|  | @@ -872,7 +872,7 @@ public class HelloWebfluxSecurityConfig {
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				|  |  |  }
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				|  |  |  -----
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				|  |  | -This configuration explicitly sets up all the sames things as our minimal configuration.
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				|  |  | +This configuration explicitly sets up all the same things as our minimal configuration.
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				|  |  |  From here you can easily make the changes to the defaults.
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				|  |  |  [[jc-oauth2login]]
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				|  | @@ -2216,7 +2216,7 @@ You can also use standard `AuthenticationProvider` beans as follows
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				|  |  |  
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				|  |  |  ----
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				|  |  |  
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				|  |  | -where `myAuthenticationProvider` is the name of a bean in your application context which implements `AuthenticationProvider`. You can use multiple `authentication-provider` elements, in which case the providers will be queried in the order they are declared. See <<ns-auth-manager>> for more on information on how the Spring Security `AuthenticationManager` is configured using the namespace.
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				|  |  | +where `myAuthenticationProvider` is the name of a bean in your application context which implements `AuthenticationProvider`. You can use multiple `authentication-provider` elements, in which case the providers will be queried in the order they are declared. See <<ns-auth-manager>> for more information on how the Spring Security `AuthenticationManager` is configured using the namespace.
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				|  |  |  [[ns-password-encoder]]
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				|  |  |  ===== Adding a Password Encoder
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