[ http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/WSS-54?page=comments#action_12442209 
] 
            
Bob Coss commented on WSS-54:
-----------------------------


   [[ Old comment, sent by email on Tue, 29 Aug 2006 10:28:05 -0500 ]]

That doesn't seem to make sense to me the way this is handled.
According to the way the callback is being processed, the only thing
that can be thrown is a UnsupportedCallbackException() or IOException.
In UsernameTokenProcessor, it will throw:

 throw new WSSecurityException(WSSecurityException.FAILURE,
                        "noPassword", new Object[]{user});

and not a
WSSecurityException(WSSecurityException.FAILED_AUTHENTICATION).

In the spirit of JAAS, shouldn't the handler be providing the value of
the password to the callback, and the UsernameTokoenProcessor evaluating
the password supplied in the token with the one from application?




> UsernameTokenProcessor not processing unhashed UsernameToken
> ------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: WSS-54
>                 URL: http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/WSS-54
>             Project: WSS4J
>          Issue Type: Bug
>            Reporter: Bob Coss
>         Assigned To: Davanum Srinivas
>
> The UsernameTokenProcessor will not authenticate anything but a UsernameToken 
> that was hashed with a nonce and timestamp.  Anything else that is passed to 
> it will create a valid principal regardless of what the implementations 
> password callback handler does.  This is creating confusion and preventing 
> WSS4J from being used for anything where the the UsernameToken is passed 
> plainly.  It is understood that doing this in a production environment is 
> discouraged, but it is usefull to have this implementation work as expected 
> so that the framework can be experimented with and evaluated.
> Specifically, in UsernameTokenProcessor.java, for a UsernameToken that is not 
> of hashed, nothing is done with the WSPasswordCallback object after the call 
> to the password handler handle method is invoked.  Since nothing is done with 
> it, the code drops through and sets up a valid principal with the userid and 
> returns.  There is no way to signal a 
> WSSecurityException(WSSecurityException.FAILED_AUTHENTICATION).

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