Configure Kerberos as the authentication mechanism using the administrative console
We can use the administrative console to configure Kerberos as the authentication mechanism for the application server. When we have entered and applied the required information to the configuration, the Kerberos service principal name is formed as <service name>/<fully qualified hostname>@KerberosRealm, and is used to verify incoming Kerberos token requests.
Read about Kerberos (KRB5) authentication mechanism support for security to understand the Kerberos authentication mechanism in this version of WAS. We must have completed the following steps before configuring Kerberos as the authentication mechanism using the administrative console:
- If we do not already have a Kerberos configuration file, krb5.ini or krb5.conf, use the createkrbConfigFile command task to create the Kerberos configuration file. Read about Create a Kerberos configuration file for more information.
- We must have a Kerberos keytab file, krb5.keytab, containing a Kerberos service principal name (SPN), <service_name>/<fully_qualified hostname>@KerberosRealm, for each machine that run WebSphere application servers. The service name can be anything you choose; the default value is WAS.
For example, if we have two application server machines, host1.austin.ibm.com and host2.austin.ibm.com, the Kerberos keytab file must contain the <service_name>/host1.austin.ibm.com and <service_name>/host2.austin.ibm.com SPNs and their Kerberos keys.
Kerberos will only load and use one keytab file per session. For example, if Kerberos is configured, and to use a new keytab file with the same name and location as the previous keytab file, first restart the server to use the new keytab file.
If we are configuring Kerberos for the first time, and you accidentally use the wrong keytab file, you must unconfigure Kerberos and restart the server before we can configure Kerberos again using a new keytab file. This is not true, however, if we have the Java SE Development Kit (JDK) with SP3 installed.
We must first enable global and application security.
If Kerberos is configured in global security, but to configure Simple and Protected GSS-API Negotiation (SPNEGO) on a domain using a different Kerberos realm, first use the Java ktab -m command to merge existing keytab files into one keytab file. Use that merged keytab file to configure Kerberos and SPNEGO on global and domain security.
- In the administrative console, click Security > Global security.
- From Authentication, click Kerberos configuration.
- Enter the Kerberos service name. By convention, a Kerberos service principal is divided into three parts: the primary, the instance, and the Kerberos realm name. The format of the Kerberos service principal name is service_Name/fully_qualified hostName@KERBEROS_REALM. The service name is the first part of the Kerberos service principal name. For example, in WAS/test.austin.ibm.com@AUSTIN.IBM.COM, the service name is WAS. In this example, the keytab file must have the Kerberos service principal name,WAS/test.austin.ibm.com@AUSTIN.IBM.COM, and its keys.
- Enter the Kerberos configuration file name or click Browse to locate it. The Kerberos client configuration file, krb5.conf or krb5.ini, contains Kerberos configuration information, including the locations of the Key Distribution Centers (KDCs) for the realm of interest. The krb5.conf file is the default file name for all platforms except the Windows operating system, which uses the krb5.ini file.
The Kerberos configuration file name and Kerberos keytab file name path do not have to be absolute paths. We can use WebSphere variables for the paths instead. If we have a mixed platform environment, we can use the ${CONF_OR_INI} variable for the Kerberos configuration file. Security configuration will expand it to ini for Windows or conf for non-Windows platforms For example:
${WAS_INSTALL_ROOT}\etc\krb5\krb5.${CFG_OR_INI}
- Optional: Enter the Kerberos keytab file name or click Browse to locate it. The Kerberos keytab file contains one or more Kerberos service principal names and keys. The default keytab file is krb5.keytab. It is important for hosts to protect their Kerberos keytab files by storing them on the local disk, which makes them readable only by authorized users. Read about Create a Kerberos service principal name and keytab file for more information. If not specified, the default keytab in the Kerberos configuration file is used.
The Kerberos configuration file name and Kerberos keytab file name path do not have to be absolute paths. We can use WebSphere variables for the paths instead.
${WAS_INSTALL_ROOT}\etc\krb5\krb5.keytab
- Enter the name of the Kerberos realm in the Kerberos realm name field. In most cases, the realm is your domain name in uppercase letters. If not specified, the default Kerberos realm name in the Kerberos configuration file is used.
For example, a machine with the domain name of test.austin.ibm.com has a Kerberos realm name of AUSTIN.IBM.COM.
The Kerberos realm name for the KDC for Microsoft is an uppercase value of the Domain Controller name.
- Optional: Trim Kerberos realm from principal name is selected by default. We can clear this option if we want the suffix of the Kerberos principal name to be retained. This option specifies whether the Kerberos login module removes the suffix of the principal user name, starting from the @ that precedes the Kerberos realm name. If this attribute is set to true, the suffix of the principal user name is removed. If this attribute is set to false, the suffix of the principal name is retained. The default value used is true.
- Optional: Enable delegation of Kerberos credentials is selected by default. This option specifies whether the Kerberos delegated credentials are extracted from the client request. The Kerberos authentication token (KRBAuthnToken) is created with the client principal name and the client delegate Kerberos ticket if the client is sent the Kerberos delegation credential as part of the request. The KRBAuthnToken is stored in the client subject. The KRBAuthnToken is propagated to the downstream server as part of the security attribute propagation. If a customer application needs the GSSCredential for authentication with a backend resource or a downstream server, you must retrieve the GSSCredential from the KRBAuthnToken using the com.ibm.wsspi.wssecurity.platform.token.KRBAuthnToken.getGSSCredential() method and place it in the subject.
If we don't check this option, the KRBAuthnToken only has the Kerberos principal name.
If this parameter is true, and the runtime environment cannot extract a client GSS delegation credential, then a warning message is displayed.
- Click OK.
Results
When you select Apply or OK the Kerberos authentication is automatically tested. If the Kerberos configuration is not complete, a message is displayed that indicates authentication failure.
You have now configured and saved Kerberos as the authentication mechanism for WebSphere Application Server.
What to do next
To enable SPNEGO, click SPNEGO web authentication enablement from Related Configuration.
SPNEGO web authentication and Kerberos authentication use the same Kerberos client configuration and keytab files.
When you attempt to authenticate to the administrative console, use an admin ID that exists in the KDC that is associated with the application server. If we use an admin ID exists in a different KDC that is not associated with the administrative console, the login process fails and following error message is added to the log file:
SECJ9200E: No Kerberos credential found in subject credential set.
For example, the client might be associated with a different KDC than the application server.
Subtopics
- Kerberos authentication settings
Use this page to configure and to verify Kerberos as the authentication mechanism for the application server.
Related tasks
Create a Kerberos configuration file Create a Kerberos service principal name and keytab file Mapping of a client Kerberos principal name to the WebSphere user registry ID (zos) Mapping a Kerberos principal to a System Authorization Facility (SAF) identity on z/OS
Authenticating users Configure CSIv2 (CSIV2) inbound and outbound communication settings
Kerberos authentication commands CSIv2 inbound communications settings CSIv2 outbound communications settings Use the ktab command to manage the Kerberos keytab file
Kerberos: The Network Authentication Protocol