blob: c2f0ebf8f212cf94fd0c4fb9b3bf9844c8401f6c [file] [log] [blame]
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +00001#
2# This is the "master security properties file".
3#
mullan68000592012-07-03 14:56:58 -04004# An alternate java.security properties file may be specified
5# from the command line via the system property
6#
7# -Djava.security.properties=<URL>
8#
9# This properties file appends to the master security properties file.
10# If both properties files specify values for the same key, the value
11# from the command-line properties file is selected, as it is the last
12# one loaded.
13#
14# Also, if you specify
15#
16# -Djava.security.properties==<URL> (2 equals),
17#
18# then that properties file completely overrides the master security
19# properties file.
20#
21# To disable the ability to specify an additional properties file from
22# the command line, set the key security.overridePropertiesFile
23# to false in the master security properties file. It is set to true
24# by default.
25
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +000026# In this file, various security properties are set for use by
27# java.security classes. This is where users can statically register
28# Cryptography Package Providers ("providers" for short). The term
29# "provider" refers to a package or set of packages that supply a
30# concrete implementation of a subset of the cryptography aspects of
31# the Java Security API. A provider may, for example, implement one or
32# more digital signature algorithms or message digest algorithms.
33#
34# Each provider must implement a subclass of the Provider class.
35# To register a provider in this master security properties file,
36# specify the Provider subclass name and priority in the format
37#
38# security.provider.<n>=<className>
39#
40# This declares a provider, and specifies its preference
41# order n. The preference order is the order in which providers are
42# searched for requested algorithms (when no specific provider is
43# requested). The order is 1-based; 1 is the most preferred, followed
44# by 2, and so on.
45#
46# <className> must specify the subclass of the Provider class whose
47# constructor sets the values of various properties that are required
48# for the Java Security API to look up the algorithms or other
49# facilities implemented by the provider.
50#
51# There must be at least one provider specification in java.security.
52# There is a default provider that comes standard with the JDK. It
53# is called the "SUN" provider, and its Provider subclass
54# named Sun appears in the sun.security.provider package. Thus, the
55# "SUN" provider is registered via the following:
56#
57# security.provider.1=sun.security.provider.Sun
58#
59# (The number 1 is used for the default provider.)
60#
61# Note: Providers can be dynamically registered instead by calls to
62# either the addProvider or insertProviderAt method in the Security
63# class.
64
65#
66# List of providers and their preference orders (see above):
67#
68security.provider.1=sun.security.provider.Sun
69security.provider.2=sun.security.rsa.SunRsaSign
vinnieed355ab2009-08-11 16:52:26 +010070security.provider.3=sun.security.ec.SunEC
71security.provider.4=com.sun.net.ssl.internal.ssl.Provider
72security.provider.5=com.sun.crypto.provider.SunJCE
73security.provider.6=sun.security.jgss.SunProvider
74security.provider.7=com.sun.security.sasl.Provider
75security.provider.8=org.jcp.xml.dsig.internal.dom.XMLDSigRI
76security.provider.9=sun.security.smartcardio.SunPCSC
77security.provider.10=sun.security.mscapi.SunMSCAPI
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +000078
79#
80# Select the source of seed data for SecureRandom. By default an
xuelei42dd6452010-11-01 07:57:46 -070081# attempt is made to use the entropy gathering device specified by
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +000082# the securerandom.source property. If an exception occurs when
xuelei42dd6452010-11-01 07:57:46 -070083# accessing the URL then the traditional system/thread activity
84# algorithm is used.
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +000085#
86# On Solaris and Linux systems, if file:/dev/urandom is specified and it
87# exists, a special SecureRandom implementation is activated by default.
88# This "NativePRNG" reads random bytes directly from /dev/urandom.
89#
90# On Windows systems, the URLs file:/dev/random and file:/dev/urandom
91# enables use of the Microsoft CryptoAPI seed functionality.
92#
93securerandom.source=file:/dev/urandom
94#
95# The entropy gathering device is described as a URL and can also
96# be specified with the system property "java.security.egd". For example,
97# -Djava.security.egd=file:/dev/urandom
xuelei42dd6452010-11-01 07:57:46 -070098# Specifying this system property will override the securerandom.source
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +000099# setting.
100
101#
102# Class to instantiate as the javax.security.auth.login.Configuration
103# provider.
