01 Oct, 2014

1 commit


24 Sep, 2014

2 commits


17 Sep, 2014

1 commit


16 Sep, 2014

1 commit


15 Sep, 2014

4 commits

  • matthew
     
  • It was misplaced in the openig-core module where it was used in openig-war module.
    
    git-svn-id: https://svn.forgerock.org/openig/trunk@573 dbb9e58e-28e6-4ce0-90e8-f11d9605b710
    guillaume.sauthier
     
  • Heap.get(String):Object gains type safety
    
        Heap.get(String, Class<T>):T
    
    Heap.getRequiredObject(JsonValue, Class<T>) has a shorter name
    
        Heap.resolve(JsonValue, Class<T>):T
    
    Heap.getObject(JsonValue, Class<T>) is replaced by a resolve
    variant that supports optional dependencies:
    
        Heap.resolve(JsonValue, Class<T>, boolean):T
    
    git-svn-id: https://svn.forgerock.org/openig/trunk@572 dbb9e58e-28e6-4ce0-90e8-f11d9605b710
    guillaume.sauthier
     
  • Inline object declarations are a mean to ease understanding of
    Exchange processing.
    They permit to describe anonymously, inner objects when a reference to
    another heap object is required. That introduce, in the configuration
    files, some hierarchical support, easing the user to mentally
    represents his processing chain.
    
    This is done in a fully backward compatible way, without requiring any
    changes to existing object declarations (the one that requires other
    objects through references or names).
    
    The idea is to automatically extract inline declaration when the Heaplet
    is calling the get***Object() methods: if the provided JsonValue is a
    String, traditional object lookup is performed, but when the JsonValue
    represents a JSONObject (a Map), we try to turn this into a normal
    object declaration (just like what is done during heap initialisation).
    If the given JsonValue does not describe a valid declaration, a
    JsonValueException is thrown (again, just like the heap init process
    is doing).
    
    Notice that inline declarations do not require a 'name' attribute to
    be specified (like anonymous Java classes), so we generate a unique name
    based on the JsonPointer (represents the location of the node in
    the JSON structure).
    
    Notice that OPENIG-316 is partly resolved in this commit: HeapUtil methods
    have only been moved into the Heap interface: no additional type safety,
    no renaming.
    
    git-svn-id: https://svn.forgerock.org/openig/trunk@571 dbb9e58e-28e6-4ce0-90e8-f11d9605b710
    guillaume.sauthier
     

10 Sep, 2014

1 commit

  • OpenIG used to provide a default Session implementation based on the
    underlying Servlet container's HttpSession. This changeset intends to
    gives to the user the ability to change the session persistence
    strategy (in other words: changing the Session implementation).
    
    This can be done at the global level (in the config.json, declaring a
    SessionFactory object named 'Session') or on a per-route basis (with the
    new 'session' attribute).
    When an Exchanges comes into a route that declares a new session type, a new
    session is build (no existing session items are propagated) and replace
    the old session. When the exchange exits the route, the new session is closed
    (notify the session that it's time to persist its content) and is replaced
    by the old one. Really like a push/pop stack mechanism.
    
    Notice that the 2 sessions are completely separated (cannot access the old
    content from the new and vis-versa). First, that would defeat the purpose of
    different session persistence modes (if items are propagated, where should
    I persist them ?). Secondly, Session is not intended to share data between
    handlers/filters: the Exchange is basically a request-scoped Map that is
    designed for that purpose.
    
    The JWT based session is a session implementation whose persistence is done
    using an HTTP Cookie, the session's content being serialized as JSON (usable
    types are constrained, see list below) and used as the payload of an
    encrypted JSON Web Token (JWT).
    
    The use of the JWT session has a few constraints:
     * HTTP Cookies are size-limited to 4K -> Small objects can be stored
     * Only JSON compatible types are supported:
        * null
        * Java primitive types + their boxed equivalent
        * Strings (and any CharSequence)
        * List and Map (of the supported types, recursively)
     * Same client performing concurrent HTTP invocations (so within the
       same HTTP session) that will modify their own session content will
       see inconsistencies in the session. This is due to the fact that the JWT
       session is not shared, each concurrent Thread has its own instance and
       can modify it at will. At the end of the processing, each Thread will
       serialize its own session's content regardless of other Threads.
    
    git-svn-id: https://svn.forgerock.org/openig/trunk@565 dbb9e58e-28e6-4ce0-90e8-f11d9605b710
    guillaume.sauthier
     

08 Sep, 2014

3 commits


05 Sep, 2014

6 commits

  • To keep backward compatibility, 'keystone' and 'truststore' are left
    unchanged but have been deprecated.
    We've added 2 new attributes to specify reference(s) to TrustManager(s)
    and KeyManager(s) declared as heap objects.
    
