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@@ -154,14 +154,16 @@
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within the expression, so you can also access properties on the arguments. For
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example, if you wanted a particular method to only allow access to a user whose
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username matched that of the contact, you could write</para>
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- <programlisting> @PreAuthorize("#contact.name == principal.name)")
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+ <programlisting>
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+ @PreAuthorize("#contact.name == authentication.name")
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public void doSomething(Contact contact);</programlisting>
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- <para>Here we are accessing another built–in expression, which is the
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- <literal>principal</literal> of the current Spring Security
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- <interfacename>Authentication</interfacename> object obtained from the
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- security context. You can also access the
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- <interfacename>Authentication</interfacename> object itself directly using
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- the expression name <literal>authentication</literal>.</para>
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+ <para>Here we are accessing another built–in expression, <literal>authentication</literal>,
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+ which is the <interfacename>Authentication</interfacename> stored in the
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+ security context. You can also access its <quote>principal</quote> property
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+ directly, using the expression <literal>principal</literal>. The value will
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+ often be a <interfacename>UserDetails</interfacename> instance, so you might use an
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+ expression like <literal>principal.username</literal> or
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+ <literal>principal.enabled</literal>.</para>
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<para>Less commonly, you may wish to perform an access-control check after the
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method has been invoked. This can be achieved using the
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<literal>@PostAuthorize</literal> annotation. To access the return value
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