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							- [[webflux-oauth2-resource-server]]
 
- = OAuth 2.0 Resource Server
 
- Spring Security supports protecting endpoints using two forms of OAuth 2.0 https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6750.html[Bearer Tokens]:
 
- * https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7519[JWT]
 
- * Opaque Tokens
 
- This is handy in circumstances where an application has delegated its authority management to an https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6749[authorization server] (for example, Okta or Ping Identity).
 
- This authorization server can be consulted by resource servers to authorize requests.
 
- [NOTE]
 
- ====
 
- A complete working example for {gh-samples-url}/reactive/webflux/java/oauth2/resource-server[*JWTs*]  is available in the {gh-samples-url}[Spring Security repository].
 
- ====
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-minimaldependencies]]
 
- == Minimal Dependencies for JWT
 
- Most Resource Server support is collected into `spring-security-oauth2-resource-server`.
 
- However, the support for decoding and verifying JWTs is in `spring-security-oauth2-jose`, meaning that both are necessary in order to have a working resource server that supports JWT-encoded Bearer Tokens.
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-minimalconfiguration]]
 
- == Minimal Configuration for JWTs
 
- When using https://spring.io/projects/spring-boot[Spring Boot], configuring an application as a resource server consists of two basic steps.
 
- First, include the needed dependencies and second, indicate the location of the authorization server.
 
- === Specifying the Authorization Server
 
- In a Spring Boot application, to specify which authorization server to use, simply do:
 
- [source,yml]
 
- ----
 
- spring:
 
-   security:
 
-     oauth2:
 
-       resourceserver:
 
-         jwt:
 
-           issuer-uri: https://idp.example.com/issuer
 
- ----
 
- Where `https://idp.example.com/issuer` is the value contained in the `iss` claim for JWT tokens that the authorization server will issue.
 
- Resource Server will use this property to further self-configure, discover the authorization server's public keys, and subsequently validate incoming JWTs.
 
- [NOTE]
 
- To use the `issuer-uri` property, it must also be true that one of `https://idp.example.com/issuer/.well-known/openid-configuration`, `https://idp.example.com/.well-known/openid-configuration/issuer`, or `https://idp.example.com/.well-known/oauth-authorization-server/issuer` is a supported endpoint for the authorization server.
 
- This endpoint is referred to as a https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-discovery-1_0.html#ProviderConfig[Provider Configuration] endpoint or a https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8414#section-3[Authorization Server Metadata] endpoint.
 
- And that's it!
 
- === Startup Expectations
 
- When this property and these dependencies are used, Resource Server will automatically configure itself to validate JWT-encoded Bearer Tokens.
 
- It achieves this through a deterministic startup process:
 
- 1. Hit the Provider Configuration or Authorization Server Metadata endpoint, processing the response for the `jwks_url` property
 
- 2. Configure the validation strategy to query `jwks_url` for valid public keys
 
- 3. Configure the validation strategy to validate each JWTs `iss` claim against `https://idp.example.com`.
 
- A consequence of this process is that the authorization server must be up and receiving requests in order for Resource Server to successfully start up.
 
- [NOTE]
 
- If the authorization server is down when Resource Server queries it (given appropriate timeouts), then startup will fail.
 
- === Runtime Expectations
 
- Once the application is started up, Resource Server will attempt to process any request containing an `Authorization: Bearer` header:
 
- [source,html]
 
- ----
 
- GET / HTTP/1.1
 
- Authorization: Bearer some-token-value # Resource Server will process this
 
- ----
 
- So long as this scheme is indicated, Resource Server will attempt to process the request according to the Bearer Token specification.
 
- Given a well-formed JWT, Resource Server will:
 
- 1. Validate its signature against a public key obtained from the `jwks_url` endpoint during startup and matched against the JWTs header
 
- 2. Validate the JWTs `exp` and `nbf` timestamps and the JWTs `iss` claim, and
 
- 3. Map each scope to an authority with the prefix `SCOPE_`.
 
- [NOTE]
 
- As the authorization server makes available new keys, Spring Security will automatically rotate the keys used to validate the JWT tokens.
 
- The resulting `Authentication#getPrincipal`, by default, is a Spring Security `Jwt` object, and `Authentication#getName` maps to the JWT's `sub` property, if one is present.
 
