The Security Namespace This appendix provides a reference to the elements available in the security namespace
and information on the underlying beans they create (a knowledge of the individual classes
and how they work together is assumed - you can find more information in the project Javadoc
and elsewhere in this document). If you haven't used the namespace before, please read the
introductory chapter on namespace configuration, as
this is intended as a supplement to the information there. Using a good quality XML editor
while editing a configuration based on the schema is recommended as this will provide
contextual information on which elements and attributes are available as well as comments
explaining their purpose. The namespace is written in RELAX NG Compact format and later converted
into an XSD schema. If you are familiar with this format, you may wish to examine the schema file directly.Web Application Security - the <http> Element If you use an <http> element within your application,
a FilterChainProxy bean named "springSecurityFilterChain" is created and
the configuration within the element is used to build a filter chain within
FilterChainProxy. As of Spring Security 3.1, additional
http elements can be used to add extra filter chains See the introductory chapter for how to
set up the mapping from your web.xml. Some core filters are always created in a filter chain and others will be added
to the stack depending on the attributes and child elements which are present. The positions of the
standard filters are fixed (see the filter order
table in the namespace introduction), removing a common source of errors with
previous versions of the framework when users had to configure the filter chain
explicitly in theFilterChainProxy bean. You can, of course, still
do this if you need full control of the configuration. All filters which require a reference to the
AuthenticationManager will be automatically injected
with the internal instance created by the namespace configuration (see the introductory chapter for more on the
AuthenticationManager). Each <http> namespace block always creates an
SecurityContextPersistenceFilter, an
ExceptionTranslationFilter and a
FilterSecurityInterceptor. These are fixed and cannot be
replaced with alternatives. <http> Attributes The attributes on the <http> element control some of the
properties on the core filters. patternDefining a pattern for the http element controls
the requests which will be filtered through the list of filters which it defines. The
interpretation is dependent on the configured request-matcher.
If no pattern is defined, all requests will be matched, so the most specific patterns should be
declared first.
securedA request pattern can be mapped to an empty filter chain, by setting
this attribute to false. No security will be applied and
none of Spring Security's features will be available.
servlet-api-provision Provides versions of HttpServletRequest security methods
such as isUserInRole() and getPrincipal()
which are implemented by adding a
SecurityContextHolderAwareRequestFilter bean to the
stack. Defaults to "true".request-matcher Defines the RequestMatcher strategy used in
the FilterChainProxy and the beans created by the
intercept-url to match incoming requests. Options are
currently ant, regex and
ciRegex, for ant, regular-expression and case-insensitive
regular-expression repsectively. A separate instance is created for each
intercept-url element using its
pattern and method attributes (see
below). Ant paths are matched using an
AntPathRequestMatcher and regular expressions are
matched using a RegexRequestMatcher. See the Javadoc for
these classes for more details on exactly how the matching is preformed. Ant
paths are the default strategy.realm Sets the realm name used for basic authentication (if enabled). Corresponds
to the realmName property on
BasicAuthenticationEntryPoint. entry-point-ref Normally the AuthenticationEntryPoint used
will be set depending on which authentication mechanisms have been configured.
This attribute allows this behaviour to be overridden by defining a customized
AuthenticationEntryPoint bean which will
start the authentication process. security-context-repository-ref
Allows injection of a custom SecurityContextRepository
into the SecurityContextPersistenceFilter.
access-decision-manager-ref Optional attribute specifying the ID of the
AccessDecisionManager implementation which
should be used for authorizing HTTP requests. By default an
AffirmativeBased implementation is used for with a
RoleVoter and an
AuthenticatedVoter. access-denied-page Deprecated in favour of the access-denied-handler child
element. once-per-request Corresponds to the observeOncePerRequest property of
FilterSecurityInterceptor. Defaults to "true".
create-session Controls the eagerness with which an HTTP session is created. If not set,
defaults to "ifRequired". Other options are "always" and "never". The setting of
this attribute affect the allowSessionCreation and
forceEagerSessionCreation properties of
HttpSessionContextIntegrationFilter.
allowSessionCreation will always be true unless this
attribute is set to "never". forceEagerSessionCreation is
"false" unless it is set to "always". So the default configuration allows
session creation but does not force it. The exception is if concurrent session
control is enabled, when forceEagerSessionCreation will be
set to true, regardless of what the setting is here. Using "never" would then
cause an exception during the initialization of
HttpSessionContextIntegrationFilter. use-expressionsEnables EL-expressions in the access attribute, as
described in the chapter on expression-based
access-control. disable-url-rewritingPrevents session IDs from being appended to URLs in the application.
