application Server security, Java security, and Platform security that are illustrated in the previous figure.
WebSphere Application Server security
WebSphere security
WebSphere Application Server security enforces security policies and services in a unified manner on access to Web resources, enterprise beans, and JMX administrative resources. It consists of WebSphere Application Server security technologies and features to support the needs of a secure enterprise environment.
Java security
Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE) security application programming interface (API)
The security collaborator enforces Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE)-based security policies and supports J2EE security APIs.
CORBA security (CSIv2)
Any calls made among secure Object Request Brokers (ORB) are invoked over the Common Security Interoperability Version 2 (CSIv2) security protocol that sets up the security context and the necessary quality of protection. After the session is established, the call is passed up to the enterprise bean layer.

[This information applies to Version 6.0.x and previous servers only that are federated in a Version 6.1 cell.] For backward compatibility, WebSphere Application Server supports the Secure Authentication Service (SAS) security protocol, which was used in prior releases of WebSphere Application Server and other IBM products.

Java 2 security
The Java 2 Security model offers fine-grained access control to system resources including file system, system property, socket connection, threading, class loading, and so on. Application code must explicitly grant the required permission to access a protected resource.
Java Virtual Machine (JVM) 5.0
The JVM security model provides a layer of security above the operating system layer. For example, JVM security protects the memory from unrestricted access, creates exceptions when errors occur within a thread, and defines array types.
Platform security
Operating system security

The security infrastructure of the underlying operating system provides certain security services for WebSphere Application Server. These services include the file system security support that secures sensitive files in the product installation for WebSphere Application Server. The system administrator can configure the product to obtain authentication information directly from the operating system user registry.

The security infrastructure of the underlying operating system provides certain security services for WebSphere Application Server. The operating system identity of the servant controller, and daemon Started Task, as established by the STARTED profile, is the identity that is used to control access to system resources such as files or sockets. Optionally, the operating system security can provide authentication services using the User Registry of local operating system, and/or authorization services using SAF Authorization for the WebSphere Administration console and for applications running under the application server.

In addition to knowledge of Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) and Transport Layer Security (TLS), the administrator must be familiar with System Authorization Facility (SAF) and Resource Access Control Facility (RACF), or an equivalent SAF based product.

The identity and verification of users can be managed by using a Local Operating System as the User Registry, RACF or equivalent SAF base product. Alternatively, an LDAP, Custom, or Federated User Registry can be used.

WebSphere can be configured to use SAF Authorization, which will use RACF or an equivalent SAF based product to manage and protect users and group resources. Alternatively, WebSphere can be configured to use WebSphere Authorization or a JACC External Authorization Provider.

When using either Local Operating System as the User Registry and/or using SAF Authorization, security auditing is an inherit feature of RACF or the equivalent SAF based products.

Network security
The Network Security layers provide transport level authentication and message integrity and confidentiality. You can configure the communication between separate application servers to use Secure Sockets Layer (SSL). Additionally, you can use IP Security and Virtual Private Network (VPN) for added message protection.
WebSphere Application Server Network Deployment installation
Important: A node agent instance exists on every computer node.

Each product application server consists of a Web container, an Enterprise Java Beans (EJB) container, and the administrative subsystem.

The WebSphere Application Server deployment manager contains only WebSphere Application Server administrative code and the administrative console.

The administrative console is a special J2EE Web application that provides the interface for performing administrative functions. WebSphere Application Server configuration data is stored in XML descriptor files, which must be protected by operating system security. Passwords and other sensitive configuration data can be modified using the administrative console. However, you must protect these passwords and sensitive data. For more information, see Encoding passwords in files.

The administrative console Web application has a setup data constraint that requires access to the administrative console servlets and JavaServer Pages (JSP) files only through an SSL connection when administrative security is enabled.

In WebSphere Application Server Version 6.0.x and earlier, the administrator console HTTPS port was configured to use DummyServerKeyFile.jks and DummyServerTrustFile.jks with the default self- signed certificate. The dummy certificates and keys must be replaced immediately after WebSphere Application Server installation; the keys are common in all of the installation and are therefore insecure. WebSphere Application Server Version 6.1 provides integrated certificate and key management, which generate distinct private key and self-signed certificate with embedded server host name to enable host name verification. WebSphere Application Server Version 6.1 also enables integration with external certificate (CA) authority to use CA-issued certificates. The WebSphere Application Servers Version 6.1 installation process provides an option to enable administrative security during installation. As a result, a WebSphere Application Server process is secured immediately after installation.