- From here, consider jumping to:
 
- <<webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-jwkseturi,How to Configure without Tying Resource Server startup to an authorization server's availability>>
 
- <<webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-sansboot,How to Configure without Spring Boot>>
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-jwkseturi]]
 
- === Specifying the Authorization Server JWK Set Uri Directly
 
- If the authorization server doesn't support any configuration endpoints, or if Resource Server must be able to start up independently from the authorization server, then the `jwk-set-uri` can be supplied as well:
 
- [source,yaml]
 
- ----
 
- spring:
 
-   security:
 
-     oauth2:
 
-       resourceserver:
 
-         jwt:
 
-           issuer-uri: https://idp.example.com
 
-           jwk-set-uri: https://idp.example.com/.well-known/jwks.json
 
- ----
 
- [NOTE]
 
- The JWK Set uri is not standardized, but can typically be found in the authorization server's documentation
 
- Consequently, Resource Server will not ping the authorization server at startup.
 
- We still specify the `issuer-uri` so that Resource Server still validates the `iss` claim on incoming JWTs.
 
- [NOTE]
 
- This property can also be supplied directly on the <<webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-jwkseturi-dsl,DSL>>.
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-sansboot]]
 
- === Overriding or Replacing Boot Auto Configuration
 
- There are two ``@Bean``s that Spring Boot generates on Resource Server's behalf.
 
- The first is a `SecurityWebFilterChain` that configures the app as a resource server. When including `spring-security-oauth2-jose`, this `SecurityWebFilterChain` looks like:
 
- .Resource Server SecurityWebFilterChain
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- SecurityWebFilterChain springSecurityFilterChain(ServerHttpSecurity http) {
 
- 	http
 
- 		.authorizeExchange(exchanges -> exchanges
 
- 			.anyExchange().authenticated()
 
- 		)
 
- 		.oauth2ResourceServer(OAuth2ResourceServerSpec::jwt)
 
- 	return http.build();
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun springSecurityFilterChain(http: ServerHttpSecurity): SecurityWebFilterChain {
 
-     return http {
 
-         authorizeExchange {
 
-             authorize(anyExchange, authenticated)
 
-         }
 
-         oauth2ResourceServer {
 
-             jwt { }
 
-         }
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- If the application doesn't expose a `SecurityWebFilterChain` bean, then Spring Boot will expose the above default one.
 
- Replacing this is as simple as exposing the bean within the application:
 
- .Replacing SecurityWebFilterChain
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- SecurityWebFilterChain springSecurityFilterChain(ServerHttpSecurity http) {
 
- 	http
 
- 		.authorizeExchange(exchanges -> exchanges
 
- 			.pathMatchers("/message/**").hasAuthority("SCOPE_message:read")
 
- 			.anyExchange().authenticated()
 
- 		)
 
- 		.oauth2ResourceServer(oauth2 -> oauth2
 
- 			.jwt(withDefaults())
 
- 		);
 
- 	return http.build();
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun springSecurityFilterChain(http: ServerHttpSecurity): SecurityWebFilterChain {
 
-     return http {
 
-         authorizeExchange {
 
-             authorize("/message/**", hasAuthority("SCOPE_message:read"))
 
-             authorize(anyExchange, authenticated)
 
-         }
 
-         oauth2ResourceServer {
 
-             jwt { }
 
-         }
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- The above requires the scope of `message:read` for any URL that starts with `/messages/`.
 
- Methods on the `oauth2ResourceServer` DSL will also override or replace auto configuration.
 
- For example, the second `@Bean` Spring Boot creates is a `ReactiveJwtDecoder`, which decodes `String` tokens into validated instances of `Jwt`:
 
- .ReactiveJwtDecoder
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- public ReactiveJwtDecoder jwtDecoder() {
 
-     return ReactiveJwtDecoders.fromIssuerLocation(issuerUri);
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun jwtDecoder(): ReactiveJwtDecoder {
 
-     return ReactiveJwtDecoders.fromIssuerLocation(issuerUri)
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- [NOTE]
 
- Calling `{security-api-url}org/springframework/security/oauth2/jwt/ReactiveJwtDecoders.html#fromIssuerLocation-java.lang.String-[ReactiveJwtDecoders#fromIssuerLocation]` is what invokes the Provider Configuration or Authorization Server Metadata endpoint in order to derive the JWK Set Uri.
 
- If the application doesn't expose a `ReactiveJwtDecoder` bean, then Spring Boot will expose the above default one.
 
