Introduction

The JOC Cockpit brings user authentication and authorization to the JobScheduler.

Authentication can either take place against an Apache ShiroTM compliant configuration, an LDAP compliant directory service or information stored in a database. Authentication against multiple realms is possible.

Authorization is defined in Roles and Permissions and an example set of Roles and Permissions is provided with the JOC Cockpit installation. System administrators are able to define their own User Roles and Permission sets as required.

The JOC Cockpit is able to handle authentication of multiple users and their authorization for multiple JobSchedulers simultaneously. It also includes an editor in the Manage Accounts view for the configuration of authentication and authorization.

Architecture

The Authentication and Authorization provided by the JOC Cockpit is provided independently of any JobScheduler instances and this functional independence allows, for example, scalability (see the JOC Cockpit Clusters section below) as well as enabling individual JobScheduler Masters and/or Agents to be used for individual clients. A more detailed description of the JobScheduler / JOC Cockpit architecture is provided in the JOC Cockpit - Architecture article.

The JOC Cockpit Authentication and Authorization allows an extremely flexible set of permissions to be configured for Users:

  • User Accounts are allocated one or more Roles, with each Role containing a set of predefined Permissions that specify the operations that can be carried out within the role.
  • Roles can be configured for individual JobScheduler Masters.
  • In addition, the objects within a JobScheduler Master configuration that can be accessed by a Role can also be configured. For example, one Role may be allowed to view the status of Jobs and Orders in Folders A and B, another Role may be allowed to change the state and modify the run times of the Jobs and Orders in all Folders. This approach may be contrasted with other systems that allocate rights and permissions purely according to resources such as files or folders.

This use of role-based permissions brings a number of significant advantages:

  • It simplifies administration in complex environments. Whilst the administration of the permissions of several hundred folders in a multi-client system is manageable, the administration of several thousand requires brings an extremely high administrative requirement and error susceptibility.
  • Role-based permissions allow the permissions for individual clients to be managed separately.
  • The clear separation of permissions also simplifies meeting compliance requirements.

JOC Cockpit Clusters

FEATURE AVAILABILITY STARTING FROM RELEASE 1.12.1

Multiple instances of the JOC Cockpit can be synchronized to provide a high availability, active, cluster that is transparent to the user. Cluster members then share Authentication and Authorization information.

A more detailed description of JOC Cockpit clusters can be found in the JOC Cockpit - Clustering article.

Implementation

  • The JOC Cockpit uses Apache Shiro to authenticate and authorize users.
  • Authentication and Authorization information can be read by Shiro from a number of separate resources. These are:
    • a local configuration (shiro.ini) file that may include both authentication and authorization information, depending on the methods of authentication and authorization configured;
    • a authentication service that provides an LDAP interface such as Microsoft Active Directory and
    • a database containing both authentication and authorization information and which complies with the Shiro data model requirements. This database will be managed (and populated) by a system administrator.

Authentication

  • The JOC Cockpit / Web services accepts the user name and password from the login screen and, depending on the configuration in the shiro.ini file, either:
    • tries to verify the credentials against information stored in the shiro.ini file,
    • tries to login to the LDAP directory service with the given credentials or
    • checks the credentials against information stored in a Shiro compliant database.
  • The authentication credentials are subsequently used for HTTP Authentication with each HTTP request that is created by the JOC Cockpit for the JobScheduler Web Services.
    • Browsers may cache credentials during a session, i.e. they are re-used for single sign-on when opening the JOC Cockpit in a new browser tab. The credentials cache is cleared on termination of the browser.
    • This behavior might vary depending on the browser and version.

The authentication methods available are:

  • Shiro Authentication:
    • Intended for development and use where security is important.
    • User passwords are encrypted in the shiro.ini file FEATURE AVAILABILITY STARTING FROM RELEASE 1.11.5 . The shiro.ini file itself is unencrypted.
  • LDAP Authentication:
    • Intended for use in production environments where LDAP is already in use.
    • The shiro.ini file contains information specifying the LDAP service.
    • Shiro and LDAP Authentication can be combined.
  • Database Authentication:
    • Intended for use in production environments.
    • The shiro.ini file contains information specifying the database authentication service.
    • Authentication information is entered manually in the database by a system administrator.

Authorization

After successful authentication the JOC Cockpit will check the assignment of roles to the given user against a mapping of user role(s) against permissions. The method used to specify this mapping depends in the method used for user authentication:

  • Shiro Authentication:
    • Using a mapping of roles to permissions stored in the local shiro.ini configuration file.
  • LDAP Authentication:
    • Using a configurable LDAP query that determines membership of an Active Directory group. The Active Directory group is then mapped onto one or more Shiro Roles. These Roles are then mapped onto a set of Permissions using information stored in the local shiro.ini configuration file.
  • Database Authentication:
    • Using a Hibernate query to check the user's role(s) against a table of roles and permissions stored in the same database as used for authentication.

By default the shiro.ini configuration file contains an example mapping of Roles and Permissions. This mapping can be used by administrators as a basis for their own configurations with either Shiro or LDAP authentication. This mapping and the function of individual Permissions are described in the Matrix of Roles and Permissions section of the Authentication and Authorization - Permissions for the JOC Cockpit Web Service Article.

Configuration

Three methods are available for configuring Authentication and Authorization:

Viewing a User Profile and its Roles and Permissions

Each user can check the permissions they are currently allocated in the JOC Cockpit. This is done in the lower part of the User Profile view, which is opened via the User Menu in the top right of the JOC Cockpit window. The following screenshot shows the User Details and Roles information for a user aa_s, that has two Roles, super and workingplan.

This view is read-only for all users - changes can only be made by a system administrator modifying the roles and permissions as described in the Authentication and Authorization - Configuration article.

Note that this view shows the permissions for the operations that can be carried out within the Roles allocated to the user. The folders permissions allocated to these Roles can be easily viewed in the folder trees in the Job Chains and Jobs views

References