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Key locator

A key locator is an abstraction of the mechanism that retrieves the key for digital signature and encryption. The Java Authentication and Authorization Service (JAAS) Login Module implementation is used to create the security token on the generator side and to validate (authenticate) the security token on the consumer side.

Retrieve keys from one of the following sources, depending upon the implementation:

Key locators search for the key using some type of a clue. The following types of clues are supported:

WAS v6 and later support a secret key-based signature called HMAC-SHA1. If we use HMAC-SHA1, the SOAP message does not contain a binary security token. In this case, it is assumed that the key information within the message contains the key name used to specify the secret key within the keystore.

Because the key locators support the public key-based signature, the key for verification is embedded in the X.509 certificate as a <BinarySecurityToken> element in the incoming message. For example, key locators can obtain the identity of the caller from the context and can retrieve the public key of the caller for response encryption.

This section describes the usage scenarios for key locators.

Signing:

The name of the signing key is specified in the Web Services Security configuration. This value is passed to the key locator and the actual key is returned. The corresponding X.509 certificate also can be returned.

Verification:

By default, WAS v6 and later supports the following types of key locators:

KeyStoreKeyLocator

Uses the keystore to retrieve the key used for digital signature and verification or encryption and decryption.

X509CertKeyLocator

Uses an X.509 certificate within a message to retrieve the key for verification or decryption.

SignerCertKeyLocator

Uses the X.509 certificate within the request message to retrieve the key used for encryption in the response message.

Encryption:

The name of the encryption key is specified in the Web Services Security configuration. This value is passed to the key locator and the actual key is returned. On the server side, we can use the SignerCertKeyLocator to retrieve the key for encryption in the response message from the X.509 certificate in the request message.

Decryption:

The Web Services Security specification recommends using the key identifier instead of the key name. However, while the algorithm for computing the identifier for the public keys is defined in Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Request for Comment (RFC) 3280, there is no agreed-upon algorithm for the secret keys. Therefore, the current implementation of Web Services Security uses the identifier only when public key-based encryption is performed. Otherwise, the ordinal key name is used.

When you use public key-based encryption, the value of the key identifier is embedded in the incoming encrypted message. Then, the Web Services Security implementation searches for all of the keys managed by the key locator and decrypts the message using the key whose identifier value matches the one in the message.

When you use secret key-based encryption, the value of the key name is embedded in the incoming encrypted message. The Web Services Security implementation asks the key locator for the key with the name that matches the name in the message and decrypts the message using the key.


Related concepts

  • Keys

  • Key collection
  • Key configuration settings