Kerberos Requirements
Kerberos Version 5 is used for both the authentication and secure communication aspects of the client and server applications developed in this tutorial. The reader is assumed to already be familiar with Kerberos. See the Kerberos reference documentation.
The JAAS framework, and the Kerberos mechanism required by the Java GSS-API methods, are built into the version 1.4 and later JREs from all vendors. (JAAS was available as a separately-downloadable optional package starting in version 1.3.) The Kerberos LoginModule required for the JAAS authentication in this tutorial may not be available in all vendors' JREs. We will be using the LoginModule for Kerberos provided in the JRE from Sun Microsystems (versions 1.4 and later).
In order to run the sample programs, you will need access to a Kerberos installation. As described in the following sections, you may also need a krb5.conf
Kerberos configuration file and an indication as to where that file is located.
As with all Kerberos installations, a Kerberos Key Distribution Center (KDC) is required. It needs to contain the user name and password you will use to be authenticated to Kerberos. Note: A KDC implementation is part of a Kerberos installation and not a part of the JRE v 1.4 and later.
As with most Kerberos installations, a Kerberos configuration file krb5.conf
is consulted to determine such things as the default realm and KDC. If you are using a Kerberos implementation such as that from Microsoft for Windows 2000, which does not include a krb5.conf
file, you will either need to create one or use system properties as described in Setting Properties to Indicate the Default Realm and KDC.
Setting Properties to Indicate the Default Realm and KDC
Typically, the default realm and the KDC for that realm are indicated in the Kerberos krb5.conf
configuration file. However, if you like, you can instead specify these values by setting the following system properties to indicate the realm and KDC, respectively:
java.security.krb5.realm
java.security.krb5.kdc
If you set one of these properties you must set them both.
Also note that if you set these properties, then no cross-realm authentication is possible unless a krb5.conf
file is also provided from which the additional information required for cross-realm authentication may be obtained.
If you set values for these properties, then they override the default realm and KDC values specified in krb5.conf
(if such a file is found). The krb5.conf
file is still consulted if values for items other than the default realm and KDC are needed. If no krb5.conf
file is found, then the default values used for these items are implementation-specific.
Locating the krb5.conf
Configuration File
The essential Kerberos configuration information is the default realm and the default KDC. As shown in Setting Properties to Indicate the Default Realm and KDC, if you set properties to indicate these values, they are not obtained from a krb5.conf
configuration file.
If these properties do not have values set, or if other Kerberos configuration information is needed, an attempt is made to find the required information in a krb5.conf
file. The algorithm to locate the krb5.conf
file is the following:
If the system property
java.security.krb5.conf
is set, its value is assumed to specify the path and file name.If that system property value is not set, then the configuration file is looked for in the directory
<java-home>\lib\security
(Windows)<java-home>/lib/security
(Solaris and Linux)
Here <java-home> refers to the directory where the JRE was installed. For example, if you have J2SE 5.0 installed on Solaris in a directory named
/j2sdk1.5
, the directory in which the configuration file is looked for is:/j2sdk1.5/jre/lib/security
If the file is still not found, then an attempt is made to locate it as follows:
/etc/krb5/krb5.conf
(Solaris)c:\winnt\krb5.ini
(Windows)/etc/krb5.conf
(Linux)
If the file is still not found, and the configuration information being searched for is not the default realm and KDC, then implementation-specific defaults are used. If, on the other hand, the configuration information being searched for is the default realm and KDC because they weren't specified in system properties, and the
krb5.conf
file is not found either, then an exception is thrown.
Naming Conventions for Realm Names and Hostnames
By convention, all Kerberos realm names are uppercase and all DNS hostname and domain names are lowercase. On the Windows 2000 platform, domains are also Kerberos realms; however, the realm name is always the uppercase version of the domain name.Hostnames are case insensitive and by convention they are all lowercase. They must resolve to the same hostname on the client and server by their respective naming services.
However, in the Kerberos database hostnames are case sensitive. In all host-based Kerberos service principals in the KDC, hostnames are case-sensitive. The hostnames used in the Kerberos service principal names must exactly match the hostnames returned by the naming service. For example, if the naming service returns a fully qualified lowercased DNS hostname, such as "raven.example.com
", then the administrator must use the same fully qualified lowercased DNS hostname when creating host-based principal names in the KDC: "host/raven.example.com
".
Cross-Realm Authentication
In cross-realm authentication, a principal in one realm can authenticate to principals in another realm.In Kerberos, cross-realm authentication is implemented by sharing an encryption key between two realms. The KDCs in two different realms share a special cross-realm secret; this secret is used to prove identity when crossing the boundary between realms.
The key that is shared is the Ticket Granting Service principal's key. Here's a typical Ticket Granting Service principal for a single realm:
ktbtgt/EXAMPLE.COM@EXAMPLE.COMIn cross realm authentication, two principals are created on each participating realm. For two realms,
ENG.EAST.EXAMPLE.COM
and SALES.WEST.EXAMPLE.COM
, these principals would be:
krbtgt/ENG.EAST.EXAMPLE.COM@SALES.WEST.EXAMPLE.COM krbtgt/SALES.WEST.EXAMPLE.COM@ENG.EAST.EXAMPLE.COMThese principals, known as remote Ticket Granting Server principals, must be created on both realms.
On Windows 2000 KDC, the krbtgt
account is created automatically when a Windows 2000 domain is created. This account cannot be deleted and renamed.
Types of Realms
When you set up multiple realms, you must decide if your realm configuration will be "hierarchical" (one realm is a superset of the other) or "direct" (the mapping between realms must be defined).How to Set Up Cross-Realm Authentication
In transitive cross-realm authentication you can define a path of realms connected via cross-realm secrets and use this path to traverse realms until you get credentials in the desired realm.The [capaths]
section in the Kerberos configuration file defines a series of authentication paths used for transitive cross-realm authentication. Clients use [capaths]
to determine the correct path for doing transitive cross-realm authentication. Application servers check the [capaths]
section to determine if a cross-realm authentication path is valid.
For example, to set-up cross realm authentication between ENG.EAST.EXAMPLE.COM
and SALES.WEST.EXAMPLE.COM
, krb5.conf
should include the following entry:
[capaths] ENG.EAST.EXAMPLE.COM = { SALES.WEST.EXAMPLE.COM = . } SALES.WEST.EXAMPLE.COM = { ENG.EAST.EXAMPLE.COM = . }On Windows 2000, you must set up a trust relationship between the two realms. For configuration details, refer to Step-by-Step Guide to Kerberos 5 (krb5 1.0) Interoperability on Microsoft's Web site.