The following figure shows a typical multiple-tier business computing environment.

Administrative security

[This information applies to Version 6.0.x and previous servers only that are federated in a Version 6.1 cell.] WebSphere Application Servers interact with each other through CSIv2 and Secure Authentication Services (SAS) security protocols as well as the HTTP and HTTPS protocols.
Important: SAS is supported only between Version 6.0.x and previous version servers that have been federated in a Version 6.1 cell.

You can configure these protocols to use Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) when you enable WebSphere Application Serveradministrative security. The WebSphere Application Server administrative subsystem in every server uses SOAP, Java Management Extensions (JMX) connectors and Remote Method Invocation over the Internet Inter-ORB Protocol (RMI/IIOP) JMX connectors to pass administrative commands and configuration data. When administrative security is disabled, the SOAP JMX connector uses the HTTP protocol and the RMI/IIOP connector uses the TCP/IP protocol. When administrative security is enabled, the SOAP JMX connector always uses the HTTPS protocol. When administrative security is enabled, you can configure the RMI/IIOP JMX connector to either use SSL or to use TCP/IP. It is recommended that you enable administrative security and enable SSL to protect the sensitive configuration data.

When administrative security is enabled, you can disable application security at each individual application server by clearing the Enable administrative security option at the server level. For more information, see Securing specific application servers. Disabling application server security does not affect the administrative subsystem in that application server, which is controlled by the security configuration only. Both administrative subsystem and application code in an application server share the optional per server security protocol configuration.

Security for J2EE resources

Security for J2EE resources is provided by the Web container and the EJB container. Each container provides two kinds of security: declarative security and programmatic security.

In declarative security, an application security structure includes network message integrity and confidentiality, authentication requirements, security roles, and access control. Access control is expressed in a form that is external to the application. In particular, the deployment descriptor is the primary vehicle for declarative security in the J2EE platform. WebSphere Application Server maintains J2EE security policy, including information that is derived from the deployment descriptor and specified by deployers and administrators in a set of XML descriptor files. At runtime, the container uses the security policy that is defined in the XML descriptor files to enforce data constraints and access control.

When declarative security alone is not sufficient to express the security model of an application, you might use programmatic security to make access decisions. When administrative security is enabled and application server security is not disabled at the server level, J2EE applications security is enforced. When the security policy is specified for a Web resource, the Web container performs access control when the resource is requested by a Web client. The Web container challenges the Web client for authentication data if none is present according to the specified authentication method, ensures that the data constraints are met, and determines whether the authenticated user has the required security role. The Web security collaborator enforces role-based access control by using an access manager implementation. An access manager makes authorization decisions that are based on security policy derived from the deployment descriptor. An authenticated user principal can access the requested servlet or JSP file if the user principal has one of the required security roles. Servlets and JSP files can use the HttpServletRequest methods, isUserInRole and getUserPrincipal.

When administrative security and application security are enabled, and the application server level application security is not disabled, the EJB container enforces access control on EJB method invocation.

The authentication occurs regardless of whether method permission is defined for the specific EJB method. The EJB security collaborator enforces role-based access control by using an access manager implementation. An access manager makes authorization decisions that are based on security policy derived from the deployment descriptor. An authenticated user principal can access the requested EJB method if it has one of the required security roles. EJB code can use the EJBContext methods, isCallerInRole and getCallerPrincipal. Use the J2EE role-based access control to protect valuable business data from access by unauthorized users through the Internet and the intranet. Refer to Securing Web applications using an assembly tool, and Securing enterprise bean applications.

Role-based security

WebSphere Application Server extends the security, role-based access control to administrative resources including the JMX system management subsystem, user registries, and Java Naming and Directory Interface (JNDI) name space. WebSphere administrative subsystem defines four administrative security roles:
Monitor role
A monitor can view the configuration information and status but cannot make any changes.
Operator role
An operator can trigger run-time state changes, such as start an application server or stop an application but cannot make configuration changes.
Configurator role
A configurator can modify the configuration information but cannot change the state of the runtime.
Administrator role
An operator as well as a configurator, which additionally can modify sensitive security configuration and security policy such as setting server IDs and passwords, enable or disable administrative security and Java 2 security, and map users and groups to the administrator role.
iscadmins
The iscadmins role has administrator privileges for managing users and groups from within the administrative console only.
WebSphere Application Server defines two additional roles that are available when you use wsadmin scripting only.
Deployer
A deployer can perform both configuration actions and run-time operations on applications.
Adminsecuritymanager
An administrative security manager can map users to administrative roles. Also, when fine grained admin security is used, users granted this role can manage authorization groups.

