cd <TS_HOME>/bin
ant config.vi
ant enable.jacc
Setup and Configuration |
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Note
|
The Jakarta EE Specification process provides for any number of compatible implementations. As additional implementations become available, refer to project or product documentation from those vendors for specific TCK setup and operational guidance. |
This chapter describes how to set up the Authorization TCK and JavaTest harness software. Before proceeding with the instructions in this chapter, be sure to install all required software, as described in Chapter 3, "Installation."
After completing the instructions in this chapter, proceed to Chapter 5, "Executing Tests," for instructions on running the Authorization TCK.
After configuring your environment as described in this section, continue with the instructions in Section 4.6, "Using the JavaTest Harness Software."
Note
|
In these instructions, variables in angle brackets need to be expanded
for each platform. For example, On Windows, you must escape any backslashes with an extra backslash in path separators used in any of the following properties, or use forward slashes as a path separator instead. |
Set the following environment variables in your shell environment:
JAVA_HOME
to the directory in which Java SE 11 or 17 is installed
TS_HOME
to the directory in which the Authorization TCK
2.1 software is installed
PATH
to include the following directories: JAVA_HOME/bin
,
JACC_HOME/bin
, and ANT_HOME/bin
Copy <TS_HOME>/bin/ts.jte.jdk11 as <TS_HOME>/bin/ts.jte if JAVA_HOME is Java SE 11.
Edit your <TS_HOME>/bin/ts.jte
file and set the following
environment variables:
Set the jacc.home
property to the installation directory of Jakarta EE
10 CI.
Set the jacc.host
property to the host name of the system where your
Authorization runtime implementation is installed.
Set the jacc.classes
property to point to the classes or JAR file
that contains the Authorization classes.
Set the sigTestClasspath
property to point to the classes or JAR file
for the runtime implementation of the Authorization 2.1 API and any additional required
signature classes.
Copy the tsharness.jar
and jacctck.jar
files to the server’s extension
directory, change to the <TS_HOME>/bin
directory and execute the following
commands:
cd <TS_HOME>/bin
ant config.vi
ant enable.jacc
After configuring your environment as described in this section, continue with the instructions in Section 4.4, "Using the JavaTest Harness Software."
Note
|
In these instructions, variables in angle brackets need to be expanded
for each platform. For example, On Windows, you must escape any backslashes with an extra backslash in path separators used in any of the following properties, or use forward slashes as a path separator instead. |
Set the following environment variables in your shell environment:
JAVA_HOME
to the directory in which Java SE 11 or 17 is installed
TS_HOME
to the directory in which the Authorization TCK
2.1 software is installed
PATH
to include the following directories: JAVA_HOME/bin
,
JACC_HOME/bin
, and ANT_HOME/bin
Copy <TS_HOME>/bin/ts.jte.jdk11 as <TS_HOME>/bin/ts.jte if JAVA_HOME is Java SE 11.
Edit your <TS_HOME>/bin/ts.jte
file and set the following
environment variables:
Set the jacc.home
property to the installation directory of Jakarta EE
10 CI.
Set the jacc.host
property to the host name of the system where your
Authorization runtime implementation is installed.
Set the jacc.classes
property to point to the classes or JAR file
that contains the Authorization classes.
Set the sigTestClasspath
property to point to the classes or JAR file
for the runtime implementation of the Jakarta Authorization API and any additional required
signature classes.
Change to the <TS_HOME>/bin
directory and execute the following
commands:
cd <TS_HOME>/bin
ant config.vi
The config.vi
Ant task performs several actions, including:
Sets the following Jakarta Authorization JVM options:
-Djakarta.security.jacc.policy.provider= com.sun.ts.tests.jacc.provider.TSPolicy -Dvendor.jakarta.security.jacc.policy.provider= com.sun.enterprise.security.jacc.provider.SimplePolicyProvider -Djakarta.security.jacc.PolicyConfigurationFactory.provider= com.sun.ts.tests.jacc.provider.TSPolicyConfigurationFactoryImpl -Dvendor.jakarta.security.jacc.PolicyConfigurationFactory.provider= com.sun.enterprise.security.jacc.provider.SimplePolicyConfigurationFactory -Dlog.file.location=${log.file.location}
Note that the log.file.location
comes from the property of the same
name in the ts.jte
file.
+
* Deploys the Authorization Provider (from <TS_HOME>/lib/tsprovider.jar
) to
your server’s library directory (for example using Eclipse GlassFish 7.0,
glassfish6/glassfish/lib
) where it can be picked up and loaded by the
server
* Enables the Security manager with the -Djava.security.manager
JVM
option
* Creates users required by the TCK tests on the server under test
* Deploys tsharness.jar
and jacctck.jar
files to your Authorization server’s
/lib
directory
4. Enable the TCK Authorization provider:
ant enable.jacc
After running the Authorization TCK tests, disable the Authorization provider by running
the disable.jacc Ant task:
ant disable.jacc
Change to the appropriate Authorization TCK test subdirectory
(<TS_HOME>/src/com/sun/ts/tests/jacc/web
or
<TS_HOME>/src/com/sun/ts/tests/jacc/ejb) for the tests that you plan to
run and execute the ant deploy
command to deploy the desired tests.