104#
105login.configuration.provider=com.sun.security.auth.login.ConfigFile
106
107#
108# Default login configuration file
109#
110#login.config.url.1=file:${user.home}/.java.login.config
111
112#
113# Class to instantiate as the system Policy. This is the name of the class
114# that will be used as the Policy object.
115#
116policy.provider=sun.security.provider.PolicyFile
117
118# The default is to have a single system-wide policy file,
119# and a policy file in the user's home directory.
120policy.url.1=file:${java.home}/lib/security/java.policy
121policy.url.2=file:${user.home}/.java.policy
122
123# whether or not we expand properties in the policy file
124# if this is set to false, properties (${...}) will not be expanded in policy
125# files.
126policy.expandProperties=true
127
128# whether or not we allow an extra policy to be passed on the command line
129# with -Djava.security.policy=somefile. Comment out this line to disable
130# this feature.
131policy.allowSystemProperty=true
132
133# whether or not we look into the IdentityScope for trusted Identities
134# when encountering a 1.1 signed JAR file. If the identity is found
135# and is trusted, we grant it AllPermission.
136policy.ignoreIdentityScope=false
137
138#
139# Default keystore type.
140#
141keystore.type=jks
142
143#
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +0000144# List of comma-separated packages that start with or equal this string
145# will cause a security exception to be thrown when
146# passed to checkPackageAccess unless the
147# corresponding RuntimePermission ("accessClassInPackage."+package) has
148# been granted.
mullan54257132012-10-26 15:21:05 -0400149package.access=sun.,\
150 com.sun.xml.internal.,\
151 com.sun.imageio.,\
152 com.sun.org.apache.xerces.internal.utils.,\
153 com.sun.org.apache.xalan.internal.utils.,\
154 com.sun.org.glassfish.external.,\
155 com.sun.org.glassfish.gmbal.
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +0000156
157#
158# List of comma-separated packages that start with or equal this string
159# will cause a security exception to be thrown when
160# passed to checkPackageDefinition unless the
161# corresponding RuntimePermission ("defineClassInPackage."+package) has
162# been granted.
163#
mullanee9229d2012-02-22 15:38:24 -0500164# by default, none of the class loaders supplied with the JDK call
165# checkPackageDefinition.
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +0000166#
mullan54257132012-10-26 15:21:05 -0400167package.definition=sun.,\
168 com.sun.xml.internal.,\
169 com.sun.imageio.,\
170 com.sun.org.apache.xerces.internal.utils.,\
171 com.sun.org.apache.xalan.internal.utils.,\
172 com.sun.org.glassfish.external.,\
173 com.sun.org.glassfish.gmbal.
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +0000174
175#
176# Determines whether this properties file can be appended to
177# or overridden on the command line via -Djava.security.properties
178#
179security.overridePropertiesFile=true
180
181#
xuelei42dd6452010-11-01 07:57:46 -0700182# Determines the default key and trust manager factory algorithms for
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +0000183# the javax.net.ssl package.
184#
185ssl.KeyManagerFactory.algorithm=SunX509
186ssl.TrustManagerFactory.algorithm=PKIX
187
188#
189# The Java-level namelookup cache policy for successful lookups:
190#
191# any negative value: caching forever
192# any positive value: the number of seconds to cache an address for
193# zero: do not cache
194#
195# default value is forever (FOREVER). For security reasons, this
196# caching is made forever when a security manager is set. When a security
xuelei42dd6452010-11-01 07:57:46 -0700197# manager is not set, the default behavior in this implementation
198# is to cache for 30 seconds.
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +0000199#
200# NOTE: setting this to anything other than the default value can have
xuelei42dd6452010-11-01 07:57:46 -0700201# serious security implications. Do not set it unless
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +0000202# you are sure you are not exposed to DNS spoofing attack.
203#
xuelei42dd6452010-11-01 07:57:46 -0700204#networkaddress.cache.ttl=-1
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +0000205
206# The Java-level namelookup cache policy for failed lookups:
207#
208# any negative value: cache forever
209# any positive value: the number of seconds to cache negative lookup results
210# zero: do not cache
211#
212# In some Microsoft Windows networking environments that employ
213# the WINS name service in addition to DNS, name service lookups
214# that fail may take a noticeably long time to return (approx. 5 seconds).
215# For this reason the default caching policy is to maintain these
xuelei42dd6452010-11-01 07:57:46 -0700216# results for 10 seconds.
