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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/NETBEANS-58?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16449497#comment-16449497
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Stephan Raible edited comment on NETBEANS-58 at 4/24/18 9:05 AM:
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I can confirme the same behaviour of Netbeans 8.2 with JDK 1.8.0_161 and _171 
on a Windows 10 OS behind a corporate proxy as Jean-Marc Borrer mentioned. 


was (Author: mcrender):
I can confirme the same behaviour of Netbeans 8.2 with JDK 1.8.0._161 and _171 
on a Windows 10 OS behind a corporate proxy as Jean-Marc Borrer mentioned. 

> NB IDE or NB Platform freeze on startup (proxy with Negotiate auth)
> -------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: NETBEANS-58
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/NETBEANS-58
>             Project: NetBeans
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: platform - Proxy
>    Affects Versions: 8.2, 9.0
>         Environment: Primarily Windows.
>            Reporter: phansson
>            Priority: Critical
>         Attachments: NETBEANS-58-workaround1.diff, nb-freeze-dump.txt, 
> netbeans.txt
>
>
> When any network operation is performed, such as attempting to contact 
> NetBeans Update Center, the application (IDE or Platform) may freeze. Users 
> will typically experience this on startup. It was reported in old bug tracker 
> as [bug 248308|https://netbeans.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=248308].
> The problem arises because of the fix JDK folks applied as a consequence of 
> the reported [JDK-8032832 
> bug|https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8032832]. This fix wasn't very 
> clever IMO: it puts a lock on the classloader, thus introducing a range of 
> other problems, one of them being that NetNeans IDE or NetBeans Platform will 
> likely freeze on startup when it attempts a network operation. The fact that 
> their fix made things worse (while no doubt fixing the original issue) has 
> been reported as 
> [JDK-8068184|https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8068184].
> h3. WHEN DOES IT HAPPEN?
> As the lock is introduced for authentication of type 'Negotiate' it of course 
> only happens if there's a network proxy on the path which uses this type of 
> authentication. Also known as SPNEGO. This form of authentication is in my 
> experience very common in corporate networks, in particular those that base 
> themselves on the Microsoft stack. But a person on Oracle's own internal 
> network, such as a JDK developer, is most likely not exposed to it. :-)
> There's another condition for it to happen: The JRE runtime must be unable to 
> provide 'credentials' (a Kerberos token) to the network proxy on its own. 
> SPNEGO is really designed to be seamless and promptless. Support for it was 
> added in Java 6. But later on Microsoft tightened the desktop security around 
> obtaining the so-called 'session token' and the JDK folks were never able to 
> work around this (unlike the makers of Chrome, FF, Opera, etc). Therefore, in 
> real-life, SPNEGO in the JRE on Windows is no longer promptless:  it will be 
> forced to ask the user for credentials, thus negating the idea of SPNEGO. It 
> is the prompting which causes the freeze. SPNEGO on Mac OS X and Linux is 
> most likely working just fine and the bug will never be experienced.
> h3. HOW DO I KNOW IF I'M AFFECTED BY EXACTLY THIS BUG?
> This bug in this ticket is characterized by the fact that you'll always be 
> able to find the following in your thread dump:
> {noformat}
>    at 
> sun.net.www.protocol.http.NegotiateAuthentication.isSupported(NegotiateAuthentication.java:<lineno>)
>         - locked <OBJECTID> (a org.netbeans.ModuleManager$SystemClassLoader)
> {noformat}
> Note that the [Ctrl-Break 
> method|https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/guides/troubleshoot/tooldescr019.html]
>  of obtaining a thread dump is favoured over jstack and other methods.
> h3. WHY DOES IT HAPPEN?
> There will be a lock held on the classloader object when the JRE's registered 
>  Authenticator is invoked. If the Authenticator does work on another thread, 
> that other thread has a need for some classloading and the current thread 
> needs to wait for the result of that thread, then bum!, there's a deadlock 
> between the two threads. This means the lock on the classloader will never be 