- And its configuration can be overridden using `jwkSetUri()` or replaced using `decoder()`.
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-jwkseturi-dsl]]
 
- ==== Using `jwkSetUri()`
 
- An authorization server's JWK Set Uri can be configured <<webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-jwkseturi,as a configuration property>> or it can be supplied in the DSL:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- SecurityWebFilterChain springSecurityFilterChain(ServerHttpSecurity http) {
 
- 	http
 
- 		.authorizeExchange(exchanges -> exchanges
 
- 			.anyExchange().authenticated()
 
- 		)
 
- 		.oauth2ResourceServer(oauth2 -> oauth2
 
- 			.jwt(jwt -> jwt
 
- 				.jwkSetUri("https://idp.example.com/.well-known/jwks.json")
 
- 			)
 
- 		);
 
- 	return http.build();
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun springSecurityFilterChain(http: ServerHttpSecurity): SecurityWebFilterChain {
 
-     return http {
 
-         authorizeExchange {
 
-             authorize(anyExchange, authenticated)
 
-         }
 
-         oauth2ResourceServer {
 
-             jwt {
 
-                 jwkSetUri = "https://idp.example.com/.well-known/jwks.json"
 
-             }
 
-         }
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- Using `jwkSetUri()` takes precedence over any configuration property.
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-decoder-dsl]]
 
- ==== Using `decoder()`
 
- More powerful than `jwkSetUri()` is `decoder()`, which will completely replace any Boot auto configuration of `JwtDecoder`:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- SecurityWebFilterChain springSecurityFilterChain(ServerHttpSecurity http) {
 
- 	http
 
- 		.authorizeExchange(exchanges -> exchanges
 
- 			.anyExchange().authenticated()
 
- 		)
 
- 		.oauth2ResourceServer(oauth2 -> oauth2
 
- 			.jwt(jwt -> jwt
 
- 				.decoder(myCustomDecoder())
 
- 			)
 
- 		);
 
-     return http.build();
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun springSecurityFilterChain(http: ServerHttpSecurity): SecurityWebFilterChain {
 
-     return http {
 
-         authorizeExchange {
 
-             authorize(anyExchange, authenticated)
 
-         }
 
-         oauth2ResourceServer {
 
-             jwt {
 
-                 jwtDecoder = myCustomDecoder()
 
-             }
 
-         }
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- This is handy when deeper configuration, like <<webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-validation,validation>>, is necessary.
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-decoder-bean]]
 
- ==== Exposing a `ReactiveJwtDecoder` `@Bean`
 
- Or, exposing a `ReactiveJwtDecoder` `@Bean` has the same effect as `decoder()`:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- public ReactiveJwtDecoder jwtDecoder() {
 
-     return NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder.withJwkSetUri(jwkSetUri).build();
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun jwtDecoder(): ReactiveJwtDecoder {
 
-     return ReactiveJwtDecoders.fromIssuerLocation(issuerUri)
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-decoder-algorithm]]
 
- == Configuring Trusted Algorithms
 
- By default, `NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder`, and hence Resource Server, will only trust and verify tokens using `RS256`.
 
- You can customize this via <<webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-boot-algorithm,Spring Boot>> or <<webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-decoder-builder,the NimbusJwtDecoder builder>>.
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-boot-algorithm]]
 
- === Via Spring Boot
 
- The simplest way to set the algorithm is as a property:
 
- [source,yaml]
 
- ----
 
- spring:
 
-   security:
 
-     oauth2:
 
-       resourceserver:
 
-         jwt:
 
-           jws-algorithm: RS512
 
-           jwk-set-uri: https://idp.example.org/.well-known/jwks.json
 
- ----
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-decoder-builder]]
 
- === Using a Builder
 
- For greater power, though, we can use a builder that ships with `NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder`:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- ReactiveJwtDecoder jwtDecoder() {
 
-     return NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder.withJwkSetUri(this.jwkSetUri)
 
-             .jwsAlgorithm(RS512).build();
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun jwtDecoder(): ReactiveJwtDecoder {
 
-     return NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder.withJwkSetUri(this.jwkSetUri)
 
-             .jwsAlgorithm(RS512).build()
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- Calling `jwsAlgorithm` more than once will configure `NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder` to trust more than one algorithm, like so:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- ReactiveJwtDecoder jwtDecoder() {
 
