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ESAPI Getting Started Guide
ESAPI is very easy to use. This tutorial shows how to get a simple application working with the reference implementation of ESAPI. Please remember that the reference implementation is a simple example. The Authenticator uses a text-based password file. This is to make it easy to test ESAPI without installing a database or directory. Enterprises will want to create their own implementation of the API that works with their identity management solution.
Step 1: Setting up a resources directory
Create a directory to hold ESAPI resources. This should be a secure location as it will contain a significant amount of security information. For example, you might create a directory called "C:\resources" (Windows) and use the operating system access control mechanisms (NTFS on Windows) to restrict access.
Step 2: Setting ESAPI configuration properties
If it isn't there already, copy the default ESAPI.Properties file into your resources directory. Edit the MasterPassword property and choose a long, difficult-to-guess string, as the security of your application depends on it.
MasterPassword=xxxxx
Also copy the antisamy.xml file into your resources directory, which defines the antisamy policy that you'll use in ESAPI.
Step 3: Configuring user accounts
The simplest way to get started is to create an "admin" account to work with. ESAPI has a command line tool that will create your users.txt file. Type the below, for example (all one line):
java -Dorg.owasp.esapi.resources="c:\resources" -classpath owasp-esapi-java-1.1.1.jar org.owasp.esapi.Authenticator yourname yourpass admin
Step 4: Hello, ESAPI!
You should be able to use any application container. The instructions below are for Tomcat.
- Do a clean Tomcat 5.5/6.0 install (or use an existing container).
- Unzip File:Test.zip and put the test directory in the webapps folder.
- Run tomcat/bin/startup.bat (or .sh).
- You should enable SSL by uncommenting the SSL Connector in tomcat/conf/server.xml (or /etc/tomcat/server.xml, etc.). Otherwise ESAPI will warn that you're sending a session id over an insecure connection.