WAS v8.5 > Develop applications > Develop web services - Security (WS-Security) > Configure Web Services Security during application assembly > Configure pluggable tokens for v5.x web services with an assembly tool

Configure the client for LTPA token authentication: collecting the authentication method information

To configure Lightweight Third-Party Authentication (LTPA) token authentication, collect the LTPA token authentication information. Do not configure the client for LTPA token authentication unless the authentication mechanism configured in WebSphere Application Server is LTPA. There is an important distinction between v5.x and v6.0.x and later applications. The information in this article supports v5.x applications only used with WAS v6.0.x and later. The information does not apply to v6.0.x and later applications.

Use this task to configure Lightweight Third-Party Authentication (LTPA) token authentication. Do not configure the client for LTPA token authentication unless the authentication mechanism configured in WAS is LTPA. When a client authenticates to a WAS, the credential created contains an LTPA token. When a web service calls a downstream web service, we can configure the first web service to send the LTPA token from the originating client. Do not attempt to configure LTPA from a pure client. LTPA works only when we configure the client-side of a web service acting as a client to a downstream web service. In order for the downstream web service to validate the LTPA token, the LTPA keys on both servers must be the same.

To specify how to collect the LTPA token authentication information:

  1. Launch an assembly tool. For more information, see the related information on Assembly Tools.
  2. Switch to the Java EE perspective. Click Window > Open Perspective > J2EE.

  3. Click Application Client Projects > application_name > appClientModule > META-INF.
  4. Right-click the application-client.xml file, select Open with > Deployment descriptor editor.

  5. Click the WS Bindings tab, located at the bottom of the deployment descriptor editor within the assembly tool.

  6. Expand the Security request sender binding configuration > Login binding section.

  7. Click Edit to view the login binding information and select LTPA. If LTPA is not already there, enter it as an option. The login binding dialog is displayed. Select or enter the following information:

    Authentication method

    Type of authentication that occurs. Select LTPA to use identity assertion.

    Token value type URI and token value type local name

    When you select LTPA, edit the token value type URI (Uniform Resource Identifier) and the local name fields. Specifies values for custom authentication types, which are authentication methods not mentioned in the specification. For the token value type URI field, enter the following string: http://www.ibm.com/websphere/appserver/tokentype/5.0.2. For the local name field, enter the following string: LTPA.

    Callback handler

    Specifies the JAAS callback handler implementation for collecting the LTPA information.  Specify the com.ibm.wsspi.wssecurity.auth.callback.LTPATokenCallbackHandler implementation for LTPA.

    Basic authentication user ID and basic authentication password

    For LTPA, we can leave these fields empty. However, when we omit this information, the LTPA CallbackHandler implementation attempts to obtain the LTPA token from the invocation (RunAs) credential. If an invocation (RunAs) credential does not exist, then the LTPA token is not propagated.

    Property name and property value

    For LTPA, we can leave these fields blank.

See Configure the client for LTPA token authentication: specifying LTPA token authentication if we have not previously specified this information.


Related concepts:

LTPA
Development and assembly tools


Related


Configure the client for LTPA token authentication: specifying LTPA token authentication
Configure the client security bindings using an assembly tool
Configure the security bindings on a server acting as a client


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