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							- = Authentication Migrations
 
- The following steps relate to changes around how authentication is performed.
 
- [[servlet-opt-in-sha256-rememberme]]
 
- == Use SHA-256 in Remember Me
 
- The `TokenBasedRememberMeServices` implementation now supports SHA-256 for the Remember Me token and this is the default in Spring Security 6.
 
- This change makes the implementation more secure by default since MD5 is already proven to be a weak hashing algorithm and vulnerable against collision attacks and modular differential attacks.
 
- The new generated tokens now have the information of which algorithm was used to generate the token and that information is used in order to match it.
 
- If the algorithm name is not present, then the `matchingAlgorithm` property is used to check the token.
 
- This allows for a smooth transition from MD5 to SHA-256.
 
- To opt into the new Spring Security 6 default to encode the tokens while still being able to decode tokens encoded with MD5, you can set the `encodingAlgorithm` property to SHA-256 and the `matchingAlgorithm` property to MD5.
 
- See the xref:servlet/authentication/rememberme.adoc#_tokenbasedremembermeservices[reference documentation] and the {security-api-url}org/springframework/security/web/authentication/rememberme/TokenBasedRememberMeServices.html[API docs] for more information.
 
- [[servlet-opt-in-sha256-sha256-encoding]]
 
- .Use Spring Security 6 defaults for encoding, SHA-256 for encoding and MD5 for matching
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Configuration
 
- @EnableWebSecurity
 
- public class SecurityConfig {
 
-     @Bean
 
-     SecurityFilterChain securityFilterChain(HttpSecurity http, RememberMeServices rememberMeServices) throws Exception {
 
-         http
 
-                 // ...
 
-                 .rememberMe((remember) -> remember
 
-                     .rememberMeServices(rememberMeServices)
 
-                 );
 
-         return http.build();
 
-     }
 
-     @Bean
 
-     RememberMeServices rememberMeServices(UserDetailsService userDetailsService) {
 
-         RememberMeTokenAlgorithm encodingAlgorithm = RememberMeTokenAlgorithm.SHA256;
 
-         TokenBasedRememberMeServices rememberMe = new TokenBasedRememberMeServices(myKey, userDetailsService, encodingAlgorithm);
 
-         rememberMe.setMatchingAlgorithm(RememberMeTokenAlgorithm.MD5);
 
-         return rememberMe;
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .XML
 
- [source,xml,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- <http>
 
-   <remember-me services-ref="rememberMeServices"/>
 
- </http>
 
- <bean id="rememberMeServices" class=
 
- "org.springframework.security.web.authentication.rememberme.TokenBasedRememberMeServices">
 
-     <property name="userDetailsService" ref="myUserDetailsService"/>
 
-     <property name="key" value="springRocks"/>
 
-     <property name="matchingAlgorithm" value="MD5"/>
 
-     <property name="encodingAlgorithm" value="SHA256"/>
 
- </bean>
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- At some point, you will want to fully migrate to Spring Security 6 defaults. But how do you know when it is safe to do so?
 
- Let's suppose that you deployed your application using SHA-256 as the encoding algorithm (as you have done <<servlet-opt-in-sha256-sha256-encoding,here>>) on November 1st, if you have the value for the `tokenValiditySeconds` property set to N days (14 is the default), you can migrate to SHA-256 N days after November 1st (which is November 15th in this example).
 
- By that time, all the tokens generated with MD5 will have expired.
 
- .Use Spring Security 6 defaults, SHA-256 for both encoding and matching
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Configuration
 
- @EnableWebSecurity
 
- public class SecurityConfig {
 
-     @Bean
 
-     SecurityFilterChain securityFilterChain(HttpSecurity http, RememberMeServices rememberMeServices) throws Exception {
 
-         http
 
-                 // ...
 
-                 .rememberMe((remember) -> remember
 
-                     .rememberMeServices(rememberMeServices)
 
-                 );
 
-         return http.build();
 
-     }
 
-     @Bean
 
-     RememberMeServices rememberMeServices(UserDetailsService userDetailsService) {
 
-         RememberMeTokenAlgorithm encodingAlgorithm = RememberMeTokenAlgorithm.SHA256;
 
-         TokenBasedRememberMeServices rememberMe = new TokenBasedRememberMeServices(myKey, userDetailsService, encodingAlgorithm);
 
-         rememberMe.setMatchingAlgorithm(RememberMeTokenAlgorithm.SHA256);
 
-         return rememberMe;
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .XML
 
- [source,xml,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- <http>
 
-   <remember-me services-ref="rememberMeServices"/>
 
- </http>
 
- <bean id="rememberMeServices" class=
 
- "org.springframework.security.web.authentication.rememberme.TokenBasedRememberMeServices">
 
-     <property name="userDetailsService" ref="myUserDetailsService"/>
 
-     <property name="key" value="springRocks"/>
 
-     <property name="matchingAlgorithm" value="SHA256"/>
 
-     <property name="encodingAlgorithm" value="SHA256"/>
 
- </bean>
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- If you are having problems with the Spring Security 6 defaults, you can explicitly opt into 5.8 defaults using the following configuration:
 
- .Use MD5 for both encoding and matching algorithms
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Configuration
 
- @EnableWebSecurity
 
- public class SecurityConfig {
 
-     @Bean
 
-     SecurityFilterChain securityFilterChain(HttpSecurity http, RememberMeServices rememberMeServices) throws Exception {
 
-         http
 
-                 // ...
 
