Solaris Installation
Building Shibboleth from source is recommended for production deployments on Solaris systems, but binary Solaris packages are available for some version/architecture combinations:
- Solaris 8 (sparc)
- Solaris 10 (i386)
The reason we suggest using a source build is because Solaris environments tend to be very localized and use versions of various packages (such as OpenSSL) that may or may not be up to date. There are few hard and fast guidelines, and you should avoid using Solaris if you aren't familiar with the specifics of your environment.
Build from Source
Install from Packages
Initial Testing
You can test to ensure that the SP is running properly and the surrounding environment is correct by accessing https://localhost/Shibboleth.sso/Status from the actual web server machine. You MUST use "localhost" as the hostname or it WILL NOT WORK by default. If this test is successful, then the software is ready for further configuration.
You can also access the Status handler from other clients or using a non-localhost name, but only if you change the acl
parameter in the configuration to permit your client address or remove it entirely to open up access to anybody. The ACL is present by default because the Status handler can return some arguably sensitive information about your configuration.
Now you can progress to the Getting Started material, or if you're in the very early stages of evaluation, try a more controlled scenario by using the TestShib IdP. (Note that before using the TestShib IdP, you'll need to complete the first step from Getting Started, setting the entityID attribute in the ApplicationDefaults element of shibboleth2.xml.)
Once you've actually configured the SP with its own settings and metadata from at least one IdP, in order to check that the SP is "working":
- Protect a directory by requiring a Shibboleth session. Usually, this is already done by default for the location "/secure".
Next, you typically place a script inside the protected directory that dumps the web server environment. With PHP for example you could in the easiest case just place a script there with the following:
<?php print_r($_SERVER) ?>
A more advanced version of such a script can be found here.
- Make sure that the Shibboleth-supplied variables are present. If there is a non-empty variable called Shib-Application-ID, you successfully authenticated and have a valid session. However, you also should check if there are other non-empty Shibboleth variables defined in the attribute-map.xml file. If there are no variables like mail or givenName or surname, the IdP either releaseed no attributes, or the attribute request failed (the latter usually only applies when using an older IdP). In this case, have a look at the
shibd.log
file.