-     return NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder.withJwkSetUri(this.jwkSetUri)
 
-             .jwsAlgorithm(RS512).jwsAlgorithm(ES512).build();
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun jwtDecoder(): ReactiveJwtDecoder {
 
-     return NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder.withJwkSetUri(this.jwkSetUri)
 
-             .jwsAlgorithm(RS512).jwsAlgorithm(ES512).build()
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- Or, you can call `jwsAlgorithms`:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- ReactiveJwtDecoder jwtDecoder() {
 
-     return NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder.withJwkSetUri(this.jwkSetUri)
 
-             .jwsAlgorithms(algorithms -> {
 
-                     algorithms.add(RS512);
 
-                     algorithms.add(ES512);
 
-             }).build();
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun jwtDecoder(): ReactiveJwtDecoder {
 
-     return NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder.withJwkSetUri(this.jwkSetUri)
 
-             .jwsAlgorithms {
 
-                 it.add(RS512)
 
-                 it.add(ES512)
 
-             }
 
-             .build()
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-decoder-public-key]]
 
- === Trusting a Single Asymmetric Key
 
- Simpler than backing a Resource Server with a JWK Set endpoint is to hard-code an RSA public key.
 
- The public key can be provided via <<webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-decoder-public-key-boot,Spring Boot>> or by <<webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-decoder-public-key-builder,Using a Builder>>.
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-decoder-public-key-boot]]
 
- ==== Via Spring Boot
 
- Specifying a key via Spring Boot is quite simple.
 
- The key's location can be specified like so:
 
- [source,yaml]
 
- ----
 
- spring:
 
-   security:
 
-     oauth2:
 
-       resourceserver:
 
-         jwt:
 
-           public-key-location: classpath:my-key.pub
 
- ----
 
- Or, to allow for a more sophisticated lookup, you can post-process the `RsaKeyConversionServicePostProcessor`:
 
- .BeanFactoryPostProcessor
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- BeanFactoryPostProcessor conversionServiceCustomizer() {
 
-     return beanFactory ->
 
-         beanFactory.getBean(RsaKeyConversionServicePostProcessor.class)
 
-                 .setResourceLoader(new CustomResourceLoader());
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun conversionServiceCustomizer(): BeanFactoryPostProcessor {
 
-     return BeanFactoryPostProcessor { beanFactory: ConfigurableListableBeanFactory ->
 
-         beanFactory.getBean<RsaKeyConversionServicePostProcessor>()
 
-                 .setResourceLoader(CustomResourceLoader())
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- Specify your key's location:
 
- ```yaml
 
- key.location: hfds://my-key.pub
 
- ```
 
- And then autowire the value:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Value("${key.location}")
 
- RSAPublicKey key;
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Value("\${key.location}")
 
- val key: RSAPublicKey? = null
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-decoder-public-key-builder]]
 
- ==== Using a Builder
 
- To wire an `RSAPublicKey` directly, you can simply use the appropriate `NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder` builder, like so:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- public ReactiveJwtDecoder jwtDecoder() {
 
-     return NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder.withPublicKey(this.key).build();
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun jwtDecoder(): ReactiveJwtDecoder {
 
-     return NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder.withPublicKey(key).build()
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-decoder-secret-key]]
 
- === Trusting a Single Symmetric Key
 
- Using a single symmetric key is also simple.
 
- You can simply load in your `SecretKey` and use the appropriate `NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder` builder, like so:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- public ReactiveJwtDecoder jwtDecoder() {
 
-     return NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder.withSecretKey(this.key).build();
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun jwtDecoder(): ReactiveJwtDecoder {
 
-     return NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder.withSecretKey(this.key).build()
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-authorization]]
 
- === Configuring Authorization
 
- A JWT that is issued from an OAuth 2.0 Authorization Server will typically either have a `scope` or `scp` attribute, indicating the scopes (or authorities) it's been granted, for example:
 
- `{ ..., "scope" : "messages contacts"}`
 
- When this is the case, Resource Server will attempt to coerce these scopes into a list of granted authorities, prefixing each scope with the string "SCOPE_".
 
