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IBM WebSphere V5.0 Security - CGISecurity

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At the same time, the tool creates a “WebAppServer” action group with the<br />

invoke (i) action, and a group called “pdwas-admin” representing <strong>WebSphere</strong><br />

Application Server administrators. The tool adds the <strong>WebSphere</strong> Application<br />

Server administrator user to the pdwas-admin group.<br />

Installation and configuration of Tivoli Access Manager for<br />

<strong>WebSphere</strong><br />

Install the Access Manager for <strong>WebSphere</strong> application on the <strong>WebSphere</strong><br />

machine. There is no ez_install script provided for this component, you have to<br />

install it from the product CD. The Access Manager for <strong>WebSphere</strong> can be found<br />

in the following directory: windows\policy director\disk images\disk1\pdwas\disk<br />

images\disk1. Run the setup.exe to install the product. In this sample Tivoli<br />

Access Manager, components were installed under the C:\Tivoli directory.<br />

Note: At the time of writing this book, only Tivoli Access Manager V3.9 was<br />

available. This version of Access Manager was not developed to be used with<br />

<strong>WebSphere</strong> Application Server V5, so we had to do some customization and<br />

workarounds to make certain scripts and functions work in this environment.<br />

Tivoli Access Manager V3.9 is available after the book is published and it<br />

works with and supports <strong>WebSphere</strong> Application Server V5.<br />

The following configuration steps are required in <strong>WebSphere</strong> Application Server<br />

in order to perform further configurations and use Access Manager for<br />

<strong>WebSphere</strong>.<br />

1. The <strong>WebSphere</strong> Application Server must be configured to share the same<br />

user registry as the Access Manager <strong>Security</strong> Domain it is joining.<br />

2. The Access Manager for <strong>WebSphere</strong> module must be installed and<br />

configured.<br />

3. J2EE Applications requiring security must be migrated.<br />

4. All user IDs which had been used with <strong>WebSphere</strong>, wasadmin (the server ID),<br />

and the other Access Manager users and groups required by the sample<br />

application had been created with Web Portal Manager so no migration of<br />

<strong>WebSphere</strong> only LDAP users was required.<br />

5. Confirm that Access Manager and <strong>WebSphere</strong> were accessing the same<br />

Java runtime; this was confirmed by running the pdjretecfg utility, under<br />

Windows in a command prompt.<br />

cd C:\Tivoli\sbin<br />

pdjrtecfg -action config -java_home %WAS_HOME%\java\jre.<br />

434 <strong>IBM</strong> <strong>WebSphere</strong> <strong>V5.0</strong> <strong>Security</strong> Handbook

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