B Configuring Oracle HTTP Server WebGate for Oracle Access Manager
- About Webgate
WebGate is a web server plug-in that intercepts HTTP requests and forwards them to an existing Oracle Access Manager instance for authentication and authorization. - General Prerequisites for Configuring Oracle HTTP Server WebGate
Before you can configure Oracle HTTP Server WebGate, you must have installed and configured a certified version of Oracle Access Manager. - Configuring Oracle HTTP Server WebGate
Configuring Oracle HTTP Server WebGate for Oracle Access Manager requires several steps. - Registering the Oracle HTTP Server WebGate with Oracle Access Manager
You can register the WebGate agent with Oracle Access Manager by using the Oracle Access Manager Administration console.
About Webgate
WebGate is a web server plug-in that intercepts HTTP requests and forwards them to an existing Oracle Access Manager instance for authentication and authorization.
For Oracle Fusion Middleware 12c, the Oracle WebGate software is installed as part of the Oracle HTTP Server 12c software installation. See Registering and Managing OAM 11g Agents in Adminstrator’s Guide for Oracle Access Management.
General Prerequisites for Configuring Oracle HTTP Server WebGate
Before you can configure Oracle HTTP Server WebGate, you must have installed and configured a certified version of Oracle Access Manager.
For the most up-to-date information, see the certification document for your release on the Oracle Fusion Middleware Supported System Configurations page.
For WebGate certification matrix, click and open http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/middleware/id-mgmt/downloads/oam-webgates-2147084.html, then click the Certification Matrix for 12c Access Management WebGates link to download the certification matrix spreadsheet.
Note:
For production environments, it is highly recommended that you install Oracle Access Manager in its own environment and not on the machines that are hosting the enterprise deployment.
For more information about Oracle Access Manager, see the latest Oracle Identity and Access Management documentation, which you can find in the Middleware documentation on the Oracle Help Center.
Configuring Oracle HTTP Server WebGate
Configuring Oracle HTTP Server WebGate for Oracle Access Manager requires several steps.
In the following examples:
-
Replace
OHS_ORACLE_HOME
with the complete path to the Oracle home where you installed the Oracle HTTP Server software. -
Replace
OHS_Configuration_Staging_Directory
with the path to the following location in the Oracle HTTP Server domain home:OHS_Configuration_Staging_Directory/config/fmwconfig/components/OHS/componentName
-
Change to
deployWebGate
directory in the Oracle HTTP Server.(UNIX)
OHS_ORACLE_HOME
/webgate/ohs/tools/deployWebGate
(Windows)
OHS_ORACLE_HOME
\webgate\ohs\tools\deployWebGate
-
To create the WebGate Instance directory and enable WebGate logging on OHS Instance, enter the following command::
(UNIX) ./deployWebGateInstance.sh -w
DOMAIN_HOME
-oh
OHS_ORACLE_HOME
(Windows) deployWebGateInstance.bat -w
DOMAIN_HOME
-oh
OHS_ORACLE_HOME
-
Verify that a
webgate
directory and subdirectories was created by thedeployWebGateInstance
command:For example, on UNIX:
ls -lart DOMAIN_HOME/webgate/ total 6 drwxr-x---+ 8 orcl oinstall 20 Oct 2 07:14 .. drwxr-xr-x+ 4 orcl oinstall 4 Oct 2 07:14 . drwxr-xr-x+ 3 orcl oinstall 3 Oct 2 07:14 tools drwxr-xr-x+ 3 orcl oinstall 4 Oct 2 07:14 config
-
To change set the PATH environment variable, enter the following command::
(UNIX) export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:OHS_ORACLE_HOME/lib
(Windows) set PATH=%PATH%;OHS_ORACLE_HOME\bin
-
Change to the
EditHttpConf
directory:(UNIX) OHS_ORACLE_HOME/webgate/ohs/tools/EditHttpConf
(Windows) OHS_ORACLE_HOME\webgate\ohs\tools\EditHttpConf
-
Enter the following command from the
InstallTools
directory:(UNIX) ./EditHttpConf -w DOMAIN_HOME [-oh OHS_ORACLE_HOME] [-o output_file_name] [-dcc custom_dcc_scripts/pages_location]
(Windows) EditHttpConf -w DOMAIN_HOME [-oh OHS_ORACLE_HOME] [-o output_file_name] [-dcc custom_dcc_scripts\pages_location]
This command does the following:
-
Copies the
apache_webgate.template
file from the Oracle HTTP Server Oracle home to a newwebgate.conf
file in the Oracle HTTP Server configuration directory. -
Updates the
httpd.conf
file to add one line, so it includes thewebgate.conf
. -
Generates a WebGate configuration file. The default name of the file is
webgate.conf
, but you can use a custom name by using theoutput_file
argument to the command.