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +0000217#
218#
219networkaddress.cache.negative.ttl=10
220
221#
222# Properties to configure OCSP for certificate revocation checking
223#
224
xuelei42dd6452010-11-01 07:57:46 -0700225# Enable OCSP
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +0000226#
227# By default, OCSP is not used for certificate revocation checking.
228# This property enables the use of OCSP when set to the value "true".
229#
230# NOTE: SocketPermission is required to connect to an OCSP responder.
231#
232# Example,
233# ocsp.enable=true
xuelei42dd6452010-11-01 07:57:46 -0700234
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +0000235#
236# Location of the OCSP responder
237#
238# By default, the location of the OCSP responder is determined implicitly
239# from the certificate being validated. This property explicitly specifies
240# the location of the OCSP responder. The property is used when the
241# Authority Information Access extension (defined in RFC 3280) is absent
242# from the certificate or when it requires overriding.
243#
244# Example,
245# ocsp.responderURL=http://ocsp.example.net:80
xuelei42dd6452010-11-01 07:57:46 -0700246
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +0000247#
248# Subject name of the OCSP responder's certificate
249#
250# By default, the certificate of the OCSP responder is that of the issuer
251# of the certificate being validated. This property identifies the certificate
xuelei42dd6452010-11-01 07:57:46 -0700252# of the OCSP responder when the default does not apply. Its value is a string
253# distinguished name (defined in RFC 2253) which identifies a certificate in
254# the set of certificates supplied during cert path validation. In cases where
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +0000255# the subject name alone is not sufficient to uniquely identify the certificate
256# then both the "ocsp.responderCertIssuerName" and
257# "ocsp.responderCertSerialNumber" properties must be used instead. When this
258# property is set then those two properties are ignored.
259#
260# Example,
261# ocsp.responderCertSubjectName="CN=OCSP Responder, O=XYZ Corp"
262
263#
264# Issuer name of the OCSP responder's certificate
265#
266# By default, the certificate of the OCSP responder is that of the issuer
267# of the certificate being validated. This property identifies the certificate
268# of the OCSP responder when the default does not apply. Its value is a string
269# distinguished name (defined in RFC 2253) which identifies a certificate in
xuelei42dd6452010-11-01 07:57:46 -0700270# the set of certificates supplied during cert path validation. When this
271# property is set then the "ocsp.responderCertSerialNumber" property must also
272# be set. When the "ocsp.responderCertSubjectName" property is set then this
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +0000273# property is ignored.
274#
275# Example,
276# ocsp.responderCertIssuerName="CN=Enterprise CA, O=XYZ Corp"
xuelei42dd6452010-11-01 07:57:46 -0700277
duke6e45e102007-12-01 00:00:00 +0000278#
279# Serial number of the OCSP responder's certificate
280#
281# By default, the certificate of the OCSP responder is that of the issuer
282# of the certificate being validated. This property identifies the certificate
283# of the OCSP responder when the default does not apply. Its value is a string
284# of hexadecimal digits (colon or space separators may be present) which
285# identifies a certificate in the set of certificates supplied during cert path
286# validation. When this property is set then the "ocsp.responderCertIssuerName"
287# property must also be set. When the "ocsp.responderCertSubjectName" property
288# is set then this property is ignored.
289#
290# Example,
291# ocsp.responderCertSerialNumber=2A:FF:00
xuelei42dd6452010-11-01 07:57:46 -0700292
weijunf49e12c2010-08-19 11:26:32 +0800293#
294# Policy for failed Kerberos KDC lookups:
295#
296# When a KDC is unavailable (network error, service failure, etc), it is
297# put inside a blacklist and accessed less often for future requests. The
298# value (case-insensitive) for this policy can be:
299#
300# tryLast
301# KDCs in the blacklist are always tried after those not on the list.
302#
303# tryLess[:max_retries,timeout]
304# KDCs in the blacklist are still tried by their order in the configuration,
305# but with smaller max_retries and timeout values. max_retries and timeout
306# are optional numerical parameters (default 1 and 5000, which means once
307# and 5 seconds). Please notes that if any of the values defined here is
308# more than what is defined in krb5.conf, it will be ignored.
309#
310# Whenever a KDC is detected as available, it is removed from the blacklist.
311# The blacklist is reset when krb5.conf is reloaded. You can add
312# refreshKrb5Config=true to a JAAS configuration file so that krb5.conf is
313# reloaded whenever a JAAS authentication is attempted.
