[[_fuse_adapter]] ==== JBoss Fuse Adapter Currently {project_name} supports securing your web applications running inside https://developers.redhat.com/products/fuse/overview/[JBoss Fuse]. ifeval::[{project_community}==true] It leverages <<_jetty9_adapter,Jetty 9 adapter>> as {fuseVersion} is bundled with http://www.eclipse.org/jetty/[Jetty 9.2 server] under the covers and Jetty is used for running various kinds of web applications. endif::[] WARNING: The only supported version of Fuse is {fuseVersion}. If you use earlier versions of Fuse, it is possible that some functions will not work correctly. In particular, the http://hawt.io[Hawtio] integration will not work with earlier versions of Fuse. Security for the following items is supported for Fuse: * Classic WAR applications deployed on Fuse with Pax Web War Extender * Servlets deployed on Fuse as OSGI services with Pax Web Whiteboard Extender * http://camel.apache.org/[Apache Camel] Jetty endpoints running with the http://camel.apache.org/jetty.html[Camel Jetty] component * http://cxf.apache.org/[Apache CXF] endpoints running on their own separate http://cxf.apache.org/docs/jetty-configuration.html[Jetty engine] * http://cxf.apache.org/[Apache CXF] endpoints running on the default engine provided by the CXF servlet * SSH and JMX admin access * http://hawt.io[Hawtio administration console] ===== Securing Your Web Applications Inside Fuse You must first install the {project_name} Karaf feature. Next you will need to perform the steps according to the type of application you want to secure. All referenced web applications require injecting the {project_name} Jetty authenticator into the underlying Jetty server. The steps to achieve this depend on the application type. The details are described below. ifeval::[{project_community}==true] The best place to start is look at Fuse demo bundled as part of {project_name} examples in directory `fuse` . Most of the steps should be understandable from testing and understanding the demo. endif::[]