I believe the OP has no use for an answer now. Nonetheless, this deserves a comprehensive answer. In fact, I am surprised that it does not have one yet.
First of all, this is a bad idea: such an arrangement as the one proposed by the OP is really too insecure. Nevertheless, a solution to the described problem can be a good prototype for someone creating an autologin for Liferay.
Now, let us say you want to automatically log in any user whose screen name is sent in a query string parameter. For example, if one access http://localhost:8080/web/guest/home?insecurely_login_user=juju
then the Liferay in the juju
user should be logged in. How to do that? Follow the steps below:
Create the autologin class
Firstly, create a hook plugin. In its docroot/WEB-INF/src
directory, creates a class implementing the com.liferay.portal.security.auth.AutoLogin
interface. In my example, I will call it br.brandizzi.adam.liferay.insecure.InsecureAutoLogin
.
The AutoLogin
interface has only one method, called login()
, which expects two parameters (an HttpServletRequest
and an HttpServletResponse
instances) and returns an array of strings. So, my class will look like this without implementation:
public class InsecureAutoLogin implements AutoLogin {
@Override
public String[] login(HttpServletRequest request,
HttpServletResponse response) throws AutoLoginException {
// TODO Auto-generated method stub
return null;
}
}
The AutoLogin.login()
method will try to retrieve the information necessary to the authentication from many sources, mainly the request object. If it decides that the user should be logged in, it returns an array with relevant data for authentication; if it decides to not log the user in, it can just return null
.
In our case, we try to get the name of the user from the the insecurely_login_user
parameter from the request. If there is such parameter, we will proceed with the login; if there is no such parameter, it just returns null
:
String screenName = request.getParameter("insecurely_login_user");
if (screenName == null || screenName.isEmpty()) {
return null;
}
So we have the screen name. What to do now? Let us get a user from the database with the same screen name.
long companyId = PortalUtil.getCompanyId(request);
User user = UserLocalServiceUtil.getUserByScreenName(companyId,
screenName);
If a user wich such a screen name exists, it will be retrieved and attributed to the user
variable. In this case, the authentication should be successful and the autologin class should return an array of three strings - the credentials. Those are the values to be returned as credentials, in the order they should appear in the array:
- the user id as a string
- the password of the user, which can be encrypted or not;
- a boolean value, cast to string, indicating if the password is encrypted.
So here is the line:
return new String[] {
String.valueOf(user.getUserId()),
user.getPassword(),
String.valueOf(user.isPasswordEncrypted())
};
If a user is not found, however, an exception will be thrown. So, we have to surround the code above with a try
/catch
construction. If an exception is thrown, just return null
:
try {
long companyId = PortalUtil.getCompanyId(request);
User user = UserLocalServiceUtil.getUserByScreenName(companyId,
screenName);
return new String[] { String.valueOf(user.getUserId()),
user.getPassword(),
String.valueOf(user.isPasswordEncrypted()) };
} catch (Exception e) {
return null;
}
In the end, this is my InsecureAutoLogin
class:
public class InsecureAutoLogin implements AutoLogin {
public String[] login(HttpServletRequest request,
HttpServletResponse response) throws AutoLoginException {
String screenName = request.getParameter("insecurely_login_user");
if (screenName == null || screenName.isEmpty())
return null;
try {
long companyId = PortalUtil.getCompanyId(request);
User user = UserLocalServiceUtil.getUserByScreenName(companyId,
screenName);
return new String[] { String.valueOf(user.getUserId()),
user.getPassword(),
String.valueOf(user.isPasswordEncrypted()) };
} catch (Exception e) {
return null;
}
}
}
Registering the autologin class
Now our hook should register this class as an autologin processor. That is really easy.
First, edit the file docroot/WEB-INF/liferay-hook.xml
adding a portal-properties
element with the value portal.properties
:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE hook PUBLIC "-//Liferay//DTD Hook 6.1.0//EN" "http://www.liferay.com/dtd/liferay-hook_6_1_0.dtd">
<hook>
<portal-properties>portal.properties</portal-properties>
</hook>
Now, create a file named portal.properties
at docroot/WEB-INF/src
. It should contain a property named auto.login.hooks
whose value should be the name of our class:
auto.login.hooks=br.brandizzi.adam.liferay.insecure.InsecureAutoLogin
And that is it. Deploy this hook and your autologin will work.
Conclusion
As I have said, you should not use such an unsafe "authentication" method. It is too easy to bypass it, getting even administration permissions! However, if you follow these steps, you have a skeleton to create a better autologin feature. Also, I know some people really want to do something like this insecure "authentication" method and sometimes we have to suspend our judgments and just help one to shoot one's feet...
The source code of this project can be found here and you can download the WAR here.