The only difference is that with LDAP authorization your clients would need to provide username/password, to identify themselves. With cert plugin, the certificate is used for that (and mapped to the appropriate user that can be later authorized).
Regards -- Dejan Bosanac ---------------------- Red Hat, Inc. FuseSource is now part of Red Hat [email protected] Twitter: @dejanb Blog: http://sensatic.net ActiveMQ in Action: http://www.manning.com/snyder/ On Wed, Nov 28, 2012 at 9:36 AM, joesan <[email protected]> wrote: > When I still need the key store and trust store, why will I use this JAAS > plug in for authentication? I can very well use SSL Authentication in the > form of certificates stored in the trust store of the broker and my client. > > I understand that I can plug in authorization rules, but for that I could > very well use the JAAS LDAP authorization mechanism rather than using the > JAAS Certificate Authentication Plug in. Please correct me if I got this > wrong? > > > > -- > View this message in context: > http://activemq.2283324.n4.nabble.com/ActiveMQ-SSL-Error-No-X509TrustManager-implementation-avaiable-tp4659805p4659863.html > Sent from the ActiveMQ - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
