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19:41
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A: How can a JAX-RS REST service have authentication handled by annotations?

derdcI think you want import javax.annotation.Security.RolesAllowed; The annotation itself looks like this @Path("/helloworld") @RolesAllowed({"ADMIN", "ORG1"}) public class helloWorld { @GET @Path("sayHello") @Produces("text/plain") @RolesAllows("ADMIN") public String sayHello() { return "Hel...

How do I define what the roles are and how they provide authentication?
That's specific to the application. Refer here for another Spring-less approach, defining them in web.xml docs.oracle.com/javaee/5/tutorial/doc/bncav.html
Thanks, I think the docs from your first comment should get me there. I guess I'm still not quite clear though - what do you mean by saying it's specific to the application? I don't know how to define them for the application. I see a @DeclareRoles annotation in the doc you linked, but I don't see how to tell it how the roles authenticate. Is that done in the web.xml file?
So are you not presently implementing role based security? Or do you have roles defined and just need to secure your RESTful URLs by the roles you already have?
19:41
Currently there's nothing at all relating to roles, or any security. I don't have any specific method in mind, just whatever will be reasonably secure and not too heavy to implement.
Hi
Hey Daenyth
web.xml is the easiest way probably
are your users, passwords, roles going to live in a database?
or LDAP?
or something else?
I think I recall someone else on the team saying we don't the web.xml file much. Currently it just defines a listener class and sets up guice
It can be in a DB.
ok, then that's all you'll use it for
setting up your listener and authentication
what application server or container are you running?
19:43
It's running inside tomcat6
with jersey
ok check this out
that should demonstrate the table structure needed to create what's called a Realm
that's used for security and should take care of what you need
Oh, I should also mention that we're using hibernate
Currently there's no manual table setup done anywhere
ah ok
and you are adverse to Spring?
I believe we are trying to avoid it
I guess you are already using Guice for DI
we might be at the end of my experience then... I have implemented this using web.xml and raw JDBC and I have done it with Spring and Hibernate in tandem
19:46
hm
Well, any information would be helpful
I'm sure it's possible to do with the setup you have, I just haven't done it on any project I've been on
There are people on my team more experienced than I am - the info might be enough to get us in the right direction
typically if clients are using Hibernate, they are using Spring too
right
if you don't want to use full out Spring, you could just use Spring Security
that might be an ok approach, I guess it's up to your team
I must be going, best of luck!
19:49
Thanks for the help
certainly

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