A user with the configurator role can perform most administrative work including installing new applications and application servers. Certain configuration tasks exist that a configurator does not have sufficient authority to do when administrative security is enabled, including modifying a WebSphere Application Server identity and password, Lightweight Third-Party Authentication (LTPA) password and keys, and assigning users to administrative security roles. Those sensitive configuration tasks require the administrative role because the server ID is mapped to the administrator role.

Enable WebSphere Application Server administrative security to protect administrative subsystem integrity. Application server security can be selectively disabled if no sensitive information is available to protect. For securing administrative security, refer to Authorizing access to administrative roles and Assigning users and groups to roles.

Java 2 security permissions

WebSphere Application Server uses the Java 2 security model to create a secure environment to run application code. Java 2 security provides a fine-grained and policy-based access control to protect system resources such as files, system properties, opening socket connections, loading libraries, and so on. The J2EE Version 1.4 specification defines a typical set of Java 2 security permissions that Web and EJB components expect to have. These permissions are shown in the following table.

Table 1. J2EE security permissions set for Web components
Security Permission Target Action
java.lang.RuntimePermission loadLibrary  
java.lang.RuntimePermission queuePrintJob  
java.net.SocketPermission * connect
java.io.FilePermission * read, write
java.util.PropertyPermission * read
Table 2. Java 2 security permissions set for EJB components
Security Permission Target Action
java.lang.RuntimePermission queuePrintJob  
java.net.SocketPermission * connect
java.util.PropertyPermission * read
The WebSphere Application Server Java 2 security default policies are based on the J2EE Version 1.4 specification. The specification grants Web components read and write file access permission to any file in the file system, which might be too broad. The WebSphere Application Server default policy gives Web components read and write permission to the subdirectory and the subtree where the Web module is installed. The default Java 2 security policies for all Java virtual machines and WebSphere Application Server processes are contained in the following policy files:
/QIBM/ProdData/Java400/jdk15/lib/security/java.policy
Used as the default policy for the Java virtual machine (JVM).
${USER_INSTALL_ROOT}/properties/server.policy
This file is used as the default policy for all product server processes.

To simplify policy management, WebSphere Application Server policy is based on resource type rather than code base (location). The following files are the default policy files for a WebSphere Application Server subsystem. These policy files, which are an extension of the WebSphere Application Server runtime, are referred to as Service Provider Programming Interfaces (SPI), and shared by multiple J2EE applications:

  • profile_root/config/cells/cell_name/nodes/node_name/spi.policy

    Used for embedded resources defined in the resources.xml file, such as the Java Message Service (JMS), JavaMail, and JDBC drivers.

  • profile_root/config/cells/cell_name/nodes/node_name/library.policy

    Used by the shared library that is defined by the WebSphere Application Server administrative console.

  • profile_root/config/cells/cell_name/nodes/node_name/app.policy

    Used as the default policy for J2EE applications.

In general, applications do not require more permissions to run than those recommended by the J2EE specification to be portable among various application servers. However, some applications might require more permissions. WebSphere Application Server supports the packaging of a was.policy file with each application to grant extra permissions to that application.
Attention: Grant extra permissions to an application only after careful consideration because of the potential of compromising the system integrity.

Loading libraries into WebSphere Application Server does allow applications to leave the Java sandbox. WebSphere Application Server uses a permission filtering policy file to alert you when an application installation fails because of additional permission requirements. For example, it is recommended that you not give the java.lang.RuntimePermission exitVM permission to an application so that application code cannot terminate WebSphere Application Server.

The filtering policy is defined by the filtermask in the profile_root/config/cells/cell_name/filter.policy file. Moreover, WebSphere Application Server also performs run-time permission filtering that is based on the run-time filtering policy to ensure that application code is not granted a permission that is considered harmful to system integrity.

Therefore, many applications developed for prior releases of WebSphere Application Server might not be Java 2 security ready. To quickly migrate those applications to the latest version of WebSphere Application Server, you might temporarily give those applications the java.security.AllPermission permission in the was.policy file. Test those applications to ensure that they run in an environment where Java 2 security is active. For example, identify which extra permissions, if any, are required, and grant only those permissions to a particular application. Not granting the AllPermission permission to applications can reduce the risk of compromising system integrity. For more information on migrating applications, refer to Migrating Java 2 security policy.