Clients must use cookies if this attribute is set to true.
<access-denied-handler> This element allows you to set the errorPage property for the
default AccessDeniedHandler used by the
ExceptionTranslationFilter, (using the
error-page attribute, or to supply your own implementation
using the ref attribute. This is discussed in more detail in the
section on the
ExceptionTranslationFilter.The <intercept-url> Element This element is used to define the set of URL patterns that the application is
interested in and to configure how they should be handled. It is used to construct
the FilterInvocationSecurityMetadataSource used by
the FilterSecurityInterceptor. It is also responsible for configuring a
ChannelAuthenticationFilter if particular URLs need to be
accessed by HTTPS, for example. When matching the specified patterns against an
incoming request, the matching is done in the order in which the elements are
declared. So the most specific matches patterns should come first and the most
general should come last.pattern The pattern which defines the URL path. The content will depend on the
request-matcher attribute from the containing http
element, so will default to ant path syntax. method The HTTP Method which will be used in combination with the pattern to match
an incoming request. If omitted, any method will match. If an identical pattern
is specified with and without a method, the method-specific match will take
precedence.access Lists the access attributes which will be stored in the
FilterInvocationSecurityMetadataSource for
the defined URL pattern/method combination. This should be a comma-separated
list of the security configuration attributes (such as role names). requires-channel Can be http or https depending on whether a
particular URL pattern should be accessed over HTTP or HTTPS respectively.
Alternatively the value any can be used when there is no
preference. If this attribute is present on any
<intercept-url> element, then a
ChannelAuthenticationFilter will be added to the
filter stack and its additional dependencies added to the application
context. If a <port-mappings> configuration is added, this
will be used to by the SecureChannelProcessor and
InsecureChannelProcessor beans to determine the ports
used for redirecting to HTTP/HTTPS. filtersCan only take the value none. This will cause any matching
request to bypass the Spring Security filter chain entirely. None of the rest of
the <http> configuration will have any effect on the
request and there will be no security context available for its duration. Access
to secured methods during the request will fail.The <port-mappings> Element By default, an instance of PortMapperImpl will be added to
the configuration for use in redirecting to secure and insecure URLs. This element
can optionally be used to override the default mappings which that class defines.
Each child <port-mapping> element defines a pair of
HTTP:HTTPS ports. The default mappings are 80:443 and 8080:8443. An example of
overriding these can be found in the namespace introduction. The <form-login> Element Used to add an UsernamePasswordAuthenticationFilter to the
filter stack and an LoginUrlAuthenticationEntryPoint to the
application context to provide authentication on demand. This will always take
precedence over other namespace-created entry points. If no attributes are supplied,
a login page will be generated automatically at the URL "/spring-security-login" This feature is really just provided for convenience and is not intended
for production (where a view technology will have been chosen and can be
used to render a customized login page). The class
DefaultLoginPageGeneratingFilter is responsible
for rendering the login page and will provide login forms for both normal
form login and/or OpenID if required. The behaviour can be customized using the following attributes. login-page The URL that should be used to render the login page. Maps to the
loginFormUrl property of the
LoginUrlAuthenticationEntryPoint. Defaults to
"/spring-security-login". login-processing-url Maps to the filterProcessesUrl property of
UsernamePasswordAuthenticationFilter. The default
value is "/j_spring_security_check". default-target-urlMaps to the defaultTargetUrl property of
UsernamePasswordAuthenticationFilter. If not set, the
default value is "/" (the application root). A user will be taken to this URL
after logging in, provided they were not asked to login while attempting to
access a secured resource, when they will be taken to the originally requested
URL. always-use-default-target If set to "true", the user will always start at the value given by
default-target-url, regardless of how they arrived at the
login page. Maps to the alwaysUseDefaultTargetUrl property of
UsernamePasswordAuthenticationFilter. Default value
is "false". authentication-failure-url Maps to the authenticationFailureUrl property of
UsernamePasswordAuthenticationFilter. Defines the URL
the browser will be redirected to on login failure. Defaults to
"/spring_security_login?login_error", which will be automatically handled by the
automatic login page generator, re-rendering the login page with an error
message. authentication-success-handler-refThis can be used as an alternative to default-target-url
and always-use-default-target, giving you full control over
the navigation flow after a successful authentication. The value should be the
name of an AuthenticationSuccessHandler bean in
the application context. By default, an imlementation of
SavedRequestAwareAuthenticationSuccessHandler is used
and injected with the default-target-url.authentication-failure-handler-refCan be used as an alternative to
authentication-failure-url, giving you full control over the
navigation flow after an authentication failure. The value should be he name of
an AuthenticationFailureHandler bean in the