-
oamsso/logout.html
, oamsso-bin/login.p
, or logout.pll
scripts), then you can copy these scripts from the following location to the custom location identified by the -dcc
parameter to EditHttpConf
utility:ORACLE_HOME/webgate/ohs/
Registering the Oracle HTTP Server WebGate with Oracle Access Manager
You can register the WebGate agent with Oracle Access Manager by using the Oracle Access Manager Administration console.
For more information about OAM registration, see Registering an OAM Agent Using the Console in Administrator's Guide for Oracle Access Management.
Locating and Preparing the RREG Tool
To set up the RREG tool, complete the following steps:
-
Sign in to one of the Oracle Access Manager hosts in the Application tier.
-
Change to the following directory in the Oracle Access Manager Oracle home:
OAM_ORACLE_HOME/oam/server/rreg/client
Note:
The location is required only for the out-of-band mode.In this example, OAM_ORACLE_HOME refers to the Oracle home on the system where the Oracle Access Manager software was installed.
Note:
If the Oracle Enterprise Deployment Guide for IDM was used, OAM_ORACLE_HOME may be/u01/oracle/products/access/iam
.Note:
If you do not have privileges or access to the Oracle Access Manager server, then you can use out-of-band mode to generate the required files and register the WebGate with Oracle Access Manager. See About RREG In-Band and Out-of-Band Mode. -
Decompress the
RREG.tar.gz
file to the required directory. -
From the unzipped directory, open the
oamreg.sh
file and set the following environment variables in the file, as follows:-
Set
OAM_REG_HOME
to the absolute path to the directory in which you extracted the contents of RREG archive.Set
JAVA_HOME
to the absolute path of the directory in which a supported JDK is installed on your machine.
-
Updating the Standard Properties in the OAM11gRequest.xml File
Before you can register the Webgate agent with Oracle Access Manager, you must update some required properties in the OAM11gRequest.xml
file.
Note:
If you plan to use the default values for most of the parameters in the provided XML file, then you can use the shorter version (OAM11gRequest_short.xml
, in which all non-listed fields will take a default value.
Note:
In the primary server list, the default names are mentioned as OAM_SERVER1 and OAM_SERVER2 for OAM servers. Rename these names in the list if the server names are changed in your environment.To perform this task:
-
If you are using in-band mode, then change directory to the following location in the directory:
OAM_ORACLE_HOME/oam/server/rreg/input
If you are using out-of-band mode, then change directory to the location where you unpacked the RREG archive.
-
Make a copy of the
OAM11GRequest.xml
file template. -
Review the properties listed in the file, and then update your copy of the OAM11GRequest.xml file to make sure the properties reference the host names and other values specific to your environment.
OAM11gRequest.xml Property | Set to... |
---|---|
serverAddress |
The host and the port of the Administration Server for the Oracle Access Manager domain. |
agentName |
Any custom name for the agent. Typically, you use a name that identifies the Fusion Middleware product you are configuring for single sign-on. |
applicationDomain |
A value that identifies the Web tier host and the FMW component you are configuring for single sign-on. |
security |
The security mode of the Oracle Access Manager server, which can be open, simple, or certificate mode. For an enterprise deployment, Oracle recommends simple mode, unless additional requirements exist to implement custom security certificates for the encryption of authentication and authorization traffic. In most cases, avoid using open mode, because in open mode, traffic to and from the Oracle Access Manager server is not encrypted. For more information using certificate mode or about Oracle Access Manager supported security modes in general, see Securing Communication Between OAM Servers and WebGates in the Administrator's Guide for Oracle Access Management. |
cachePragmaHeader |
private |
cacheControlHeader |
private |
ipValidation |
0
|
ipValidationExceptions |
The IP address of the front-end load balancer. For example:
|
agentBaseUrl |
The host and the port of the machine on which Oracle HTTP Server 12c WebGate is installed. |
Running the RREG Tool
The following topics provide information about running the RREG tool to register your Oracle HTTP Server Webgate with Oracle Access Manager.
About RREG In-Band and Out-of-Band Mode
You can run the RREG Tool in one of two modes: in-band and out-of-band.
Use in-band mode when you have the privileges to access the Oracle Access Manager server and run the RREG tool yourself from the Oracle Access Manager Oracle home. You can then copy the generated artifacts and files to the Web server configuration directory after you run the RREG Tool.
Use out-of-band mode if you do not have privileges or access to the Oracle Access Manager server. For example, in some organizations, only the Oracle Access Manager server administrators have privileges access the server directories and perform administration tasks on the server. In out-of-band mode, the process can work as follows:
-
The Oracle Access Manager server administrator provides you with a copy of the RREG archive file (RREG.tar.gz).