> released and it will ultimately affect other threads, such as the AWT 
> dispatch thread (aka Swing EDT) which will then also lock. Then you have what 
> the user experiences as a freeze.
> The NB Platform's own Authenticator, {{NbAuthenticator}}, does exactly what I 
> described and will thus be triggering the deadlock. More precisely it will 
> happen when NbAuthenticator calls Keyring. Does this mean the NbAuthenticator 
> does something wrong?  No, of course it doesn't. The real problem is the lock 
> on the classloader. It is actually virtually impossible to design an 
> Authenticator which doesn't trigger this problem. You cannot predict when 
> classloading is needed. In fact it is very likely to be needed when 
> application is still not "warm", i.e. during startup.
> h3. WORKAROUNDS
> *#1*
> If on Windows: Setting the following registry key:
> {{HKLM\System\CurrentControlSet\Control\Lsa\Kerberos\Parameters\allowtgtsessionkey}}
> to {{true}} will allow the JRE to obtain the session key, thus the JDK's HTTP 
> classes will have no need to invoke Authenticator, thus deadlock will not 
> happen. But this registry key only has effect for users who are _not_ local 
> admins and since it is a HKLM such user will need to ask his administrator to 
> do this change. There's probably zero chance in a million that a corporate 
> network administrator will allow this change. After all, Microsoft introduced 
> the tightened security for a reason and the admin will rightly ask why only 
> the JRE needs this and not Chrome, IE, FF, Opera and so on?
> *#2*
> Convice the JDK folks that they've made a mess of it with this lock. I've 
> pursued this avenue too. I've done that on the JDK security-dev mailing list. 
> I've pointed to similar bug tickets for Eclipse IDE and IDEA and I got the 
> attention of Weijun Wang ("Max") of Oracle who promised he would look at it. 
> But to be honest the JDK people have a lot of other things on their plate and 
> a fix will take some time.
> UPDATE 29-OCT-2017:  To be fair to the JDK folks to issue only occurs with 
> NB's own classloaders. So the chance they'll fix it at the JDK end is 
> probably slim.
> Link: 
> http://mail.openjdk.java.net/pipermail/security-dev/2017-August/016267.html
> *#3*
> Re-design the Authenticator in the Platform. As I cannot change the code in 
> NB itself, I've created a workaround as a plugin. The recipe is described in 
> [Comment 44|https://netbeans.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=248308#c44] on the 
> original NB bug ticket. This is really a workaround, not a fix. It will 
> simply give up on attempting to obtain credentials if it discovers that it is 
> likely to be in this deadlock scenario. Thus it leaves the application with 
> no outbound network connectivity but it is still better than the freeze. It 
> also alerts the user to the situation using a bubble notification. 
> Links:
> https://bitbucket.org/phansson/netbeansnetworkauthenticator
> https://bitbucket.org/phansson/netbeansnetworkauthenticator/wiki/JDK-8068184%20Workaround
> *#4*
> It may help to set proxy username/password _explicitly_ in the NB's Options 
> panel. But this is not a solution I recommend. It means you must put your AD 
> password into NetBeans IDE Options. It will of course be static so once your 
> AD password changes then you must remember to change there as well. And for 
> the user to configure this, it requires that he can actually start the IDE or 
> Platform app in the first place ... which is often not the case because of 
> the freeze.
> *#5* 
> Use a JRE prior to 8u20 or prior to 7u76. To most people this workaround is 
> unacceptable.
> h3. CONCLUSION
> IMHO #3 is the most attractive solution for now. It doesn't exclude the user 
> still doing #1 or #4 to get full benefit. The real solution is of course #2.
> .. and the very best solution long term is if JDK would have same support for 
> SPNEGO on Windows as does 'regular' applications such as Chrome, FF, Opera, 
> IE, Edge, etc. Then we wouldn't have the problem in the first place. This has 
> been discussed intensively over the last 7-8 years but there's a somewhat 
> religious tug of war between Sun/Oracle and Microsoft on the matter. The 
> problem can be solved if the JDK would base itself on the Win32 SSPI api in 
> this area, rather than the long-time deprecated Win32 
> LsaCallAuthenticationPackage API. We are getting slightly off topic here and 
> not appropriate for a bug ticket. :-)



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