2006-09-15 09:41:09 +00:00
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gcjwebplugin is a Firefox plugin for running Java applets. It is now
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included in the libgcj sub-package, though it is not enabled by
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default.
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GNU Classpath and libgcj's security implementation is under active
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development, but it is not ready to be declared secure. Specifically,
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it cannot run untrusted applets safely.
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When gcjwebplugin is enabled, it prompts you with a dialog before
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loading an applet. The dialog tells you that a certain URL would like
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to load an applet, and asks if you trust the applet. Be aware though
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that this dialog is mostly informative and doesn't provide much
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protection:
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- http and DNS can be spoofed meaning that the URL named in the
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warning dialog cannot be trusted
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- someone could create a browser denial-of-service attack by creating a
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page with hundreds of applet tags, causing gcjwebplugin to create
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warning dialog after warning dialog. The browser would have to be
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closed to eliminate the latest dialog
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- the whitelist is provided as a convenience, but it is unsafe because a
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domain may change hands from a trusted owner to an untrusted owner.
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If that domain is in the whitelist then the warning dialog will not
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appear when loading the new malicious applet.
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CURRENTLY GCJWEBPLUGIN RUNS WITH NO SECURITY MANAGER. THIS MEANS THAT
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APPLETS CAN DO ANYTHING A JAVA APPLICATION THAT YOU DOWNLOAD AND RUN
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COULD DO. BE *VERY* CAREFUL WHICH APPLETS YOU RUN. DO NOT USE
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GCJWEBPLUGIN ON YOUR SYSTEM IF YOUR SYSTEM STORES IMPORTANT DATA.
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THIS DATA CAN BE DESTROYED OR STOLEN.
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The same warning applies to gappletviewer, which also runs with no
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security manager (in fact, gcjwebplugin spawns gappletviewer to do the
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applet loading). When run on the command line, gappletviewer issues a
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warning on startup and asks you if you want to continue.
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Even considering the risks involved, you may still want to try
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gcjwebplugin. GNU Classpath's AWT and Swing implementations are now
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sufficiently mature that they're able to run many applets deployed on
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the web. If you're interested in trying gcjwebplugin, you can do so
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by creating a symbolic link in ~/.mozilla/plugins like so:
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2007-04-25 09:44:58 +00:00
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ln -s /usr/lib/gcj-@VERSION@/libgcjwebplugin.so ~/.mozilla/plugins/
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2006-09-15 09:41:09 +00:00
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Type about:plugins in Firefox's URL bar to confirm that the plugin has
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been loaded. To see gcjwebplugin debugging output, run:
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firefox -g
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then at the GDB prompt, type
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run
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Please report bugs in Red Hat Bugzilla: http://bugzilla.redhat.com
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