Configure HCL Connections to use single sign-on with IBM Security Verify Access (or ISVA,
formerly Security Access Manager) and SPNEGO.
Before you begin
- Complete the task described in the Configuring
web browsers to support SPNEGO topic.
- Ensure that ISVA is installed.
- This task describes how to enable single sign-on (SSO) for ISVA on the Windows™ operating system.
- Connections supports the WebSphere® cookie-based,
lightweight, third-party authentication (LTPA) mechanism as an SSO solution for ISVA.
Connections does not support other SSO solutions that WebSEAL supports such as WebSphere Trust Association Interceptor (TAI),
Forms SSO, Cross-domain SSO, or E-community SSO.
- Connections supports the use of encrypted connections, Transparent Path junctions with ISVA.
Connections does not support TCP type junctions or ISVA Standard junctions.
- Verify that you can access Connections applications from a web browser.
- Set the IBM®
WebSphere Application Server single sign-on
domain to the same value as the domain of the ISVA server.
About this task
Single sign-on (SSO) enables users to log in to an Connections application and switch to other
applications within the product without having to authenticate again.
There are several different ways to configure SSO. The Connections DefaultAuthenticator protocol
allows your users and Security Verify Access to prove their identities to one another in a
secure manner. After users sign in to their Active Directory Windows client systems, they are automatically signed into both
Security Verify Access and Connections.
To set up SSO using Security Verify Access with SPNEGO, complete the following steps:
Procedure
-
Create a user account for WebSEAL in your Active Directory domain. When creating the user
account, ensure that you specify the following options:
- The user cannot change the password
- The password never expires
For example, if you create an account for A User, where the Active Directory domain is
isamspnego.example.com, the user identity is auser@isamspnego.example.com.
-
Map a Kerberos principal to an Active Directory user. Map the service principal name to
the account that you created in Step 1 by running the ktpass command on the domain
controller. Use the ISVA server through which users access Connections as the instance in
the service principal name.
-
Run the following ktpass command:
ktpass –princ SPN -mapuser
account_name -mapOp set –pass
account_password
where
- SPN is the Kerberos service principal name. The host name
specified in the SPN should match the host name of the
WebSEAL server. For example, if users contact the WebSEAL server at
diamond.subnet2.example.com and the WebSEAL server is part of the EXAMPLE.COM
Active Directory domain, the Kerberos principal name is
HTTP/diamond.subnet2.example.com@EXAMPLE.COM.
- account_name is the account name that you specified in Step
1.
- account_password is the password associated with the
account that you specified in Step 1.
-
Modify the Windows service for the WebSEAL
instance so that it starts using the new user account that you just created. On the
WebSEAL server, complete the following steps:
- Click .
- Right-click on Access Manager WebSEAL-default and select
Properties.
- Click Log On and then click This
account.
- Enter the details of the user account and password that you created in Step
1.
- Click OK to save your changes.
-
Grant administrator privileges for the local system to the account that you created
in step 1.
-
Enable SPNEGO for WebSEAL:
- Stop the WebSEAL server.
- Enable SPNEGO over encrypted connections by adding the following lines to the WebSEAL
configuration file:
[spnego]
spnego-auth =
https
[authentication-mechanisms]
auth-challenge-type
= spnego
kerberosv5 = fully_qualified_path to the
authentication library
For example: kerberosv5 =
TDI_root\bin\stliauthn.dll
where
TDI_root is the installation directory of Security Verify
Access.
-
Enable TAI authentication as follows:
- In the WebSphere Application Server administrative console, navigate to .
- Enter the following name and value pair:
- Name
- com.ibm.websphere.security.performTAIForUnprotectedURI
- Value
- true
- Click OK and then click Save to preserve your
update.
-
Restart WebSEAL from the Services Control Panel. On Windows, WebSEAL must be running as a service for SPNEGO authentication to work properly.
Otherwise, it runs using the credentials of the logged in user.
-
Configure form-based authentication with transparent junctions. Complete all the steps
in the Enabling single sign-on for Security
Verify Access topic except the steps about updating interService URLs
, adding a Tivoli Allow access to the Embedded Experience gadget, and
adding an authenticator property. You need to use the
HTTP Server URLs and the DefaultAuthenticator property in this configuration.
Note: This
procedure enables a fallback authentication method for user systems that do not support
SPNEGO. This alternative is important for users of Notes®, mobile devices, and other extensions for
Connections.
-
Files and wikis display the log in button in Siteminder and SPNEGO
configuration even though the user is logged in. This occurs in public files and
wikis pages as the server does not require user authentication for public pages.
To solve this issue, you need to disable anonymous for wikis by mapping 'reader'
to 'All authenticated in application's realm'. This change needs to be done for
all SPNEGO-related configurations and not just Siteminder and SPNEGO
configuration. To remove the log in string for both Files and Wikis on SPNEGO
configurations, follow these steps:
Results
After users sign in to the Windows desktop, they are
automatically signed into Connections.
Note: If you are using on-ramp
plug-ins or mobile services, your data traffic is not authenticated
by Kerberos tickets or SPNEGO tokens. It is instead authenticated
through Java EE form-based authentication.
What to do next
For more information about Kerberos and SPNEGO, refer to SPNEGO protocol and Kerberos authentication in the IBM Security
Verify Access documentation.