The WebSphere Application Server runtime uses Java 2 security to protect sensitive run-time functions. Applications that are granted the AllPermission permission not only have access to sensitive system resources, but also WebSphere Application Server run-time resources and can potentially cause damage to both. In cases where an application can be trusted as safe, WebSphere Application Server does support having Java 2 security disabled on a per application server basis. You can enforce Java 2 security by default in the administrative console and clear the Java 2 security flag to disable it at the particular application server.

When you specify the Enable administrative security and Use Java 2 security to restrict application access to local resources options on the Secure administration, applications, and infrastructure panel of the administrative console, the information and other sensitive configuration data, are stored in a set of XML configuration files. Both role-based access control and Java 2 security permission-based access control are employed to protect the integrity of the configuration data. The example uses configuration data protection to illustrate how system integrity is maintained.
Attention: The Enable global security option in previous releases of WebSphere Application Server is the same as the Enable administrative security option in Version 6.1. Also, the Enable Java 2 security option in previous releases is the same as the Use Java 2 security to restrict application access to local resources option in Version 6.1.

Other Runtime resources

Other WebSphere Application Server run-time resources are protected by a similar mechanism, as described previously. It is very important to enable WebSphere Application Server administrative security and to use Java 2 security to restrict application access to local resources. J2EE Specification defines several authentication methods for Web components: HTTP Basic Authentication, Form-Based Authentication, and HTTPS Client Certificate Authentication. When you use client certificate login, it is more convenient for the browser client if the Web resources have integral or confidential data constraint. If a browser uses HTTP to access the Web resource, the Web container automatically redirects the browser to the HTTPS port. The CSIv2 security protocol also supports client certificate authentication. You can also use SSL client authentication to set up secure communication among a selected set of servers based on a trust relationship.

If you start from the WebSphere Application Server plug-in at the Web server, you can configure SSL mutual authentication between it and the WebSphere Application Server HTTPS server. When using a certificate, you can restrict the WebSphere Application Server plug-in to communicate with only the selected two WebSphere Application Servers as shown in the following figure. Note that you can use self-signed certificates to reduce administration and cost.
For example, you want to restrict the HTTPS server in WebSphere Application Server A and in WebSphere Application Server B to accept secure socket connections only from the WebSphere Application Server plug-in W.
  • To complete this task, you can generate three certificates using the IKEYMAN and the certificate management utilities. Also, you can use certificate W and trust certificate A and B. Configure the HTTPS server of WebSphere Application Server A to use certificate A and to trust certificate W.
Configure the HTTPS server of WebSphere Application Server B to use certificate B and to trust certificate W.
The trust relationship that is depicted in the previous figure is shown in the following table.
Server Key Trust
WebSphere Application Server plug-in W A, B
WebSphere Application Server A A W
WebSphere Application Server B B W

The WebSphere Application Server Deployment Manager is a central point of administration. System management commands are sent from the deployment manager to each individual application server. When administrative security is enabled, you can configure WebSphere Application Servers to require SSL and mutual authentication.

You might want to restrict WebSphere Application Server A so that it can communicate with WebSphere Application Server C only and WebSphere Application Server B can communicate with WebSphere Application Server D only. All WebSphere Application Servers must be able to communicate with WebSphere Application Server deployment manager E; therefore, when using self-signed certificates, you might configure the CSIv2 and SOAP/HTTPS Key and trust relationship, as shown in the following table.
Server Key Trust
WebSphere Application Server A A C, E
WebSphere Application Server B B D, E
WebSphere Application Server C C A, E
WebSphere Application Server D D B, E
WebSphere Application Server Deployment Manager E E A, B, C, D

When WebSphere Application Server is configured to use Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) user registry, you also can configure SSL with mutual authentication between every application server and the LDAP server with self-signed certificates so that a password is not visible when it is passed from WebSphere Application Server to the LDAP server.

In this example, the node agent processes are not discussed. Each node agent must communicate with application servers on the same node and with the deployment manager. Node agents also must communicate with LDAP servers when configured to use an LDAP user registry. It is reasonable to let the deployment manager and the node agents use the same certificate. Suppose application server A and C are on the same computer node. The node agent on that node needs to have certificates A and C in its trust store.

WebSphere Application Server does not provide a registry configuration or management utility. In addition, it does not dictate the registry password policy. It is recommended that you use the password policy recommended by your registry, including the password length and expiration period.




Related concepts
Overview and new features for securing applications and their environment
Related tasks
Migrating Java 2 security policy
Authorizing access to administrative roles
Assigning users to naming roles
Concept topic Concept topic    

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Last updatedLast updated: Aug 30, 2013 10:47:11 PM CDT
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