marcusdacoregio c7675213ce Update Spring Boot Version to 3.1.6 1 anno fa
..
gradle 3f8e2c204a Upgrade to Gradle 8.3 1 anno fa
src 1a6352ff1a Use Spring Authorization Server SNAPSHOTs 2 anni fa
README.adoc dd8ecd241c Revert "Temporarily remove authorization-server sample" 2 anni fa
build.gradle c7675213ce Update Spring Boot Version to 3.1.6 1 anno fa
gradle.properties cd892c5604 Sync gradle.properties 2 anni fa
gradlew 3f8e2c204a Upgrade to Gradle 8.3 1 anno fa
gradlew.bat 3f8e2c204a Upgrade to Gradle 8.3 1 anno fa
settings.gradle dd8ecd241c Revert "Temporarily remove authorization-server sample" 2 anni fa

README.adoc

= OAuth 2.0 Authorization Server Sample

This sample demonstrates Authorization Server with the `authorization_code` and `client_credentials` grant types, as well as OpenID Connect 1.0. This authorization server is configured to generate JWT tokens signed with the `RS256` algorithm.

* <>
* <>
* <>

[[running-the-tests]]
== Running the tests

To run the tests, do:

```bash
./gradlew integrationTest
```

Or import the project into your IDE and run `OAuth2AuthorizationServerApplicationTests` from there.

=== What is it doing?

The tests are making requests to the token endpoint with the `client_credentials` grant type using the `client_secret_basic` authentication method, and subsequently verifying the access token from the response using the token introspection endpoint.

The introspection endpoint response is used to verify the token (decode the JWT in this case), returning the payload including the requested scope.

NOTE: Spring Security does not require the token introspection endpoint when configured to use the Bearer scheme with JWTs, this is simply used for demonstration purposes.

[[running-the-app]]
== Running the app

To run as a stand-alone application, do:

```bash
./gradlew bootRun
```

Or import the project into your IDE and run `OAuth2AuthorizationServerApplication` from there.

Once it is up and running, you can issue the following request:

```bash
curl -X POST messaging-client:secret@localhost:9000/oauth2/token -d "grant_type=client_credentials" -d "scope=message:read"
```

This returns something like the following:

```json
{
"access_token": "eyJraWQiOiI4YWY4Zjc2Zi0zMTdkLTQxZmYtYWY5Yi1hZjg5NDg4ODM5YzciLCJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLCJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiJ9.eyJzdWIiOiJtZXNzYWdpbmctY2xpZW50IiwiYXVkIjoibWVzc2FnaW5nLWNsaWVudCIsIm5iZiI6MTYyNzMzNDQ1MCwic2NvcGUiOlsibWVzc2FnZTpyZWFkIl0sImlzcyI6Imh0dHA6XC9cL2xvY2FsaG9zdDo5MDAwIiwiZXhwIjoxNjI3MzM0NzUwLCJpYXQiOjE2MjczMzQ0NTAsImp0aSI6IjBiYjYwZjhkLWIzNjItNDk0MC05MGRmLWZhZDg4N2Q1Yzg1ZSJ9.O8dI67B_feRjOn6pJi5ctPJmUJCNpV77SC4OiWqmpa5UHvf4Ud6L6EFe9LKuPIRrEWi8rMdCdMBOPKQMXvxLoI3LMUPf7Yj973uvZN0E988MsKwhGwxyaa_Wam8wFlk8aQlN8SbW3cKdeH-nKloNMdwjfspovefX521mxouaMjmyXdIFrM5WZ15GZK69NIniACSatE-pc9TAjKYBDbC65jVt_zHEvDQbEkZulF2bjrGOZC8C3IbJWnlKgkcshrY44TtrGPyCp2gIS0TSUUsG00iSBBC8E8zPU-YdfaP8gB9_FwUwK9zfy_hU2Ykf2aU3eulpGDVLn2rCwFeK86Rw1w",
"expires_in": 299,
"scope": "message:read",
"token_type": "Bearer"
}
```

In order to make the same token introspection request as the tests, export the access token from the response:

```bash
export TOKEN=...
```

Then issue the following request:

```bash
curl -X POST messaging-client:secret@localhost:9000/oauth2/introspect -d "token=$TOKEN"
```

Which will return something like the following:

```json
{
"active": true,
"aud": [
"messaging-client"
],
"client_id": "messaging-client",
"exp": 1627334750,
"iat": 1627334450,
"iss": "http://localhost:9000",
"jti": "0bb60f8d-b362-4940-90df-fad887d5c85e",
"nbf": 1627334450,
"scope": "message:read",
"sub": "messaging-client",
"token_type": "Bearer"
}
```

[[testing-with-a-resource-server]]
== Testing with a resource server

This sample can be used in conjunction with a resource server, such as the https://github.com/spring-projects/spring-security-samples/tree/main/servlet/spring-boot/java/oauth2/resource-server/hello-security[resource-server sample] in this project which is pre-configured to work with this authorization server sample out of the box.

You can run that app similarly to the authorization server:

```bash
./gradlew bootRun
```

Once it is up and running, you can issue the following request:

```bash
curl -X POST messaging-client:secret@localhost:9000/oauth2/token -d "grant_type=client_credentials" -d "scope=message:read"
```

Then, export the access token from the response:

```bash
export TOKEN=...
```

Then issue the following request:

```bash
curl -H "Authorization: Bearer $TOKEN" localhost:8080
```

Which will respond with the phrase:

```
Hello, messaging-client!
```