IBM BS029ML Self Help Guide - Page 100

Planning and considerations, 4.1.1 The basics, Architecture PUMA.

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4.1 Planning and considerations In this section, we will address the basic concepts, planning issues, and considerations while configuring WebSphere Portal security. 4.1.1 The basics IBM WebSphere Portal provides personalized access to applications and processes, ranging from small and simple applications to complex enterprise information systems. It aggregates the content from many different data sources to provide a single user interface for centralized management. These different applications and systems may require their own security controls with different level of complexities. To accommodate such a wide range of security requirements, WebSphere Portal must integrate with different security infrastructure components for authentication, authorization, single sign-on (SSO), and user management, so that the customers can choose the solution that best suits their security needs. WebSphere Portal is a J2EE application deployed onto an application server, called WebSphere_Portal within a WebSphere Application Server. It can leverage the underlying application server's powerful security infrastructure. In addition, WebSphere Portal security extended the security configuration provided by the Application Server, and presented a flexible set of options for customers to choose. It also provides the Credential Vault mechanism for supporting Single Sign-On solutions with back-end enterprise systems. WebSphere Portal security consists of authentication and authorization. Authentication answers question of confidentiality, that is, the user submits the credentials to let the system know who he or she is and the server then verifies whether the user's credentials are correct against a user registry. Authorization is more commonly referred to as Access Control. Once the user's identity is established during the authentication phase, the authorization mechanism of the system checks what the authenticated user can do on which resources on the site. WebSphere Portal utilizes WebSphere Member Manager (WMM) for its user and group management, through an abstraction layer called Portal User Management Architecture (PUMA). Figure 4-1 on page 87 gives a general overview of the deployment of the WebSphere Portal solution. 86 IBM WebSphere Portal V6 Self Help Guide

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IBM WebSphere Portal V6 Self Help Guide
4.1
Planning and considerations
In this section, we will address the basic concepts, planning issues, and considerations while
configuring WebSphere Portal security.
4.1.1
The basics
IBM WebSphere Portal provides personalized access to applications and processes, ranging
from small and simple applications to complex enterprise information systems. It aggregates
the content from many different data sources to provide a single user interface for centralized
management. These different applications and systems may require their own security
controls with different level of complexities. To accommodate such a wide range of security
requirements, WebSphere Portal must integrate with different security infrastructure
components for authentication, authorization, single sign-on (SSO), and user management,
so that the customers can choose the solution that best suits their security needs.
WebSphere Portal is a J2EE application deployed onto an application server, called
WebSphere_Portal within a WebSphere Application Server. It can leverage the underlying
application server's powerful security infrastructure. In addition, WebSphere Portal security
extended the security configuration provided by the Application Server, and presented a
flexible set of options for customers to choose. It also provides the Credential Vault
mechanism for supporting Single Sign-On solutions with back-end enterprise systems.
WebSphere Portal security consists of authentication and authorization. Authentication
answers question of confidentiality, that is, the user submits the credentials to let the system
know who he or she is and the server then verifies whether the user’s credentials are correct
against a user registry. Authorization is more commonly referred to as Access Control. Once
the user’s identity is established during the authentication phase, the authorization
mechanism of the system checks what the authenticated user can do on which resources on
the site. WebSphere Portal utilizes WebSphere Member Manager (WMM) for its user and
group management, through an abstraction layer called Portal User Management
Architecture (PUMA).
Figure 4-1 on page 87 gives a general overview of the deployment of the WebSphere Portal
solution.