To deploy the Authorization EJB tests:
cd ${TS_HOME}/src/com/sun/ts/tests/jacc/ejb ant deploy
Or, to deploy the Authorization Web tests:
cd ${TS_HOME}/src/com/sun/ts/tests/jacc/web
ant deploy
Repeat this deployment step for each Authorization test directory after you run
the tests in the current directory, as described in
Chapter 5, "Executing Tests."
Authorization tests translate security configurations into corresponding Authorization
permissions. If multiple test directories are deployed simultaneously,
the result can be permissions that are stricter than what is expected,
which can lead to test failures. To avoid this potential problem, deploy
and run individual test directories separately, not simultaneously.
Configuration handlers are used to configure and unconfigure a Authorization 2.1 implementation during the certification process. These are similar to deployment handlers but used for configuration. A configuration handler is an Ant build file that contains at least the required targets listed below:
config.vi
- to configure the vendor implementation
clean.vi
- to unconfigure the vendor implementation
These targets are called from the <TS_HOME>/bin/build.xml
file and
call down into the implementation-specific configuration handlers.
To provide your own configuration handler, create a config.vi.xml file
with the necessary configuration steps for your implementation and place
the file under the <TS_HOME>/bin/xml/impl/<your_impl>
directory.
For more information, you may wish to view <TS_HOME>/bin/xml/impl/glassfish/config.vi.xml
,
the configuration file for Jakarta EE 10 Compatible Implementation, Eclipse GlassFish.
Deployment handlers are used to deploy and undeploy the WAR files that contain the tests to be run during the certification process. A deployment handler is an Ant build file that contains at least the required targets listed in the table below.
The Authorization TCK provides these deployment handlers:
<TS_HOME>/bin/xml/impl/none/deploy.xml
<TS_HOME>/bin/xml/impl/glassfish/deploy.xml
<TS_HOME>/bin/xml/impl/tomcat/deploy.xml
The deploy.xml
files in each of these directories are used to control
deployment to a specific container (no deployment, deployment to
the Eclipse GlassFish Web container, deployment to the Tomcat Web container)
denoted by the name of the directory in which each deploy.xml
file
resides. The primary build.xml
file in the <TS_HOME>/bin
directory
has a target to invoke any of the required targets (-deploy
, -undeploy
,
-deploy.all
, -undeploy.all
).
To deploy tests to another Authorization implementation, you must create a custom handler.
Create a new directory in the <TS_HOME>/bin/xml/impl
directory tree.
For example, create the <TS_HOME>/bin/xml/impl/my_deployment_handler
directory.
Replace my_deployment_handler with the value of the impl.vi
property that you set in Step 5 of the configuration procedure
described in Section 4.2, "Configuring Your Environment to Repackage
and Run the TCK Against the Vendor Implementation".
Copy the deploy.xml file from the <TS_HOME>/bin/xml/impl/none
directory to the directory that you created.
Modify the required targets in the deploy.xml
file. This is what
the deploy.xml
file for the "none" deployment handler looks like.
<project name="No-op Deployment" default="deploy">
<!-- No-op deployment target -->
<target name="-deploy">
<echo message="No deploy target implemented for this deliverable"/>
</target>
<target name="-undeploy">
<echo message="No undeploy target implemented for this deliverable"/>
</target>
<target name="-deploy.all">
<echo message="No deploy target implemented for this deliverable"/>
</target>
<target name="-undeploy.all">
<echo message="No undeploy target implemented for this deliverable"/>
</target>
</project>
Although this example just echoes messages, it does include the four
required Ant targets (-deploy
, -undeploy
, -deploy.all
, -undeploy.all
)
that your custom deploy.xml
file must contain. With this as your
starting point, look at the required targets in the deploy.xml
files
in the Tomcat and Eclipse Glassfish directories for guidance as you create
the same targets for the Web container in which you will run your
implementation of Authorization.
The following Ant targets can be called from anywhere under the
<TS_HOME>/src
directory:
deploy
undeploy
deploy.all
undeploy.all
The deploy.all
and undeploy.all
targets can also be called from the
<TS_HOME>/bin
directory.
Note
|
The targets in the |
There are two general ways to run the Authorization TCK test suite using the JavaTest harness software:
Through the JavaTest GUI; if using this method, please continue on to Section 4.7, "Using the JavaTest Harness Configuration GUI."
In JavaTest batch mode, from the command line in your shell environment; if using this method, please proceed directly to Chapter 5, "Executing Tests."
