[[_jboss_adapter]] {% if book.community %} ==== JBoss EAP/Wildfly Adapter {% endif %} {% if book.product %} ==== JBoss EAP Adapter {% endif %} {% if book.community %} To be able to secure WAR apps deployed on JBoss EAP, WildFly or JBoss AS, you must install and configure the {{book.project.name}} adapter subsystem. You then have two options to secure your WARs. {% endif %} {% if book.product %} To be able to secure WAR apps deployed on JBoss EAP, you must install and configure the {{book.project.name}} adapter subsystem. You then have two options to secure your WARs. {% endif %} You can provide an adapter config file in your WAR and change the auth-method to KEYCLOAK within web.xml. Alternatively, you don't have to modify your WAR at all and you can secure it via the {{book.project.name}} adapter subsystem configuration in `standalone.xml`. Both methods are described in this section. [[_jboss_adapter_installation]] ===== Installing the adapter Adapters are available as a separate archive depending on what server version you are using. {% if book.community %} Install on Wildfly 9 or 10: [source, subs="attributes"] ---- $ cd $WILDFLY_HOME $ unzip keycloak-wildfly-adapter-dist-{{book.project.version}}.zip ---- Install on Wildfly 8: [source, subs="attributes"] ---- $ cd $WILDFLY_HOME $ unzip keycloak-wf8-adapter-dist-{{book.project.version}}.zip ---- Install on JBoss EAP 7: [source, subs="attributes"] ---- $ cd $EAP_HOME $ unzip keycloak-eap7-adapter-dist-{{book.project.version}}.zip ---- Install on JBoss EAP 6: [source, subs="attributes"] ---- $ cd $EAP_HOME $ unzip keycloak-eap6-adapter-dist-{{book.project.version}}.zip ---- Install on JBoss AS 7.1: [source, subs="attributes"] ---- $ cd $JBOSS_HOME $ unzip keycloak-as7-adapter-dist-{{book.project.version}}.zip ---- {% endif %} {% if book.product %} Install on JBoss EAP 7: [source, subs="attributes"] ---- $ cd $EAP_HOME $ unzip rh-sso-{{book.project.version}}-eap7-adapter.zip ---- Install on JBoss EAP 6: [source, subs="attributes"] ---- $ cd $EAP_HOME $ unzip rh-sso-{{book.project.version}}-eap6-adapter.zip ---- {% endif %} This ZIP archive contains JBoss Modules specific to the {{book.project.name}} adapter. It also contains JBoss CLI scripts to configure the adapter subsystem. To configure the adapter subsystem if the server is not running execute: [source] ---- $ ./bin/jboss-cli.sh --file=adapter-install-offline.cli ---- NOTE: The offline script is not available for JBoss EAP 6 Alternatively, if the server is running execute: [source] ---- $ ./bin/jboss-cli.sh --file=adapter-install.cli ---- ===== Required Per WAR Configuration This section describes how to secure a WAR directly by adding configuration and editing files within your WAR package. The first thing you must do is create a `keycloak.json` adapter configuration file within the `WEB-INF` directory of your WAR. The format of this configuration file is described in the <> section. Next you must set the `auth-method` to `KEYCLOAK` in `web.xml`. You also have to use standard servlet security to specify role-base constraints on your URLs. Here's an example: [source,xml] ---- application Admins /admin/* admin CONFIDENTIAL Customers /customers/* user CONFIDENTIAL KEYCLOAK this is ignored currently admin user ---- ===== Securing WARs via Adapter Subsystem You do not have to modify your WAR to secure it with {{book.project.name}}. Instead you can externally secure it via the {{book.project.name}} Adapter Subsystem. While you don't have to specify KEYCLOAK as an `auth-method`, you still have to define the `security-constraints` in `web.xml`. You do not, however, have to create a `WEB-INF/keycloak.json` file. This metadata is instead defined within server configuration (i.e. `standalone.xml`) in the {{book.project.name}} subsystem definition. [source,xml] ---- demo http://localhost:8081/auth external customer-portal password ---- The `secure-deployment` `name` attribute identifies the WAR you want to secure. Its value is the `module-name` defined in `web.xml` with `.war` appended. The rest of the configuration corresponds pretty much one to one with the `keycloak.json` configuration options defined in <>. The exception is the `credential` element. To make it easier for you, you can go to the {{book.project.name}} Administration Console and go to the Client/Installation tab of the application this WAR is aligned with. It provides an example XML file you can cut and paste. If you have multiple deployments secured by the same realm you can share the realm configuration in a separate element. For example: [source,xml] ---- http://localhost:8080/auth external demo customer-portal password demo product-portal password demo database-service true ---- ===== Security Domain To propagate the security context to the EJB tier you need to configure it to use the "keycloak" security domain. This can be achieved with the @SecurityDomain annotation: [source] ---- import org.jboss.ejb3.annotation.SecurityDomain; ... @Stateless @SecurityDomain("keycloak") public class CustomerService { @RolesAllowed("user") public List getCustomers() { return db.getCustomers(); } } ----