-                 .rememberMe((remember) -> remember
 
-                     .rememberMeServices(rememberMeServices)
 
-                 );
 
-         return http.build();
 
-     }
 
-     @Bean
 
-     RememberMeServices rememberMeServices(UserDetailsService userDetailsService) {
 
-         RememberMeTokenAlgorithm encodingAlgorithm = RememberMeTokenAlgorithm.MD5;
 
-         TokenBasedRememberMeServices rememberMe = new TokenBasedRememberMeServices(myKey, userDetailsService, encodingAlgorithm);
 
-         rememberMe.setMatchingAlgorithm(RememberMeTokenAlgorithm.MD5);
 
-         return rememberMe;
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .XML
 
- [source,xml,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- <http>
 
-   <remember-me services-ref="rememberMeServices"/>
 
- </http>
 
- <bean id="rememberMeServices" class=
 
- "org.springframework.security.web.authentication.rememberme.TokenBasedRememberMeServices">
 
-     <property name="userDetailsService" ref="myUserDetailsService"/>
 
-     <property name="key" value="springRocks"/>
 
-     <property name="matchingAlgorithm" value="MD5"/>
 
-     <property name="encodingAlgorithm" value="MD5"/>
 
- </bean>
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- == Propagate ``AuthenticationServiceException``s
 
- {security-api-url}org/springframework/security/web/authentication/AuthenticationFilter.html[`AuthenticationFilter`] propagates {security-api-url}org/springframework/security/authentication/AuthenticationServiceException.html[``AuthenticationServiceException``]s to the {security-api-url}org/springframework/security/authentication/AuthenticationEntryPoint.html[`AuthenticationEntryPoint`].
 
- Because ``AuthenticationServiceException``s represent a server-side error instead of a client-side error, in 6.0, this changes to propagate them to the container.
 
- === Configure `AuthenticationFailureHandler` to rethrow ``AuthenticationServiceException``s
 
- To prepare for the 6.0 default, wire `AuthenticationFilter` instances with a `AuthenticationFailureHandler` that rethrows ``AuthenticationServiceException``s, like so:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- AuthenticationFilter authenticationFilter = new AuthenticationFilter(...);
 
- AuthenticationEntryPointFailureHandler handler = new AuthenticationEntryPointFailureHandler(...);
 
- handler.setRethrowAuthenticationServiceException(true);
 
- authenticationFilter.setAuthenticationFailureHandler(handler);
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- val authenticationFilter: AuthenticationFilter = new AuthenticationFilter(...)
 
- val handler: AuthenticationEntryPointFailureHandler = new AuthenticationEntryPointFailureHandler(...)
 
- handler.setRethrowAuthenticationServiceException(true)
 
- authenticationFilter.setAuthenticationFailureHandler(handler)
 
- ----
 
- .Xml
 
- [source,xml,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- <bean id="authenticationFilter" class="org.springframework.security.web.authentication.AuthenticationFilter">
 
-     <!-- ... -->
 
-     <property ref="authenticationFailureHandler"/>
 
- </bean>
 
- <bean id="authenticationFailureHandler" class="org.springframework.security.web.authentication.AuthenticationEntryPointFailureHandler">
 
-     <property name="rethrowAuthenticationServiceException" value="true"/>
 
- </bean>
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- [[servlet-authenticationfailurehandler-opt-out]]
 
- === Opt-out Steps
 
- If rethrowing ``AuthenticationServiceException``s gives you trouble, you can set the value to false instead of taking the 6.0 default, like so:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- AuthenticationFilter authenticationFilter = new AuthenticationFilter(...);
 
- AuthenticationEntryPointFailureHandler handler = new AuthenticationEntryPointFailureHandler(...);
 
- handler.setRethrowAuthenticationServiceException(false);
 
- authenticationFilter.setAuthenticationFailureHandler(handler);
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- val authenticationFilter: AuthenticationFilter = new AuthenticationFilter(...)
 
- val handler: AuthenticationEntryPointFailureHandler = new AuthenticationEntryPointFailureHandler(...)
 
- handler.setRethrowAuthenticationServiceException(false)
 
- authenticationFilter.setAuthenticationFailureHandler(handler)
 
- ----
 
- .Xml
 
- [source,xml,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- <bean id="authenticationFilter" class="org.springframework.security.web.authentication.AuthenticationFilter">
 
-     <!-- ... -->
 
-     <property ref="authenticationFailureHandler"/>
 
- </bean>
 
- <bean id="authenticationFailureHandler" class="org.springframework.security.web.authentication.AuthenticationEntryPointFailureHandler">
 
-     <property name="rethrowAuthenticationServiceException" value="false"/>
 
- </bean>
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
 
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