| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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The pki-client.jar has been split and merged into pki-certsrv.jar
and pki-tools.jar. The REST client classes are now packaged in
com.netscape.certsrv.<component> packages. The REST CLI classes
are now packaged in com.netscape.cmstools.<component> packages.
The "pki" script has been moved into pki-tools RPM package.
Ticket #215
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The shutdown() methods in several classes have been fixed to allow
more graceful shutdown and clean restart. There are two types of
object attributes that need to be handled differently.
Attributes that are initialized by the constructor should not be
nulled during shutdown because they won't be reinitialized during
restart. If they require a cleanup (e.g. emptying collections,
closing LDAP connections) it's not necessary to check for null
before calling the cleanup method because they're never null.
For attributes that are initialized during init(), it may not be
necessary to do a cleanup or null the attribute since they might
still be used by other threads and they will be reinitialized
during restart so the old objects will be garbage collected. If
they do need a cleanup they should be checked for null because
they might still be null due to init() failure or initialization
conditionals.
If the attributes are initialized conditionally, the logic has been
modified to ensure the attributes are either initialized or set to
null.
Ticket #247
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The common classes used by REST client and services have been moved
into the com.netscape.certsrv.<component> packages.
Ticket #215
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The REST client classes have been moved into the
com.netscape.cms.client.<component> packages.
Ticket #215
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The REST common classes have been renamed for better clarity
and consistency.
Ticket #259
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The REST server classes have been renamed for better clarity
and consistency.
Ticket #259
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The REST client classes have been renamed for better clarity
and consistency.
Ticket #259
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The remaining build scripts have been updated to automatically
find the source codes.
Ticket #62
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To support different access control configurations the REST
services have been separated by roles. Services that don't
need authentication will be available under /rest. Services
that require agent rights will be available under /rest/agent.
Services that require admin rights will be available under
/rest/admin.
Ticket #107
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The PKI JNDI realm has been modified to utilize the authentication
and authorization subsystems in PKI engine directly. It's no longer
necessary to define the LDAP connection settings in Tomcat's
configuration files.
Ticket #126
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A new ClientConfig class has been added to encapsulate client
configuration parameters. These parameters include server URI,
certificate database, certificate nickname, and password.
Ticket #107
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* Integration of Tomcat 7
* Introduction of dependency upon tomcatjss 7.0
* Removal of http filtering configuration mechanisms
* Introduction of additional slot substitution to
support revised filesystem layout
* Addition of 'pkiuser' uid:gid creation methods
* Inclusion of per instance '*.profile' files
* Introduction of configurable 'configurationRoot'
parameter
* Introduction of default configuration of 'log4j'
mechanism (alee)
* Modify web.xml to use new Application classes to
bootstrap servers (alee)
* Introduction of "Wrapper" logic to support
Tomcat 6 --> Tomcat 7 API change (jmagne)
* Added jython helper function to allow attaching
a remote java debugger (e. g. - eclipse)
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The cert revocation REST service is based on DoRevoke and DoUnrevoke servlets.
It provides an interface to manage certificate revocation.
Ticket #161
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A new getEntity() method has been added to obtain the entity from
a Response object and also map HTTP errors into exceptions.
Ticket #161
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* Integration of Tomcat 7
* Addition of centralized 'pki-tomcatd' systemd functionality to the
PKI Deployment strategy
* Removal of 'pki_flavor' attribute
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FB.SBSC_USE_STRINGBUFFER_CONCATENATION --Remaining
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Tickets #144 and #145
Providing the following:
1. Simple EE restful interface for certificates, printing, listing and searching.
2. Simple EE restful interface for certificate enrollment requests.
3. Simple EE restful interface for profiles and profile properties.
4. Simple Test client to exercise the functionality.
5. Created restful client base class inherited by CARestClient and DRMRestClient.
6. Provide simple restful implementations of new interfaces added.
ToDO: Need some more refactoring to base classes for some of the new classes which are similar to classes
in the DRM restful area.
ToDO: Actual certificate enrollment code that will be refactored from existing ProfileSubmitServlet.
Provide CA EE Restful interface and test client review fixes.
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* Re-aligned code to account for revised layout documented at
http://pki.fedoraproject.org/wiki/PKI_Instance_Deployment
* Massaged logic to comply with PKI subsystem running within
a shared instance
* Developed code to take advantage of a single shared NSS security
database model
* Completed the following two 'scriptlets':
* Dogtag 10: Python 'slot_assignment.py' Installation Scriptlet
(https://fedorahosted.org/pki/ticket/146)
* Dogtag 10: Python 'security_databases.py' Installation Scriptlet
(https://fedorahosted.org/pki/ticket/136)
* Created several additional PKI deployment helper utilities.
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- The real fix is in JSS alone; This patch only adds better error handling and non-static salt.
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Simple fix to get the DRMRestClient working under SSL again.
Ticket #163.
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Most of unused private fields have been removed because they generate
warnings in Eclipse. Some are kept because it might be useful later.