- This means that to protect an endpoint or method with a scope derived from a JWT, the corresponding expressions should include this prefix:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- SecurityWebFilterChain springSecurityFilterChain(ServerHttpSecurity http) {
 
- 	http
 
- 		.authorizeExchange(exchanges -> exchanges
 
- 			.mvcMatchers("/contacts/**").hasAuthority("SCOPE_contacts")
 
- 			.mvcMatchers("/messages/**").hasAuthority("SCOPE_messages")
 
- 			.anyExchange().authenticated()
 
- 		)
 
- 		.oauth2ResourceServer(OAuth2ResourceServerSpec::jwt);
 
-     return http.build();
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun springSecurityFilterChain(http: ServerHttpSecurity): SecurityWebFilterChain {
 
-     return http {
 
-         authorizeExchange {
 
-             authorize("/contacts/**", hasAuthority("SCOPE_contacts"))
 
-             authorize("/messages/**", hasAuthority("SCOPE_messages"))
 
-             authorize(anyExchange, authenticated)
 
-         }
 
-         oauth2ResourceServer {
 
-             jwt { }
 
-         }
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- Or similarly with method security:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @PreAuthorize("hasAuthority('SCOPE_messages')")
 
- public Flux<Message> getMessages(...) {}
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @PreAuthorize("hasAuthority('SCOPE_messages')")
 
- fun getMessages(): Flux<Message> { }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-authorization-extraction]]
 
- ==== Extracting Authorities Manually
 
- However, there are a number of circumstances where this default is insufficient.
 
- For example, some authorization servers don't use the `scope` attribute, but instead have their own custom attribute.
 
- Or, at other times, the resource server may need to adapt the attribute or a composition of attributes into internalized authorities.
 
- To this end, the DSL exposes `jwtAuthenticationConverter()`:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- SecurityWebFilterChain springSecurityFilterChain(ServerHttpSecurity http) {
 
- 	http
 
- 		.authorizeExchange(exchanges -> exchanges
 
- 			.anyExchange().authenticated()
 
- 		)
 
- 		.oauth2ResourceServer(oauth2 -> oauth2
 
- 			.jwt(jwt -> jwt
 
- 				.jwtAuthenticationConverter(grantedAuthoritiesExtractor())
 
- 			)
 
- 		);
 
- 	return http.build();
 
- }
 
- Converter<Jwt, Mono<AbstractAuthenticationToken>> grantedAuthoritiesExtractor() {
 
-     JwtAuthenticationConverter jwtAuthenticationConverter =
 
-             new JwtAuthenticationConverter();
 
-     jwtAuthenticationConverter.setJwtGrantedAuthoritiesConverter
 
-             (new GrantedAuthoritiesExtractor());
 
-     return new ReactiveJwtAuthenticationConverterAdapter(jwtAuthenticationConverter);
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun springSecurityFilterChain(http: ServerHttpSecurity): SecurityWebFilterChain {
 
-     return http {
 
-         authorizeExchange {
 
-             authorize(anyExchange, authenticated)
 
-         }
 
-         oauth2ResourceServer {
 
-             jwt {
 
-                 jwtAuthenticationConverter = grantedAuthoritiesExtractor()
 
-             }
 
-         }
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- fun grantedAuthoritiesExtractor(): Converter<Jwt, Mono<AbstractAuthenticationToken>> {
 
-     val jwtAuthenticationConverter = JwtAuthenticationConverter()
 
-     jwtAuthenticationConverter.setJwtGrantedAuthoritiesConverter(GrantedAuthoritiesExtractor())
 
-     return ReactiveJwtAuthenticationConverterAdapter(jwtAuthenticationConverter)
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- which is responsible for converting a `Jwt` into an `Authentication`.
 
- As part of its configuration, we can supply a subsidiary converter to go from `Jwt` to a `Collection` of granted authorities.
 
- That final converter might be something like `GrantedAuthoritiesExtractor` below:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- static class GrantedAuthoritiesExtractor
 
-         implements Converter<Jwt, Collection<GrantedAuthority>> {
 
-     public Collection<GrantedAuthority> convert(Jwt jwt) {
 
-         Collection<?> authorities = (Collection<?>)
 
-                 jwt.getClaims().getOrDefault("mycustomclaim", Collections.emptyList());
 
-         return authorities.stream()
 
-                 .map(Object::toString)
 
-                 .map(SimpleGrantedAuthority::new)
 
-                 .collect(Collectors.toList());
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- internal class GrantedAuthoritiesExtractor : Converter<Jwt, Collection<GrantedAuthority>> {
 