application context. The <http-basic> Element Adds a BasicAuthenticationFilter and
BasicAuthenticationEntryPoint to the configuration. The
latter will only be used as the configuration entry point if form-based login is not
enabled. The <remember-me> Element Adds the RememberMeAuthenticationFilter to the stack. This
in turn will be configured with either a
TokenBasedRememberMeServices, a
PersistentTokenBasedRememberMeServices or a
user-specified bean implementing RememberMeServices
depending on the attribute settings. data-source-ref If this is set, PersistentTokenBasedRememberMeServices
will be used and configured with a
JdbcTokenRepositoryImpl instance. token-repository-ref Configures a PersistentTokenBasedRememberMeServices
but allows the use of a custom
PersistentTokenRepository bean. services-ref Allows complete control of the
RememberMeServices implementation that will
be used by the filter. The value should be the Id of a bean in the application
context which implements this interface. token-repository-ref Configures a PersistentTokenBasedRememberMeServices
but allows the use of a custom
PersistentTokenRepository bean. The key AttributeMaps to the "key" property of
AbstractRememberMeServices. Should be set to a unique
value to ensure that remember-me cookies are only valid within the one
application This doesn't affect the use of
PersistentTokenBasedRememberMeServices, where
the tokens are stored on the server side.. token-validity-seconds Maps to the tokenValiditySeconds property of
AbstractRememberMeServices. Specifies the period in
seconds for which the remember-me cookie should be valid. By default it will be
valid for 14 days. user-service-ref The remember-me services implementations require access to a
UserDetailsService, so there has to be one
defined in the application context. If there is only one, it will be selected
and used automatically by the namespace configuration. If there are multiple
instances, you can specify a bean Id explicitly using this attribute. The <session-management> ElementSession-management related functionality is implemented by the addition of a
SessionManagementFilter to the filter stack.session-fixation-protection Indicates whether an existing session should be invalidated when a user
authenticates and a new session started. If set to "none" no change will be
made. "newSession" will create a new empty session. "migrateSession" will create
a new session and copy the session attributes to the new session. Defaults to
"migrateSession". If session fixation protection is enabled, the
SessionManagementFilter is inected with a
appropriately configured
DefaultSessionAuthenticationStrategy. See the Javadoc
for this class for more details. The <concurrency-control> Element Adds support for concurrent session control, allowing limits to be placed on the
number of active sessions a user can have. A
ConcurrentSessionFilter will be created, and a
ConcurrentSessionControlStrategy will be used with the
SessionManagementFilter. If a
form-login element has been declared, the strategy object
will also be injected into the created authentication filter. An instance of
SessionRegistry (a
SessionRegistryImpl instance unless the user wishes to
use a custom bean) will be created for use by the strategy.The max-sessions attributeMaps to the maximumSessions property of
ConcurrentSessionControlStrategy.The expired-url attribute The URL a user will be redirected to if they attempt to use a session which
has been "expired" by the concurrent session controller because the user has
exceeded the number of allowed sessions and has logged in again elsewhere.
Should be set unless exception-if-maximum-exceeded is set. If
no value is supplied, an expiry message will just be written directly back to
the response. The error-if-maximum-exceeded attributeIf set to "true" a
SessionAuthenticationException will be raised
when a user attempts to exceed the maximum allowed number of sessions. The
default behaviour is to expire the original session. The session-registry-alias and
session-registry-ref attributes The user can supply their own SessionRegistry
implementation using the session-registry-ref attribute. The
other concurrent session control beans will be wired up to use it. It can also be useful to have a reference to the internal session registry
for use in your own beans or an admin interface. You can expose the interal bean
using the session-registry-alias attribute, giving it a name
that you can use elsewhere in your configuration. The <anonymous> Element Adds an AnonymousAuthenticationFilter to the stack and an
AnonymousAuthenticationProvider. Required if you are
using the IS_AUTHENTICATED_ANONYMOUSLY attribute. The <x509> Element Adds support for X.509 authentication. An
X509AuthenticationFilter will be added to the stack and
an Http403ForbiddenEntryPoint bean will be created. The
latter will only be used if no other authentication mechanisms are in use (it's only
functionality is to return an HTTP 403 error code). A
PreAuthenticatedAuthenticationProvider will also be
created which delegates the loading of user authorities to a
UserDetailsService. The subject-principal-regex attribute Defines a regular expression which will be used to extract the username from
the certificate (for use with the
UserDetailsService). The user-service-ref attribute Allows a specific UserDetailsService to be
used with X.509 in the case where multiple instances are configured. If not set,
an attempt will be made to locate a suitable instance automatically and use
that. The <openid-login> Element Similar to <form-login> and has the same attributes. The
default value for login-processing-url is
"/j_spring_openid_security_check". An
OpenIDAuthenticationFilter and
OpenIDAuthenticationProvider will be registered. The
latter requires a reference to a UserDetailsService.