-
Untar the
RREG.tar.gz
file that was provided to you by the server administrator.For example:
gunzip RREG.tar.gz
tar -xvf RREG.tar
After you unpack the RREG archive, you can find the tool for registering the agent in the following location:
RREG_HOME
/bin/oamreg.sh
In this example,
RREG_Home
is the directory in which you extracted the contents of RREG archive. -
Use the instructions in Updating the Standard Properties in the OAM11gRequest.xml File to update the
OAM11GRequest.xml
file, and send the completedOAM11GRequest.xml
file to the Oracle Access Manager server administrator. -
The Oracle Access Manager server administrator then uses the instructions in Running the RREG Tool in Out-Of-Band Mode to run the RREG Tool and generate the
AgentID_response.xml
file. -
The Oracle Access Manager server administrator sends the
AgentID_response.xml
file to you. -
Use the instructions in Running the RREG Tool in Out-Of-Band Mode to run the RREG Tool with the
AgentID_response.xml
file and generate the required artifacts and files on the client system.
Parent topic: Running the RREG Tool
Running the RREG Tool in In-Band Mode
To run the RREG Tool in in-band mode:
-
Change to the RREG home directory.
If you are using in-band mode, the RREG directory is inside the Oracle Access Manager Oracle home:
OAM_ORACLE_HOME/oam/server/rreg
If you are using out-of-band mode, then the RREG home directory is the location where you unpacked the RREG archive.
-
Change to the following directory:
-
(UNIX)
RREG_HOME/bin
-
(Windows)
RREG_HOME\bin
cd RREG_HOME/bin/
-
-
Set the permissions of the
oamreg.sh
command so that you can execute the file:chmod +x oamreg.sh
-
Enter the following command:
./oamreg.sh inband RREG_HOME/input/OAM11GRequest_edg.xml
In this example:
-
It is assumed that the edited
OAM11GRequest.xml
file is located in theRREG_HOME/input
directory. -
The output from this command is saved to the following directory:
RREG_HOME/output/
The following example shows a sample RREG session:
Welcome to OAM Remote Registration Tool!
Parameters passed to the registration tool are:
Mode: inband
Filename: /u01/oracle/products/fmw/iam_home/oam/server/rreg/client/rreg/input/OAM11GRequest_edg.xml
Enter admin username:weblogic_idm
Username: weblogic_iam
Enter admin password:
Do you want to enter a Webgate password?(y/n):
n
Do you want to import an URIs file?(y/n):
n
----------------------------------------
Request summary:
OAM11G Agent Name:SOA12213_EDG_AGENT
Base URL: https://soa.example.com
:443
URL String:null
Registering in Mode:inband
Your registration request is being sent to the Admin server at: http://host1.example.com:7001
----------------------------------------
Jul 08, 2015 7:18:13 PM oracle.security.jps.util.JpsUtil disableAudit
INFO: JpsUtil: isAuditDisabled set to true
Jul 08, 2015 7:18:14 PM oracle.security.jps.util.JpsUtil disableAudit
INFO: JpsUtil: isAuditDisabled set to true
Inband registration process completed successfully! Output artifacts are created in the output folder.
Parent topic: Running the RREG Tool
Running the RREG Tool in Out-Of-Band Mode
To run the RREG Tool in out-of-band mode on the WEBHOST server, the administrator uses the following command:
RREG_HOME/bin/oamreg.sh outofband input/OAM11GRequest.xml
In this example:
-
Replace RREG_HOME with the location where the RREG archive file was unpacked on the server.
-
The edited
OAM11GRequest.xml
file is located in theRREG_HOME/input
directory. -
The RREG Tool saves the output from this command (the
AgentID_response.xml
file) to the following directory:RREG_HOME/output/
The Oracle Access Manager server administrator can then send the
AgentID_response.xml
to the user who provided theOAM11GRequest.xml
file.
To run the RREG Tool in out-of-band mode on the Web server client machine, use the following command:
RREG_HOME/bin/oamreg.sh outofband input/AgentID_response.xml
In this example:
-
Replace RREG_HOME with the location where you unpacked the RREG archive file on the client system.
-
The
AgentID_response.xml
file, which was provided by the Oracle Access Manager server administrator, is located in the RREG_HOME/input directory. -
The RREG Tool saves the output from this command (the artifacts and files required to register the Webgate software) to the following directory on the client machine:
RREG_HOME/output/
Parent topic: Running the RREG Tool
Files and Artifacts Generated by RREG
The files that get generated by the RREG Tool vary, depending on the security level you are using for communications between the WebGate and the Oracle Access Manager server. For more information about the supported security levels, see Securing Communication Between OAM Servers and WebGates in Administrator's Guide for Oracle Access Management.