-     override fun convert(jwt: Jwt): Collection<GrantedAuthority> {
 
-         val authorities: List<Any> = jwt.claims
 
-                 .getOrDefault("mycustomclaim", emptyList<Any>()) as List<Any>
 
-         return authorities
 
-                 .map { it.toString() }
 
-                 .map { SimpleGrantedAuthority(it) }
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- For more flexibility, the DSL supports entirely replacing the converter with any class that implements `Converter<Jwt, Mono<AbstractAuthenticationToken>>`:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- static class CustomAuthenticationConverter implements Converter<Jwt, Mono<AbstractAuthenticationToken>> {
 
-     public AbstractAuthenticationToken convert(Jwt jwt) {
 
-         return Mono.just(jwt).map(this::doConversion);
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- internal class CustomAuthenticationConverter : Converter<Jwt, Mono<AbstractAuthenticationToken>> {
 
-     override fun convert(jwt: Jwt): Mono<AbstractAuthenticationToken> {
 
-         return Mono.just(jwt).map(this::doConversion)
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-validation]]
 
- === Configuring Validation
 
- Using <<webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-minimalconfiguration,minimal Spring Boot configuration>>, indicating the authorization server's issuer uri, Resource Server will default to verifying the `iss` claim as well as the `exp` and `nbf` timestamp claims.
 
- In circumstances where validation needs to be customized, Resource Server ships with two standard validators and also accepts custom `OAuth2TokenValidator` instances.
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-jwt-validation-clockskew]]
 
- ==== Customizing Timestamp Validation
 
- JWT's typically have a window of validity, with the start of the window indicated in the `nbf` claim and the end indicated in the `exp` claim.
 
- However, every server can experience clock drift, which can cause tokens to appear expired to one server, but not to another.
 
- This can cause some implementation heartburn as the number of collaborating servers increases in a distributed system.
 
- Resource Server uses `JwtTimestampValidator` to verify a token's validity window, and it can be configured with a `clockSkew` to alleviate the above problem:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- ReactiveJwtDecoder jwtDecoder() {
 
-      NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder jwtDecoder = (NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder)
 
-              ReactiveJwtDecoders.fromIssuerLocation(issuerUri);
 
-      OAuth2TokenValidator<Jwt> withClockSkew = new DelegatingOAuth2TokenValidator<>(
 
-             new JwtTimestampValidator(Duration.ofSeconds(60)),
 
-             new IssuerValidator(issuerUri));
 
-      jwtDecoder.setJwtValidator(withClockSkew);
 
-      return jwtDecoder;
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun jwtDecoder(): ReactiveJwtDecoder {
 
-     val jwtDecoder = ReactiveJwtDecoders.fromIssuerLocation(issuerUri) as NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder
 
-     val withClockSkew: OAuth2TokenValidator<Jwt> = DelegatingOAuth2TokenValidator(
 
-             JwtTimestampValidator(Duration.ofSeconds(60)),
 
-             JwtIssuerValidator(issuerUri))
 
-     jwtDecoder.setJwtValidator(withClockSkew)
 
-     return jwtDecoder
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- [NOTE]
 
- By default, Resource Server configures a clock skew of 60 seconds.
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-validation-custom]]
 
- ==== Configuring a Custom Validator
 
- Adding a check for the `aud` claim is simple with the `OAuth2TokenValidator` API:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- public class AudienceValidator implements OAuth2TokenValidator<Jwt> {
 
-     OAuth2Error error = new OAuth2Error("invalid_token", "The required audience is missing", null);
 
-     public OAuth2TokenValidatorResult validate(Jwt jwt) {
 
-         if (jwt.getAudience().contains("messaging")) {
 
-             return OAuth2TokenValidatorResult.success();
 
-         } else {
 
-             return OAuth2TokenValidatorResult.failure(error);
 
-         }
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- class AudienceValidator : OAuth2TokenValidator<Jwt> {
 
-     var error: OAuth2Error = OAuth2Error("invalid_token", "The required audience is missing", null)
 
-     override fun validate(jwt: Jwt): OAuth2TokenValidatorResult {
 
-         return if (jwt.audience.contains("messaging")) {
 
-             OAuth2TokenValidatorResult.success()
 
-         } else {
 
-             OAuth2TokenValidatorResult.failure(error)
 
-         }
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- Then, to add into a resource server, it's a matter of specifying the `ReactiveJwtDecoder` instance:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- ReactiveJwtDecoder jwtDecoder() {
 
