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Refer to this definitive and authoritative book to understand the Jakarta EE Security Spec, with Jakarta Authentication & Authorization as its underlying official foundation. Jakarta EE Security implementations are discussed, such as Soteria and Open Liberty, along with the build-in modules and Jakarta EE Security third-party modules, such as Payara Yubikey & OIDC, and OmniFaces JWT-Auth. The book discusses Jakarta EE Security in relation to SE underpinnings and provides a detailed explanation of how client-cert authentication over HTTPS takes place, how certifications work, and how LDAP-like names are mapped to caller/user names. General (web) security best practices are presented, such as not storing passwords in plaintext, using HTTPS, sanitizing inputs to DB queries, encoding output, and explanations of various (web) attacks and common vulnerabilities are included. Practical examples of securing applications discuss common needs such as letting users explicitly log in, sign up, verify email safely, explicitly log in to access protected pages, and go direct to the log in page. Common issues are covered such as abandoning an authentication dialog halfway and later accessing protected pages again. What You Will Learn Know what Jakarta/Java EE security includes and how to get started learning and using this technology for today's and tomorrow's enterprise Java applications Secure applications: traditional server-side web apps built with JSF (Faces) as well as applications based on client-side frameworks (such as Angular) and JAX-RS Work with the daunting number of security APIs in Jakarta EE Understand how EE security evolved Who This Book Is For Java developers using Jakarta EE and writing applications that need to be secured (every application). Basic knowledge of Servlets and CDI is assumed. Library writers and component providers who wish to provide additional authentication mechanisms for Jakarta EE also will find the book useful.
Learn everything you need to know about frameworks that help developers to integrate their solutions with social networks or APIs, from general purpose (Facebook, Twitter, Google, Mastodon) to specialized (LinkedIn, Xing, WhatsApp, YouTube, Instagram, Flickr, TikTok) to vertical (eToro, Fitbit, Strava). This book will teach you how to add social media features to web applications or services developed using Java, Jakarta EE or generally running on a Java Virtual Machine (JVM). Jam-packed with practical examples of social integration into enterprise applications, you’ll learn how to address common requirements such as social login, identity federation, single sign-on via social accounts, OpenID Connect, and mash-ups. You’ll also see how to leverage Java social frameworks like Facebook Business SDK, Twitter4J, Agorava, Keycloak, and Spring Security. Enterprise Social for the Java Platform is an excellent companion to books covering Jakarta EE Security, Spring Security, portals, and related frameworks. Upon completing it, you’ll be armed with the expertise you need to integrate your own Java enterprise applications with social media networks.  What You Will Learn Harness the reach and power of social media platforms by integrating your enterprise Java applications with them Understand social media standards for different platforms Address common security issues Who This Book Is For Developers, architects, and managers of projects involving the use of APIs or Social Networks.
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