You can use the JavaTest harness GUI to modify general test settings and to quickly get started with the default Authorization TCK test environment. This section covers the following topics:
Note
|
It is only necessary to proceed with this section if you want to run the JavaTest harness in GUI mode. If you plan to run the JavaTest harness in command-line mode, skip the remainder of this chapter, and continue with Chapter 5, "Executing Tests." |
In order for the JavaTest harness to execute the test suite, it requires information about how your computing environment is configured. The JavaTest harness requires two types of configuration information:
Test environment: This is data used by the tests. For example, the path to the Java runtime, how to start the product being tested, network resources, and other information required by the tests in order to run. This information does not change frequently and usually stays constant from test run to test run.
Test parameters: This is information used by the JavaTest harness to run the tests. Test parameters are values used by the JavaTest harness that determine which tests in the test suite are run, how the tests should be run, and where the test reports are stored. This information often changes from test run to test run.
The first time you run the JavaTest harness software, you are asked to specify the test suite and work directory that you want to use. (These parameters can be changed later from within the JavaTest harness GUI.)
Once the JavaTest harness GUI is displayed, whenever you choose Start, then Run Tests to begin a test run, the JavaTest harness determines whether all of the required configuration information has been supplied:
If the test environment and parameters have been completely configured, the test run starts immediately.
If any required configuration information is missing, the configuration editor displays a series of questions asking you the necessary information. This is called the configuration interview. When you have entered the configuration data, you are asked if you wish to proceed with running the test.
Before you start the JavaTest harness software, you must have a valid test suite and Java SE 11 or 17 installed on your system.
The Authorization TCK includes an Ant script that is used to execute the
JavaTest harness from the <TS_HOME>
directory. Using this Ant script
to start the JavaTest harness is part of the procedure described in
Section 4.7.3, "To Configure the JavaTest Harness to Run the
TCK Tests."
When you execute the JavaTest harness software for the first time, the JavaTest harness displays a Welcome dialog box that guides you through the initial startup configuration.
If it is able to open a test suite, the JavaTest harness displays a Welcome to JavaTest dialog box that guides you through the process of either opening an existing work directory or creating a new work directory as described in the JavaTest online help.
If the JavaTest harness is unable to open a test suite, it displays a Welcome to JavaTest dialog box that guides you through the process of opening both a test suite and a work directory as described in the JavaTest documentation.
After you specify a work directory, you can use the Test Manager to configure and run tests as described in Section 4.7.3, "To Configure the JavaTest Harness to Run the TCK Tests."
The answers you give to some of the configuration interview questions are specific to your site. For example, the name of the host on which the JavaTest harness is running. Other configuration parameters can be set however you wish. For example, where you want test report files to be stored.
Note that you only need to complete all these steps the first time you start the JavaTest test harness. After you complete these steps, you can either run all of the tests by completing the steps in Section 5.1, "Starting JavaTest," or run a subset of the tests by completing the steps in Section 5.2, "Running a Subset of the Tests."
Change to the <TS_HOME>/bin
directory and start the JavaTest test
harness:
cd <TS_HOME>/bin
ant gui
From the File menu, click Open Quick Start Wizard.
The Welcome screen displays.
Select Start a new test run, and then click Next.
You are prompted to create a new configuration or use a configuration
template.
Select Create a new configuration, and then click Next.
You are prompted to select a test suite.
Accept the default suite (<TS_HOME>/src
), and then click Next.
You are prompted to specify a work directory to use to store your test
results.
Type a work directory name or use the Browse button to select a work
directory, and then click Next.
You are prompted to start the configuration editor or start a test run.
At this point, the Authorization TCK is configured to run the
default test suite.
Deselect the Start the configuration editor option, and then click Finish.
Click Run Tests, then click Start.
The JavaTest harness starts running the tests.
To reconfigure the JavaTest test harness, do one of the following:
Click Configuration, then click New Configuration.
Click Configuration, then click Change Configuration.
Click Report, and then click Create Report.
Specify the directory in which the JavaTest test harness will write
the report, and then click OK.
A report is created, and you are asked whether you want to view it.
Click Yes to view the report.
The JavaTest GUI enables you to configure numerous test options. These options are divided into two general dialog box groups:
Group 1: Available from the JavaTest Configure/Change Configuration submenus, the following options are displayed in a tabbed dialog box:
Tests to Run
Exclude List
Keywords
Prior Status
Test Environment
Concurrency
Timeout Factor
Group 2: Available from the JavaTest Configure/Change
Configuration/Other Values submenu, or by pressing Ctrl+E
, the following
options are displayed in a paged dialog box:
Environment Files
Test Environment
Specify Tests to Run
Specify an Exclude List
Note that there is some overlap between the functions in these two dialog boxes; for those functions use the dialog box that is most convenient for you. Please refer to the JavaTest Harness documentation or the online help for complete information about these various options.
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