-     NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder jwtDecoder = (NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder)
 
-             ReactiveJwtDecoders.fromIssuerLocation(issuerUri);
 
-     OAuth2TokenValidator<Jwt> audienceValidator = new AudienceValidator();
 
-     OAuth2TokenValidator<Jwt> withIssuer = JwtValidators.createDefaultWithIssuer(issuerUri);
 
-     OAuth2TokenValidator<Jwt> withAudience = new DelegatingOAuth2TokenValidator<>(withIssuer, audienceValidator);
 
-     jwtDecoder.setJwtValidator(withAudience);
 
-     return jwtDecoder;
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun jwtDecoder(): ReactiveJwtDecoder {
 
-     val jwtDecoder = ReactiveJwtDecoders.fromIssuerLocation(issuerUri) as NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder
 
-     val audienceValidator: OAuth2TokenValidator<Jwt> = AudienceValidator()
 
-     val withIssuer: OAuth2TokenValidator<Jwt> = JwtValidators.createDefaultWithIssuer(issuerUri)
 
-     val withAudience: OAuth2TokenValidator<Jwt> = DelegatingOAuth2TokenValidator(withIssuer, audienceValidator)
 
-     jwtDecoder.setJwtValidator(withAudience)
 
-     return jwtDecoder
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-minimaldependencies]]
 
- === Minimal Dependencies for Introspection
 
- As described in xref:servlet/oauth2/oauth2-resourceserver.adoc#oauth2resourceserver-jwt-minimaldependencies[Minimal Dependencies for JWT] most of Resource Server support is collected in `spring-security-oauth2-resource-server`.
 
- However unless a custom <<webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-introspector-bean,`ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector`>> is provided, the Resource Server will fallback to ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector.
 
- Meaning that both `spring-security-oauth2-resource-server` and `oauth2-oidc-sdk` are necessary in order to have a working minimal Resource Server that supports opaque Bearer Tokens.
 
- Please refer to `spring-security-oauth2-resource-server` in order to determin the correct version for `oauth2-oidc-sdk`.
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-minimalconfiguration]]
 
- === Minimal Configuration for Introspection
 
- Typically, an opaque token can be verified via an https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7662[OAuth 2.0 Introspection Endpoint], hosted by the authorization server.
 
- This can be handy when revocation is a requirement.
 
- When using https://spring.io/projects/spring-boot[Spring Boot], configuring an application as a resource server that uses introspection consists of two basic steps.
 
- First, include the needed dependencies and second, indicate the introspection endpoint details.
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-introspectionuri]]
 
- ==== Specifying the Authorization Server
 
- To specify where the introspection endpoint is, simply do:
 
- [source,yaml]
 
- ----
 
- security:
 
-   oauth2:
 
-     resourceserver:
 
-       opaque-token:
 
-         introspection-uri: https://idp.example.com/introspect
 
-         client-id: client
 
-         client-secret: secret
 
- ----
 
- Where `https://idp.example.com/introspect` is the introspection endpoint hosted by your authorization server and `client-id` and `client-secret` are the credentials needed to hit that endpoint.
 
- Resource Server will use these properties to further self-configure and subsequently validate incoming JWTs.
 
- [NOTE]
 
- When using introspection, the authorization server's word is the law.
 
- If the authorization server responses that the token is valid, then it is.
 
- And that's it!
 
- ==== Startup Expectations
 
- When this property and these dependencies are used, Resource Server will automatically configure itself to validate Opaque Bearer Tokens.
 
- This startup process is quite a bit simpler than for JWTs since no endpoints need to be discovered and no additional validation rules get added.
 
- ==== Runtime Expectations
 
- Once the application is started up, Resource Server will attempt to process any request containing an `Authorization: Bearer` header:
 
- ```http
 
- GET / HTTP/1.1
 
- Authorization: Bearer some-token-value # Resource Server will process this
 
- ```
 
- So long as this scheme is indicated, Resource Server will attempt to process the request according to the Bearer Token specification.
 
- Given an Opaque Token, Resource Server will
 
- 1. Query the provided introspection endpoint using the provided credentials and the token
 
- 2. Inspect the response for an `{ 'active' : true }` attribute
 
- 3. Map each scope to an authority with the prefix `SCOPE_`
 
- The resulting `Authentication#getPrincipal`, by default, is a Spring Security `{security-api-url}org/springframework/security/oauth2/core/OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal.html[OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal]` object, and `Authentication#getName` maps to the token's `sub` property, if one is present.
 
