123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307 |
- [[getting]]
- = Getting Spring Security
- This section describes how to get the Spring Security binaries.
- See xref:community.adoc#community-source[Source Code] for how to obtain the source code.
- == Release Numbering
- Spring Security versions are formatted as MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH such that:
- * MAJOR versions may contain breaking changes.
- Typically, these are done to provide improved security to match modern security practices.
- * MINOR versions contain enhancements but are considered passive updates.
- * PATCH level should be perfectly compatible, forwards and backwards, with the possible exception of changes that fix bugs.
- [[maven]]
- == Usage with Maven
- As most open source projects, Spring Security deploys its dependencies as Maven artifacts.
- The topics in this section describe how to consume Spring Security when using Maven.
- [[getting-maven-boot]]
- === Spring Boot with Maven
- Spring Boot provides a `spring-boot-starter-security` starter that aggregates Spring Security-related dependencies.
- The simplest and preferred way to use the starter is to use https://docs.spring.io/initializr/docs/current/reference/html/[Spring Initializr] by using an IDE integration in (https://joshlong.com/jl/blogPost/tech_tip_geting_started_with_spring_boot.html[Eclipse] or https://www.jetbrains.com/help/idea/spring-boot.html#d1489567e2[IntelliJ], https://github.com/AlexFalappa/nb-springboot/wiki/Quick-Tour[NetBeans]) or through https://start.spring.io.
- Alternatively, you can manually add the starter, as the following example shows:
- .pom.xml
- [source,xml,subs="verbatim,attributes"]
- ----
- <dependencies>
- <!-- ... other dependency elements ... -->
- <dependency>
- <groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
- <artifactId>spring-boot-starter-security</artifactId>
- </dependency>
- </dependencies>
- ----
- Since Spring Boot provides a Maven BOM to manage dependency versions, you do not need to specify a version.
- If you wish to override the Spring Security version, you can do so by providing a Maven property:
- .pom.xml
- [source,xml,subs="verbatim,attributes"]
- ----
- <properties>
- <!-- ... -->
- <spring-security.version>{spring-security-version}</spring-security.version>
- </properties>
- ----
- Since Spring Security makes breaking changes only in major releases, you can safely use a newer version of Spring Security with Spring Boot.
- However, at times, you may need to update the version of Spring Framework as well.
- You can do so by adding a Maven property:
- .pom.xml
- [source,xml,subs="verbatim,attributes"]
- ----
- <properties>
- <!-- ... -->
- <spring.version>{spring-core-version}</spring.version>
- </properties>
- ----
- If you use additional features (such as LDAP, OAuth 2, and others), you need to also include the appropriate xref:modules.adoc#modules[Project Modules and Dependencies].
- [[getting-maven-no-boot]]
- === Maven Without Spring Boot
- When you use Spring Security without Spring Boot, the preferred way is to use Spring Security's BOM to ensure that a consistent version of Spring Security is used throughout the entire project. The following example shows how to do so:
- .pom.xml
- [source,xml,ubs="verbatim,attributes"]
- ----
- <dependencyManagement>
- <dependencies>
- <!-- ... other dependency elements ... -->
- <dependency>
- <groupId>org.springframework.security</groupId>
- <artifactId>spring-security-bom</artifactId>
- <version>{spring-security-version}</version>
- <type>pom</type>
- <scope>import</scope>
- </dependency>
- </dependencies>
- </dependencyManagement>
- ----
- A minimal Spring Security Maven set of dependencies typically looks like the following example:
- .pom.xml
- [source,xml,subs="verbatim,attributes"]
- ----
- <dependencies>
- <!-- ... other dependency elements ... -->
- <dependency>
- <groupId>org.springframework.security</groupId>
- <artifactId>spring-security-web</artifactId>
- </dependency>
- <dependency>
- <groupId>org.springframework.security</groupId>
- <artifactId>spring-security-config</artifactId>
- </dependency>
- </dependencies>
- ----
- If you use additional features (such as LDAP, OAuth 2, and others), you need to also include the appropriate xref:modules.adoc#modules[Project Modules and Dependencies].
- Spring Security builds against Spring Framework {spring-core-version} but should generally work with any newer version of Spring Framework 5.x.
- Many users are likely to run afoul of the fact that Spring Security's transitive dependencies resolve Spring Framework {spring-core-version}, which can cause strange classpath problems.
- The easiest way to resolve this is to use the `spring-framework-bom` within the `<dependencyManagement>` section of your `pom.xml`:
- .pom.xml
- [source,xml,subs="verbatim,attributes"]
- ----
- <dependencyManagement>
- <dependencies>
- <!-- ... other dependency elements ... -->
- <dependency>
- <groupId>org.springframework</groupId>
- <artifactId>spring-framework-bom</artifactId>
- <version>{spring-core-version}</version>
- <type>pom</type>
- <scope>import</scope>
- </dependency>
- </dependencies>
- </dependencyManagement>
- ----
- The preceding example ensures that all the transitive dependencies of Spring Security use the Spring {spring-core-version} modules.
- [NOTE]
- ====
- This approach uses Maven's "`bill of materials`" (BOM) concept and is only available in Maven 2.0.9+.
- For additional details about how dependencies are resolved, see https://maven.apache.org/guides/introduction/introduction-to-dependency-mechanism.html[Maven's Introduction to the Dependency Mechanism documentation].
- ====
- [[maven-repositories]]
- === Maven Repositories
- All GA releases (that is, versions ending in .RELEASE) are deployed to Maven Central, so you need not declare additional Maven repositories in your pom.
