A quick workaround is to create the advisory destinattions manually via JMX or the Web Console to avoid your client being the first person to create the destination - but it does look like somethings wrong - it looks like either the users's group is not being found correctly or that the authorizationPlugin is not being properly initialised.
We could maybe patch the code for the authorizationPlugin to add debug logging to help you figure this one out? On 4/25/06, Johan Hallgren <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello list, I am trying to get authentication and authorization using JAAS to work with ActiveMQ-RC2, and am having troubles with the authorization part (authentication seems to be working fine). I am trying to get a setup as close to the one outlined in http://www.activemq.org/Security to work first, so this is what I have set up: I have created a login.config file in $ACTIVE_HOME/lib with these contents: activemq-domain { org.apache.activemq.jaas.PropertiesLoginModule required debug=true org.apache.activemq.jaas.properties.user="users.properties" org.apache.activemq.jaas.properties.group="groups.properties"; }; In the same directory, I have created users.properties with this content: myuser=mypassword Also in the same directory, I have created groups.properties with this content: myuser=mygroup Finally, I have made this addition to activemq.xml, and placed it as the first element in the broker element: <plugins> <!-- use JAAS to authenticate using the login.config file on the classpath to configure JAAS --> <jaasAuthenticationPlugin configuration="activemq-domain" /> <!-- lets configure a destination based authorization mechanism --> <authorizationPlugin> <map> <authorizationMap> <authorizationEntries> <authorizationEntry queue=">" read="mygroup" write="mygroup" admin="mygroup" /> <authorizationEntry queue="USERS.>" read="mygroup" write="mygroup" admin="mygroup" /> <authorizationEntry queue="GUEST.>" read="mygroup" write="mygroup" admin="mygroup" /> <authorizationEntry topic=">" read="mygroup" write="mygroup" admin="mygroup" /> <authorizationEntry topic="USERS.>" read="mygroup" write="mygroup" admin="mygroup" /> <authorizationEntry topic="GUEST.>" read="mygroup" write="mygroup" admin="mygroup" /> <authorizationEntry topic="ActiveMQ.Advisory.>" read="mygroup" write="mygroup" admin="mygroup"/> </authorizationEntries> </authorizationMap> </map> </authorizationPlugin> </plugins> I am then trying to send messages to a queue from an application in my servlet container, that I have based on the example that came with the ActiveMQ distribution. Basically, first I create a connection like this: ActiveMQConnection connection = ActiveMQConnection.makeConnection("myuser", "mypassword", "tcp://localhost:61616"); I then try and create a javax.jms.Session like this: Session session = connection.createSession(false, Session.AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE); However, when doing this, I get an exception: javax.jms.JMSException: User myuser is not authorized to create: topic://ActiveMQ.Advisory.Connection I have also tried doing a connection.start() before creating the session, but that statement also yields the above exception. The authentication piece does seem to work, though, because if I supply an erroneous user name, creating the session throws this exception: javax.jms.JMSException: User name or password is invalid. Also, sending messages without using JAAS (by removing the above plugins element from activemq.xml) works fine. I'm now lost trying to figure out where I'm going wrong. I have not referenced any topic or queue names in the code prior to creating the session, so I'm wondering why the exception states that I'm trying to create an ActiveMQ.Advisory.Connection topic. Have I misconfigured activemq.xml or login.config somewhere, or is there something in the code that needs to happen to invoke the authorization logic, other than specifying the autorizationMap in activemq.xml? Any insight would be most appreciated! Thanks in advance, Johan Hallgren
-- James ------- http://radio.weblogs.com/0112098/