Ticket #139
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Unnecessary type casts have been removed using Eclipse Quick Fix.
Ticket #134
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Whitespaces in Java code have been removed with the following command:
find . -not -path .git -name *.java -exec sed -i 's/[[:blank:]]\+$//' {} \;
Ticket #134
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For the ECC plan and the different phases, please refer to
http://pki.fedoraproject.org/wiki/ECC_in_Dogtag
Design for each phase is on the same wiki page.
Note: the designs beyond phase 2 were more like a brain dump. Although I said
"Do Not Review," you are free to take a peak at what's intended down the road.
I will go back and take a closer look and refine/adjust the designs when I
begin implementation for each new phase.
What you need to know:
* Problem 1 - nethsm issue:
On the server side, if you turn on FIPS mode, in addition to nethsm, you need
to attach certicom as well to have ECC SSL working on the server side. This
problem has already been reported to Thales last year and they said they'd look
into putting the item on their next release. Recently through a different
contact, we learned there might be a way to "turn it on" (still waiting for
their further instruction)
* Problem 2- Certicom issue:
This is a show-stopper for deployment. Initially, on the client side, I used Kai's special
version of Xulrunner/Firefox, attached to Certicom token, so that the CRMF
requests can be generated with key archival option. However, I encountered
(or, re-encountered) an issue with certicom token. Certicom generates ECC keys
with the wrong format (not PKCS7 conforming), which makes ECC key archival
impossible on the server side if you use non-certicom token with DRM (but we
expect an HSM in most product deployment). I have contacted Certicom for this
issue, and they confirmed that they indeed have such issue. We are hoping they will fix it.
But then you might ask, "I thought I saw some ECC enrollment
profiles/javascripts being checked in? How were the tests done?" The tests for
those profiles were done against this ECC key archival/recovery DRM prototype I
implemented last year (needs to be turned on manually in 8.1), where I
"cheated" (yeah, that's why it's called a prototype) by decrypting the private
key in the CRMF on DRM, and then manipulating the byte array to strip off the
offending bytes before archival.
In the real, non-prototype implementation, which is what's in this patch, for
security reasons, private keys are unwrapped directly onto the token during key
archival, so there is no way to manipulate the keys in memory and bypass the
Certicom issue.
A word about Kai's special version of Xulrunner/Firefox. It is not yet
publicly available (due out in Firefox 10.0.4 on RHEL 5.8).
* Problem 3- Firefox with nethsm issue:
Another option was to connect Kai's special version firefox with an HSM to test
my DRM/JSS code. However, for whatever reason, I could not get SSL going
between such Firefox and ECC CA ( I did not try very hard though, as I have one
other option -- writing my own ECC CRMF generation tool. I might come back to
try the nethsm Firefox idea later)
My solution (how I work on this official implementation):
* I hacked up a ECC CRMF tool by taking the CRMFPopClient (existing in current
releases), gutting out the RSA part of the code, and replacing it with ECC
code. I call it CRMFPopClientEC. Two types of ECC key pairs could be
generated: ECDSA or ECDH (That's another benefit of writing my own tool -- I
don't know if you can select which type to generate in the Javascript... maybe
you can, I just don't know). I'm in no way condoning archival of signing
keys!! This is just a test tool.
This tool takes a curve name as option (along with others), generates an ECC
key pair, crafts up an CRMF request with key archival option, and sends request
directly to the specified CA. You will see a "Deferred" message in the HTML
response (see attachment for example)
Once CA agent approves the request, the archival request goes to DRM and the
user private key is archived.
For recovery, DRM agent selects key recovery, etc, and you get your pkcs12.
I did some sanity test with the pkcs12 recovered:
* Import the recovered pkcs12 into a certicom library:
pk12util -d . -h "Certicom FIPS Cert/Key Services" -i userEC.p12
I also tested by retrieving a p12, importing it into a browser, and adding the
user as an agent and the user could act as agent via ssl client auth to the CA.
Finally, much of the RSA-centric code had been cleared out of the way at the
time when I worked on the DRM ECC prototype, so you don't see much of that in
this round.
How do you test? Well, unless you want to use my CRMFPopClientEC tool hooked up
with a nethsm (like I did), or write your own tool, you can't really test it
until Certicom fixes their issue. (BTW CRMFPopClientEC can also be changed to
work with ceriticom, although you would run into the same issue I mentioned
above)
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The deprecated ApacheHttpClientExecutor class has been replaced with
ApacheHttpClient4Executor.
Ticket #3
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The CMSException was added to simplify error handling in REST services.
The exception may include an error message and some other attributes.
When the server throws a CMSException (or its subclass), the exception
will be marshalled into XML and unmarshalled by the client, then thrown
again as a new exception which can be caught by the application.
Ticket #100
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Previously the source code was located inside a pki folder.
This folder was created during svn migration and is no longer
needed. This folder has now been removed and the contents have
been moved up one level.
Ticket #131
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