    Issues: OPENIG-305
    
    git-svn-id: https://svn.forgerock.org/openig/trunk@560 dbb9e58e-28e6-4ce0-90e8-f11d9605b710
    guillaume.sauthier
     
  • This change eases references resolution when they are provided as a JSON
    String array (like ["RefOne", "RefTwo"]).
    
    git-svn-id: https://svn.forgerock.org/openig/trunk@559 dbb9e58e-28e6-4ce0-90e8-f11d9605b710
    guillaume.sauthier
     
  • The two referenced service implementations do not exist (anymore ?).
    And the service file name was incorrect (no HeapletService interface
    exist).
    
    git-svn-id: https://svn.forgerock.org/openig/trunk@558 dbb9e58e-28e6-4ce0-90e8-f11d9605b710
    guillaume.sauthier
     
  • KeyStore and related security objects are being more and more central
    to OpenIG:
     * Used by HttpClient
     * Needed for encryption / decryption
    
    This patch is a first step to provide a way to configure theses as
    usual heap objects (through JSON).
    
    KeyStore heap object is an abstraction around the keystore file (either JKS,
    PKCS12 or other depending on the platform capabilities).
    Specifying a password or not depends on he usage:
     * If KeyStore will be used to read private credentials (through a
       KeyManager for example), a password is required
     * If not (for a TrustManager), no password is required
    
    KeyManager and TrustManager are using a KeyStore heap object and
    are used within SSL mechanism (SSLContext) to provide a view on the KeyStore:
     * KeyManager when private credentials access is required.
     * TrustManager when only public information access is required
    
    Issues: OPENIG-295
    Reviews: CR-4441
    
    git-svn-id: https://svn.forgerock.org/openig/trunk@557 dbb9e58e-28e6-4ce0-90e8-f11d9605b710
    guillaume.sauthier
     
  • The previously introduced evaluate() method was a step in the right
    direction, allowing resolution of static (no references to ${exchange})
    string JsonValue, returning a simple resolved String.
    While it works great, it's a shame that we don't benefit anymore of the
    JsonValue API, in particular the conversion methods (asURL(), ...).
    
    This fix uses a JsonTransformer to actually resolve any String wrapped
    JsonValue and creates a deep copy of the given JsonValue.
    
    git-svn-id: https://svn.forgerock.org/openig/trunk@556 dbb9e58e-28e6-4ce0-90e8-f11d9605b710
    guillaume.sauthier
     
  • When a new heap object instance has to be created, we first have to
    find a Heaplet instance that will create the required object from the
    given JSON configuration.
    Heaplet instances are linked to the single object they created: they
    manage the heap object lifecycle with the start() and destroy() methods.
    The old behaviour was using Heaplet instances directly loaded and
    instantiated, meaning that a single Heaplet instance could be used to
    create multiple heap objects, somehow mixing states, which was very
    wrong.
    
    Now, HeapletFactory (instead of direct Heaplet) are found using the
    ServiceLoader discovery mechanism. They are responsible to create new
    Heaplet instances, meaning that we cannot anymore share a Heaplet
    instance for 2 or more heap objects.
    
    Heaplet class does not extends Indexed<Class> anymore (was only used
    because of the way Heaplets was looking for Heaplet instances).
    NestedHeaplet is now deprecated since its only duty was to implement the
    Indexed interface. All references to NestedHeaplet were replaced to
    GenericHeaplet (its parent class) in our code base to avoid ugly
    compiler warnings.
    
    As per OPENIG-302 comments, the HeapletFactory will be a short-lived
    concept since this additional layer introduction was the straw that broke
    the camel's back :)
    
    Issues: OPENIG-302
    Reviews: CR-4457
    
    git-svn-id: https://svn.forgerock.org/openig/trunk@555 dbb9e58e-28e6-4ce0-90e8-f11d9605b710
    guillaume.sauthier
     

26 Aug, 2014

1 commit


25 Aug, 2014

2 commits


22 Aug, 2014

2 commits


21 Aug, 2014

3 commits


20 Aug, 2014

1 commit


08 Aug, 2014

2 commits


04 Aug, 2014

1 commit


03 Aug, 2014

9 commits