Book Image

Mastering JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 7

By : Francesco Marchioni, Luigi Fugaro
Book Image

Mastering JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 7

By: Francesco Marchioni, Luigi Fugaro

Overview of this book

The JBoss Enterprise Application Platform (EAP) has been one of the most popular tools for Java developers to create modular, cloud-ready, and modern applications. It has achieved a reputation for architectural excellence and technical savvy, making it a solid and efficient environment for delivering your applications. The book will first introduce application server configuration and the management instruments that can be used to control the application server. Next, the focus will shift to enterprise solutions such as clustering, load balancing, and data caching; this will be the core of the book. We will also discuss services provided by the application server, such as database connectivity and logging. We focus on real-world example configurations and how to avoid common mistakes. Finally, we will implement the knowledge gained so far in terms of Docker containers and cloud availability using RedHat's OpenShift.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Mastering JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 7
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Introducing elytron


Elytron is a new subproject, developed for the upstream version of the application server (WildFly) which will completely replace the combination of PicketBox and JAAS as the application server's client and server security system.

In terms of features, a non-exhaustive list of elytron features, include:

  • A set of API that you call and use to achieve your security goals, and a set of SPI that you can extend and implement to achieve custom security implementations

  • A unified security solution across the application server, which is now fragmented into several parts of your configuration

  • Support for secure server-side authentication mechanisms based on HTTP, SASL, and TLS, as well as supporting other authentication protocols in the future without change (such as RADIUS, for example)

  • Support for password credential types using the standard Java cryptography extension structure (such as DES, MD5, SHA, bcrypt, and so on)

  • Propagation of identities to remote application servers as well...