The CAS JSP tag library conforms to its TLD.
Getting the files
The CAS JSP tag library is distributed as part of the Java CAS Client distributions.
A legacy CAS JSP client is also attached to this Wiki page.
Example
Here's an example of using the CAS JSP Taglib.
<%-- This is a sample JSP page that uses the CAS tag library. It assumes that the tag library from http://www.yale.edu/tp/cas/cas-taglib-1.00.tar.gz is installed into your web application. For the CAS 1.0 client (which works under JSP 1.1), this involves the following steps: - addition of castools.tld to your application's WEB-INF directory - addition of castools.jar to your application's WEB-INF/lib directory - modification of your application's deployment descriptor (web.xml) to add an element like this: http://www.yale.edu/its/tp/castools/WEB-INF/castools.tld To use the CAS 2.0 client, simply refer to the sample application ('webProxy') that comes with the CAS 2.0 distribution. --%> <%-- The following like imports the tag library into the current page and associates it with the prefix 'cas' --%> <%@ taglib prefix="cas" uri="/WEB-INF/castools.tld" %> <%-- The following tag (JSP action) authenticates the user via CAS and exposes the NetID of this user in the session-scoped variable named 'netid'. If this session-scoped variable already exists, the tag assumes the user has authenticated previously, and it does not re-authenticate the user. --%> <cas:auth id="netid" scope="session"/> <%-- Now, scripting code may use the scripting variable named 'netid', and other code (such as a servlet sharing a session with this page) may refer to the session-scoped attribute named 'netid', as in myHttpServletRequest.getSession().getAttribute("netid") --%> <%-- After authenticating the user, we might forward to a servlet in our application; this servlet can read the session-scoped parameter, as described earlier. (It would not be secure to pass the NetID to the servlet as a request parameter; the servlet should use the session-scoped attribute exposed by the CAS tag.) --%> <jsp:forward page="/myServlet"/>