Note that in this topic any references to RREG_HOME
should be replaced with the path to the directory where you ran the RREG tool. This is typically the following directory on the Oracle Access Manager server, or (if you are using out-of-band mode) the directory where you unpacked the RREG archive:
OAM_ORACLE_HOME/oam/server/rreg/client
The following table lists the artifacts that are always generated by the RREG Tool, regardless of the Oracle Access Manager security level.
File | Location |
---|---|
cwallet.sso |
RREG_HOME/output/Agent_ID/ |
ObAccessClient.xml |
RREG_HOME/output/Agent_ID/ |
The following table lists the additional files that are created if you are using the SIMPLE or CERT security level for Oracle Access Manager:
File | Location |
---|---|
aaa_key.pem |
RREG_HOME/output/Agent_ID/ |
aaa_cert.pem |
RREG_HOME/output/Agent_ID/ |
password.xml |
RREG_HOME/output/Agent_ID/ |
Note that the password.xml
file contains the obfuscated global passphrase to encrypt the private key used in SSL. This passphrase can be different than the passphrase used on the server.
You can use the files generated by RREG to generate a certificate request and get it signed by a third-party Certification Authority. To install an existing certificate, you must use the existing aaa_cert.pem
and aaa_chain.pem
files along with password.xml
and aaa_key.pem
.
Copying Generated Artifacts to the Oracle HTTP Server WebGate Instance Location
After the RREG Tool generates the required artifacts, manually copy the artifacts from the RREG_Home/output/agent_ID
directory to the Oracle HTTP Server configuration directory on the Web tier host.
The location of the files in the Oracle HTTP Server configuration directory depends upon the Oracle Access Manager security mode setting (OPEN, SIMPLE, or CERT).
The following table lists the required location of each generated artifact in the Oracle HTTP Server configuration directory, based on the security mode setting for Oracle Access Manager. In some cases, you might have to create the directories if they do not exist already. For example, the wallet directory might not exist in the configuration directory.
Note:
For an enterprise deployment, Oracle recommends simple mode, unless additional requirements exist to implement custom security certificates for the encryption of authentication and authorization traffic. The information about using open or certification mode is provided here as a convenience.
Avoid using open mode, because in open mode, traffic to and from the Oracle Access Manager server is not encrypted.
For more information using certificate mode or about Oracle Access Manager supported security modes in general, see Securing Communication Between OAM Servers and WebGates in Administrator's Guide for Oracle Access Management.
File | Location When Using OPEN Mode | Location When Using SIMPLE Mode | Location When Using CERT Mode |
---|---|---|---|
wallet/cwallet.sso |
OHS_CONFIG_DIR/webgate/config/wallet |
OHS_CONFIG_DIR/webgate/config/wallet/ Note: By default the wallet folder is not available. Create the wallet folder underOHS_CONFIG_DIR/webgate/config/ .
|
OHS_CONFIG_DIR/webgate/config/wallet/ |
ObAccessClient.xml |
OHS_CONFIG_DIR/webgate/config |
OHS_CONFIG_DIR/webgate/config/ |
OHS_CONFIG_DIR/webgate/config/ |
password.xml |
N/A | OHS_CONFIG_DIR/webgate/config/ |
OHS_CONFIG_DIR/webgate/config/ |
aaa_key.pem |
N/A | OHS_CONFIG_DIR/webgate/config/simple/ |
OHS_CONFIG_DIR/webgate/config/ |
aaa_cert.pem |
N/A | OHS_CONFIG_DIR/webgate/config/simple/ |
OHS_CONFIG_DIR/webgate/config/ |
Note:
If you need to redeploy theObAccessClient.xml
to WEBHOST1
and WEBHOST2
, delete the cached copy of ObAccessClient.xml
from the servers. The cache location on WEBHOST1
is:OHS_DOMAIN_HOME/servers/ohs1/cache/
And you must perform the similar step for the second Oracle HTTP Server instance on WEBHOST2
:
OHS_DOMAIN_HOME/servers/ohs2/cache/
Restarting the Oracle HTTP Server Instance
For information about restarting the Oracle HTTP Server instance, see Restarting Oracle HTTP Server Instances by Using WLST in Administering Oracle HTTP Server.
If you have configured Oracle HTTP Server in a WebLogic Server domain, you can also use Oracle Fusion Middleware Control to restart the Oracle HTTP Server instances. For more information, see Restarting Oracle HTTP Server Instances by Using Fusion Middleware Control in Administering Oracle HTTP Server.