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Difference between revisions of "Talk:Securing tomcat"

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  # For Tomcat 5.5 (inject your new file onto the path of the server classloader):
 
  # For Tomcat 5.5 (inject your new file onto the path of the server classloader):
 
 
  ${catalina.home}/server/classes/org/apache/catalina/util/ServerInfo.properties
 
  ${catalina.home}/server/classes/org/apache/catalina/util/ServerInfo.properties
  
 
  # For Tomcat 6 (inject it onto the path of the common classloader, or whichever classloader is loading catalina.jar):
 
  # For Tomcat 6 (inject it onto the path of the common classloader, or whichever classloader is loading catalina.jar):
 
 
  ${catalina.home}/lib/org/apache/catalina/util/ServerInfo.properties
 
  ${catalina.home}/lib/org/apache/catalina/util/ServerInfo.properties
  
 
In both cases, ${catalina.home} is typically either the root of your local installation, or your global installation if you are making use of disjoint installs using ${catalina.base} to provide instance-specific information.
 
In both cases, ${catalina.home} is typically either the root of your local installation, or your global installation if you are making use of disjoint installs using ${catalina.base} to provide instance-specific information.

Revision as of 23:16, 8 June 2011

InvokerServlet

There needs to be an addendum in here about disabling the InvokerServlet. See my blog entry at [yet-another-dev.blogspot.com] for details about why this is a bad idea. --Chris Schmidt 22:03, 17 December 2009 (UTC)

File permissions

Hmm, what does "Make sure tomcat user has read/write access to /tmp" mean?

Tomcat creates a directory "temp", not "tmp", and read/write on a directory doesn't actually allow reading or writing. I assume the intention is "chmod 700 temp"... would love if anyone can clarify. Douglasheld 18:06, 3 April 2009 (UTC)

Newer Tomcat branches

This page is hopelessly outdated for anyone working with the Tomcat 6 branch. We need to figure out the best way to document security measures for the different supported branches. Ken 10:25, 20 March 2009 (UTC)

I've not had call to use Tomcat 6, but in a few months I plan to start experimenting with the embedded version. I don't mind expanding the article to have a section on 6 (and keep the section on 5.5), but I can't contribute anything just yet. My preference would be a single article as it will cut down on duplication. In the meantime, any differences, areas to cover, new features, etc. that others could note down will help speed things up. Darren 09:11, 26 March 2009 (UTC)

HttpOnly configuration

Tomcat versions from 5.5.28 and 6.0.19 support the HttpOnly [1] cookie option.

This is configured in the conf/context.xml file:

<Context useHttpOnly="true">
...
</Context>

Simon Bennetts 14:40, 18 June 2010 (UTC)

Overriding Tomcat Version Number

Rebuilding the catalina.jar to alter ServerInfo.properties may not be an ideal way to override the version number, the same effect can be achieved without repackaging JARs in the default distribution (repackaging can be somewhat intrusive and/or impractical). Classloader classpaths can be patched using strategically placed files on the classpath. Classes that are loaded first always take precedence, the same goes for properties files, hence you can override by creating files in the following places:

# For Tomcat 5.5 (inject your new file onto the path of the server classloader):
${catalina.home}/server/classes/org/apache/catalina/util/ServerInfo.properties
# For Tomcat 6 (inject it onto the path of the common classloader, or whichever classloader is loading catalina.jar):
${catalina.home}/lib/org/apache/catalina/util/ServerInfo.properties

In both cases, ${catalina.home} is typically either the root of your local installation, or your global installation if you are making use of disjoint installs using ${catalina.base} to provide instance-specific information.