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Example: Developing a custom trust manager for custom SSL trust decisions

The following example is of a sample custom trust manager. The custom trust manager makes no trust decisions but instead uses the information in the X.509 certificate that it references to make decisions.

After you build and package the custom trust manager, configure it either from ssl.client.props for a pure client or the SSLConfiguration TrustManager link in the console. See Trust manager control of X.509 certificate trust decisions for more information about trust managers.

This example should only be used as a sample, and is not supported.

import java.security.cert.X509Certificate;
import javax.net.ssl.*;
import com.ibm.wsspi.ssl.TrustManagerExtendedInfo;
 public final class CustomTrustManager implements X509TrustManager, TrustManagerExtendedInfo
{
    private static ThreadLocal threadLocStorage = new ThreadLocal();
    private java.util.Properties sslConfig = null;
    private java.util.Properties props = null;
     public CustomTrustManager()
    {
    }
     /**
     * Method called by WebSphere Application Server run time to set the target      * host information and potentially other connection info in the future.
     * This needs to be set on ThreadLocal since the same trust manager can be      * used by multiple connections.
     *       * @param java.util.Map - Contains information about the connection.
     */
    public void setExtendedInfo(java.util.Map info)
    {
        threadLocStorage.set(info);
    }
     /**
     * Method called internally to retrieve information about the connection.       *       * @return java.util.Map - Contains information about the connection.
     */
    private java.util.Map getExtendedInfo()
    {
        return (java.util.Map) threadLocStorage.get();
    }
     /**
     * Method called by WebSphere Application Server run time to set the custom      * properties.
     *       * @param java.util.Properties - custom props
     */
    public void setCustomProperties(java.util.Properties customProps)
    {
        props = customProps;
    }
     /**
     * Method called internally to the custom properties set in the Trust Manager      * configuration.
     *       * @return java.util.Properties - information set in the configuration.
     */
    private java.util.Properties getCustomProperties()
    {
        return props;
    }
     /**
     * Method called by WAS runtime to set the SSL      * configuration properties being used for this connection.
     *       * @param java.util.Properties - contains a property for the SSL configuration.
     */
    public void setSSLConfig(java.util.Properties config)
    {
        sslConfig = config;         }
     /**
     * Method called by TrustManager to get access to the SSL configuration for       * this connection.
     *       * @return java.util.Properties
     */
    public java.util.Properties getSSLConfig ()
    {
        return sslConfig;
    }
     /**
     * Method called on the server-side for establishing trust with a client.
     * See API documentation for javax.net.ssl.X509TrustManager.
     */
    public void checkClientTrusted(X509Certificate[] chain, String authType)          throws java.security.cert.CertificateException
    {
        for (int j=0; j<chain.length; j++)
        {
            System.out.println("Client certificate information:");
            System.out.println(  "Subject DN:"  + chain[j].getSubjectDN());
            System.out.println(  "Issuer DN:"  + chain[j].getIssuerDN());
            System.out.println(  "Serial number:"  + chain[j].getSerialNumber());
            System.out.println("");
        }
    }
 
    /**
     * Method called on the client-side for establishing trust with a server.
     * See API documentation for javax.net.ssl.X509TrustManager.
     */
    public void checkServerTrusted(X509Certificate[] chain, String authType)          throws java.security.cert.CertificateException
    {
        for (int j=0; j<chain.length; j++)
        {
            System.out.println("Server certificate information:");
            System.out.println(  "Subject DN:"  + chain[j].getSubjectDN());
            System.out.println(  "Issuer DN:"  + chain[j].getIssuerDN());
            System.out.println(  "Serial number:"  + chain[j].getSerialNumber());
            System.out.println("");
        }
    }
     /**
     * Return an array of certificate authority certificates which are trusted       * for authenticating peers. We can return null here since the IbmX509
     * or IbmPKIX will provide a default set of issuers.
     *
     * See API documentation for javax.net.ssl.X509TrustManager.
     */
    public X509Certificate[] getAcceptedIssuers()
    {
        return null;
    }
}


Related concepts

  • Trust manager control of X.509 certificate trust decisions


    Related tasks

  • Create a custom trust manager configuration for SSL