Again, this can be specified by Id, using the user-service-ref
attribute, or will be located automatically in the application context. The <attribute-exchange> ElementThe attribute-exchange element defines the list of
attributes which should be requested from the identity provider. More than one
can be used, in which case each must have an identifier-match
attribute, containing a regular expression which is matched against the supplied
OpenID identifer. This allows different attribute lists to be fetched from
different providers (Google, Yahoo etc).The <logout> Element Adds a LogoutFilter to the filter stack. This is
configured with a SecurityContextLogoutHandler. The logout-url attribute The URL which will cause a logout (i.e. which will be processed by the
filter). Defaults to "/j_spring_security_logout". The logout-success-url attribute The destination URL which the user will be taken to after logging out.
Defaults to "/". The invalidate-session attribute Maps to the invalidateHttpSession of the
SecurityContextLogoutHandler. Defaults to "true", so
the session will be invalidated on logout. The <custom-filter> ElementThis element is used to add a filter to the filter chain. It doesn't create any
additional beans but is used to select a bean of type
javax.servlet.Filter which is already defined in
the appllication context and add that at a particular position in the filter chain
maintained by Spring Security. Full details can be found in the namespace
chapter.The request-cache ElementSets the RequestCache instance which will be used
by the ExceptionTranslationFilter to store request information
before invoking an AuthenticationEntryPoint.
Authentication Services Before Spring Security 3.0, an AuthenticationManager
was automatically registered internally. Now you must register one explicitly using the
<authentication-manager> element. This creates an instance
of Spring Security's ProviderManager class, which needs to be
configured with a list of one or more
AuthenticationProvider instances. These can either be
created using syntax elements provided by the namespace, or they can be standard bean
definitions, marked for addition to the list using the
authentication-provider element. The <authentication-manager> Element Every Spring Security application which uses the namespace must have include this
element somewhere. It is responsible for registering the
AuthenticationManager which provides
authentication services to the application. It also allows you to define an alias
name for the internal instance for use in your own configuration. Its use is
described in the namespace introduction.
All elements which create AuthenticationProvider
instances should be children of this element.
The element also exposes an erase-credentials attribute which maps
to the eraseCredentialsAfterAuthentication property of
the ProviderManager. This is discussed in the
Core Services chapter.The <authentication-provider> Element Unless used with a ref attribute, this element is
shorthand for configuring a DaoAuthenticationProvider.
DaoAuthenticationProvider loads user information from
a UserDetailsService and compares the
username/password combination with the values supplied at login. The
UserDetailsService instance can be defined
either by using an available namespace element
(jdbc-user-service or by using the
user-service-ref attribute to point to a bean defined
elsewhere in the application context). You can find examples of these variations
in the namespace introduction. The <password-encoder> ElementAuthentication providers can optionally be configured to use a password
encoder as described in the namespace introduction. This will result in the bean being
injected with the appropriate PasswordEncoder
instance, potentially with an accompanying
SaltSource bean to provide salt values
for hashing. Using <authentication-provider> to refer to an
AuthenticationProvider Bean If you have written your own
AuthenticationProvider implementation (or
want to configure one of Spring Security's own implementations as a traditional
bean for some reason, then you can use the following syntax to add it to the
internal ProviderManager's list:
]]>Method SecurityThe <global-method-security> Element This element is the primary means of adding support for securing methods on
Spring Security beans. Methods can be secured by the use of annotations (defined at
the interface or class level) or by defining a set of pointcuts as child elements,
using AspectJ syntax. Method security uses the same
AccessDecisionManager configuration as web
security, but this can be overridden as explained above , using the same attribute. The secured-annotations and
jsr250-annotations Attributes Setting these to "true" will enable support for Spring Security's own
@Secured annotations and JSR-250 annotations,
respectively. They are both disabled by default. Use of JSR-250 annotations also
adds a Jsr250Voter to the
AccessDecisionManager, so you need to make
sure you do this if you are using a custom implementation and want to use these
annotations. The mode AttributeThis attribute can be set to aspectj to specify that
AspectJ should be used instead of the default Spring AOP. Secured methods must
be woven with the AnnotationSecurityAspect from the
spring-security-aspects module.