314#
315# Example,
316# krb5.kdc.bad.policy = tryLast
317# krb5.kdc.bad.policy = tryLess:2,2000
318krb5.kdc.bad.policy = tryLast
319
xuelei42dd6452010-11-01 07:57:46 -0700320# Algorithm restrictions for certification path (CertPath) processing
321#
322# In some environments, certain algorithms or key lengths may be undesirable
323# for certification path building and validation. For example, "MD2" is
324# generally no longer considered to be a secure hash algorithm. This section
325# describes the mechanism for disabling algorithms based on algorithm name
326# and/or key length. This includes algorithms used in certificates, as well
327# as revocation information such as CRLs and signed OCSP Responses.
328#
329# The syntax of the disabled algorithm string is described as this Java
330# BNF-style:
331# DisabledAlgorithms:
332# " DisabledAlgorithm { , DisabledAlgorithm } "
333#
334# DisabledAlgorithm:
335# AlgorithmName [Constraint]
336#
337# AlgorithmName:
338# (see below)
339#
340# Constraint:
341# KeySizeConstraint
342#
343# KeySizeConstraint:
344# keySize Operator DecimalInteger
345#
346# Operator:
347# <= | < | == | != | >= | >
348#
349# DecimalInteger:
350# DecimalDigits
351#
352# DecimalDigits:
353# DecimalDigit {DecimalDigit}
354#
355# DecimalDigit: one of
356# 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0
357#
358# The "AlgorithmName" is the standard algorithm name of the disabled
359# algorithm. See "Java Cryptography Architecture Standard Algorithm Name
360# Documentation" for information about Standard Algorithm Names. Matching
361# is performed using a case-insensitive sub-element matching rule. (For
362# example, in "SHA1withECDSA" the sub-elements are "SHA1" for hashing and
363# "ECDSA" for signatures.) If the assertion "AlgorithmName" is a
364# sub-element of the certificate algorithm name, the algorithm will be
365# rejected during certification path building and validation. For example,
366# the assertion algorithm name "DSA" will disable all certificate algorithms
367# that rely on DSA, such as NONEwithDSA, SHA1withDSA. However, the assertion
368# will not disable algorithms related to "ECDSA".
369#
370# A "Constraint" provides further guidance for the algorithm being specified.
371# The "KeySizeConstraint" requires a key of a valid size range if the
372# "AlgorithmName" is of a key algorithm. The "DecimalInteger" indicates the
373# key size specified in number of bits. For example, "RSA keySize <= 1024"
374# indicates that any RSA key with key size less than or equal to 1024 bits
375# should be disabled, and "RSA keySize < 1024, RSA keySize > 2048" indicates
376# that any RSA key with key size less than 1024 or greater than 2048 should
377# be disabled. Note that the "KeySizeConstraint" only makes sense to key
378# algorithms.
379#
380# Note: This property is currently used by Oracle's PKIX implementation. It
381# is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations.
382#
383# Example:
384# jdk.certpath.disabledAlgorithms=MD2, DSA, RSA keySize < 2048
385#
386#
xuelei7b2dfe72012-12-28 00:48:12 -0800387jdk.certpath.disabledAlgorithms=MD2, RSA keySize < 1024
xuelei42dd6452010-11-01 07:57:46 -0700388
389# Algorithm restrictions for Secure Socket Layer/Transport Layer Security
390# (SSL/TLS) processing
391#
392# In some environments, certain algorithms or key lengths may be undesirable
393# when using SSL/TLS. This section describes the mechanism for disabling
394# algorithms during SSL/TLS security parameters negotiation, including cipher
395# suites selection, peer authentication and key exchange mechanisms.
396#
397# For PKI-based peer authentication and key exchange mechanisms, this list
398# of disabled algorithms will also be checked during certification path
399# building and validation, including algorithms used in certificates, as
400# well as revocation information such as CRLs and signed OCSP Responses.
401# This is in addition to the jdk.certpath.disabledAlgorithms property above.
402#
403# See the specification of "jdk.certpath.disabledAlgorithms" for the
404# syntax of the disabled algorithm string.
405#
406# Note: This property is currently used by Oracle's JSSE implementation.
407# It is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations.
408#
409# Example:
410# jdk.tls.disabledAlgorithms=MD5, SHA1, DSA, RSA keySize < 2048
411