- If you use a SNAPSHOT version, you need to ensure that you have the Spring Snapshot repository defined:
- .pom.xml
- [source,xml]
- ----
- <repositories>
- <!-- ... possibly other repository elements ... -->
- <repository>
- <id>spring-snapshot</id>
- <name>Spring Snapshot Repository</name>
- <url>https://repo.spring.io/snapshot</url>
- </repository>
- </repositories>
- ----
- If you use a milestone or release candidate version, you need to ensure that you have the Spring Milestone repository defined, as the following example shows:
- .pom.xml
- [source,xml]
- ----
- <repositories>
- <!-- ... possibly other repository elements ... -->
- <repository>
- <id>spring-milestone</id>
- <name>Spring Milestone Repository</name>
- <url>https://repo.spring.io/milestone</url>
- </repository>
- </repositories>
- ----
- [[getting-gradle]]
- == Gradle
- As most open source projects, Spring Security deploys its dependencies as Maven artifacts, which allows for first-class Gradle support.
- The following topics describe how to consume Spring Security when using Gradle.
- [[getting-gradle-boot]]
- === Spring Boot with Gradle
- Spring Boot provides a `spring-boot-starter-security` starter that aggregates Spring Security related dependencies.
- The simplest and preferred method to use the starter is to use https://docs.spring.io/initializr/docs/current/reference/html/[Spring Initializr] by using an IDE integration in (https://joshlong.com/jl/blogPost/tech_tip_geting_started_with_spring_boot.html[Eclipse] or https://www.jetbrains.com/help/idea/spring-boot.html#d1489567e2[IntelliJ], https://github.com/AlexFalappa/nb-springboot/wiki/Quick-Tour[NetBeans]) or through https://start.spring.io.
- Alternatively, you can manually add the starter:
- .build.gradle
- [source,groovy]
- [subs="verbatim,attributes"]
- ----
- dependencies {
- implementation "org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-security"
- }
- ----
- Since Spring Boot provides a Maven BOM to manage dependency versions, you need not specify a version.
- If you wish to override the Spring Security version, you can do so by providing a Gradle property:
- .build.gradle
- [source,groovy]
- [subs="verbatim,attributes"]
- ----
- ext['spring-security.version']='{spring-security-version}'
- ----
- Since Spring Security makes breaking changes only in major releases, you can safely use a newer version of Spring Security with Spring Boot.
- However, at times, you may need to update the version of Spring Framework as well.
- You can do so by adding a Gradle property:
- .build.gradle
- [source,groovy]
- [subs="verbatim,attributes"]
- ----
- ext['spring.version']='{spring-core-version}'
- ----
- If you use additional features (such as LDAP, OAuth 2, and others), you need to also include the appropriate xref:modules.adoc#modules[Project Modules and Dependencies].
- === Gradle Without Spring Boot
- When you use Spring Security without Spring Boot, the preferred way is to use Spring Security's BOM to ensure a consistent version of Spring Security is used throughout the entire project.
- You can do so by using the https://github.com/spring-gradle-plugins/dependency-management-plugin[Dependency Management Plugin]:
- .build.gradle
- [source,groovy]
- [subs="verbatim,attributes"]
- ----
- plugins {
- id "io.spring.dependency-management" version "1.0.6.RELEASE"
- }
- dependencyManagement {
- imports {
- mavenBom 'org.springframework.security:spring-security-bom:{spring-security-version}'
- }
- }
- ----
- A minimal Spring Security Maven set of dependencies typically looks like the following:
- .build.gradle
- [source,groovy]
- [subs="verbatim,attributes"]
- ----
- dependencies {
- implementation "org.springframework.security:spring-security-web"
- implementation "org.springframework.security:spring-security-config"
- }
- ----
- If you use additional features (such as LDAP, OAuth 2, and others), you need to also include the appropriate xref:modules.adoc#modules[Project Modules and Dependencies].
- Spring Security builds against Spring Framework {spring-core-version} but should generally work with any newer version of Spring Framework 5.x.
- Many users are likely to run afoul of the fact that Spring Security's transitive dependencies resolve Spring Framework {spring-core-version}, which can cause strange classpath problems.
- The easiest way to resolve this is to use the `spring-framework-bom` within your `dependencyManagement` section of your `build.gradle`.
- You can do so by using the https://github.com/spring-gradle-plugins/dependency-management-plugin[Dependency Management Plugin]:
- .build.gradle
- [source,groovy]
- [subs="verbatim,attributes"]
- ----
- plugins {
- id "io.spring.dependency-management" version "1.0.6.RELEASE"
- }
- dependencyManagement {
- imports {
- mavenBom 'org.springframework:spring-framework-bom:{spring-core-version}'
- }
- }
- ----
- The preceding example ensures that all the transitive dependencies of Spring Security use the Spring {spring-core-version} modules.
- [[gradle-repositories]]
- === Gradle Repositories
- All GA releases (that is, versions ending in .RELEASE) are deployed to Maven Central, so using the `mavenCentral()` repository is sufficient for GA releases. The following example shows how to do so:
- .build.gradle
- [source,groovy]
- ----
- repositories {
- mavenCentral()
- }
- ----
- If you use a SNAPSHOT version, you need to ensure that you have the Spring Snapshot repository defined:
- .build.gradle
- [source,groovy]
- ----
- repositories {
- maven { url 'https://repo.spring.io/snapshot' }
- }
- ----
- If you use a milestone or release candidate version, you need to ensure that you have the Spring Milestone repository defined:
- .build.gradle
- [source,groovy]
- ----
- repositories {
- maven { url 'https://repo.spring.io/milestone' }
- }
- ----
|