Securing Methods using <protect-pointcut> Rather than defining security attributes on an individual method or class
basis using the @Secured annotation, you can define
cross-cutting security constraints across whole sets of methods and interfaces
in your service layer using the <protect-pointcut>
element. This has two attributes: expression - the pointcut expressionaccess - the security attributes which
apply You can find an example in the namespace introduction. The <after-invocation-provider> Element This element can be used to decorate an
AfterInvocationProvider for use by the
security interceptor maintained by the
<global-method-security> namespace. You can define
zero or more of these within the global-method-security
element, each with a ref attribute pointing to an
AfterInvocationProvider bean instance within
your application context. LDAP Namespace Options LDAP is covered in some details in its own
chapter. We will expand on that here with some explanation of how the
namespace options map to Spring beans. The LDAP implementation uses Spring LDAP
extensively, so some familiarity with that project's API may be useful. Defining the LDAP Server using the <ldap-server>
Element This element sets up a Spring LDAP
ContextSource for use by the other LDAP
beans, defining the location of the LDAP server and other information (such as a
username and password, if it doesn't allow anonymous access) for connecting to
it. It can also be used to create an embedded server for testing. Details of the
syntax for both options are covered in the LDAP
chapter. The actual ContextSource
implementation is DefaultSpringSecurityContextSource
which extends Spring LDAP's LdapContextSource class. The
manager-dn and manager-password
attributes map to the latter's userDn and
password properties respectively. If you only have one server defined in your application context, the other
LDAP namespace-defined beans will use it automatically. Otherwise, you can give
the element an "id" attribute and refer to it from other namespace beans using
the server-ref attribute. This is actually the bean Id of the
ContextSource instance, if you want to use it in other
traditional Spring beans. The <ldap-provider> Element This element is shorthand for the creation of an
LdapAuthenticationProvider instance. By default this
will be configured with a BindAuthenticator instance and
a DefaultAuthoritiesPopulator. As with all namespace
authentication providers, it must be included as a child of the
authentication-provider element.The user-dn-pattern Attribute If your users are at a fixed location in the directory (i.e. you can work
out the DN directly from the username without doing a directory search), you
can use this attribute to map directly to the DN. It maps directly to the
userDnPatterns property of
AbstractLdapAuthenticator. The user-search-base and
user-search-filter Attributes If you need to perform a search to locate the user in the directory, then
you can set these attributes to control the search. The
BindAuthenticator will be configured with a
FilterBasedLdapUserSearch and the attribute
values map directly to the first two arguments of that bean's constructor.
If these attributes aren't set and no user-dn-pattern has
been supplied as an alternative, then the default search values of
user-search-filter="(uid={0})" and
user-search-base="" will be used. group-search-filter,
group-search-base,
group-role-attribute and
role-prefix Attributes The value of group-search-base is mapped to the
groupSearchBase constructor argument of
DefaultAuthoritiesPopulator and defaults to
"ou=groups". The default filter value is "(uniqueMember={0})", which assumes
that the entry is of type "groupOfUniqueNames".
group-role-attribute maps to the
groupRoleAttribute attribute and defaults to "cn".
Similarly role-prefix maps to
rolePrefix and defaults to "ROLE_". The <password-compare> Element This is used as child element to <ldap-provider>
and switches the authentication strategy from
BindAuthenticator to
PasswordComparisonAuthenticator. This can
optionally be supplied with a hash attribute or with a
child <password-encoder> element to hash the
password before submitting it to the directory for comparison. The <ldap-user-service> Element This element configures an LDAP
UserDetailsService. The class used is
LdapUserDetailsService which is a combination of a
FilterBasedLdapUserSearch and a
DefaultAuthoritiesPopulator. The attributes it
supports have the same usage as in <ldap-provider>.