- From here, you may want to jump to:
 
- * <<webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-attributes,Looking Up Attributes Post-Authentication>>
 
- * <<webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-authorization-extraction,Extracting Authorities Manually>>
 
- * <<webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-jwt-introspector,Using Introspection with JWTs>>
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-attributes]]
 
- === Looking Up Attributes Post-Authentication
 
- Once a token is authenticated, an instance of `BearerTokenAuthentication` is set in the `SecurityContext`.
 
- This means that it's available in `@Controller` methods when using `@EnableWebFlux` in your configuration:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @GetMapping("/foo")
 
- public Mono<String> foo(BearerTokenAuthentication authentication) {
 
-     return Mono.just(authentication.getTokenAttributes().get("sub") + " is the subject");
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @GetMapping("/foo")
 
- fun foo(authentication: BearerTokenAuthentication): Mono<String> {
 
-     return Mono.just(authentication.tokenAttributes["sub"].toString() + " is the subject")
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- Since `BearerTokenAuthentication` holds an `OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal`, that also means that it's available to controller methods, too:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @GetMapping("/foo")
 
- public Mono<String> foo(@AuthenticationPrincipal OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal principal) {
 
-     return Mono.just(principal.getAttribute("sub") + " is the subject");
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @GetMapping("/foo")
 
- fun foo(@AuthenticationPrincipal principal: OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal): Mono<String> {
 
-     return Mono.just(principal.getAttribute<Any>("sub").toString() + " is the subject")
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- ==== Looking Up Attributes Via SpEL
 
- Of course, this also means that attributes can be accessed via SpEL.
 
- For example, if using `@EnableReactiveMethodSecurity` so that you can use `@PreAuthorize` annotations, you can do:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @PreAuthorize("principal?.attributes['sub'] == 'foo'")
 
- public Mono<String> forFoosEyesOnly() {
 
-     return Mono.just("foo");
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @PreAuthorize("principal.attributes['sub'] == 'foo'")
 
- fun forFoosEyesOnly(): Mono<String> {
 
-     return Mono.just("foo")
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-sansboot]]
 
- === Overriding or Replacing Boot Auto Configuration
 
- There are two ``@Bean``s that Spring Boot generates on Resource Server's behalf.
 
- The first is a `SecurityWebFilterChain` that configures the app as a resource server.
 
- When use Opaque Token, this `SecurityWebFilterChain` looks like:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- SecurityWebFilterChain springSecurityFilterChain(ServerHttpSecurity http) {
 
- 	http
 
- 		.authorizeExchange(exchanges -> exchanges
 
- 			.anyExchange().authenticated()
 
- 		)
 
- 		.oauth2ResourceServer(ServerHttpSecurity.OAuth2ResourceServerSpec::opaqueToken)
 
- 	return http.build();
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun springSecurityFilterChain(http: ServerHttpSecurity): SecurityWebFilterChain {
 
-     return http {
 
-         authorizeExchange {
 
-             authorize(anyExchange, authenticated)
 
-         }
 
-         oauth2ResourceServer {
 
-             opaqueToken { }
 
-         }
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- If the application doesn't expose a `SecurityWebFilterChain` bean, then Spring Boot will expose the above default one.
 
- Replacing this is as simple as exposing the bean within the application:
 
- .Replacing SecurityWebFilterChain
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @EnableWebFluxSecurity
 
- public class MyCustomSecurityConfiguration {
 
-     @Bean
 
-     SecurityWebFilterChain springSecurityFilterChain(ServerHttpSecurity http) {
 
-         http
 
-             .authorizeExchange(exchanges -> exchanges
 
-                 .pathMatchers("/messages/**").hasAuthority("SCOPE_message:read")
 
-                 .anyExchange().authenticated()
 
-             )
 
-             .oauth2ResourceServer(oauth2 -> oauth2
 
-                 .opaqueToken(opaqueToken -> opaqueToken
 
-                     .introspector(myIntrospector())
 
-                 )
 
-             );
 
-         return http.build();
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun springSecurityFilterChain(http: ServerHttpSecurity): SecurityWebFilterChain {
 
-     return http {
 
-         authorizeExchange {
 
-             authorize("/messages/**", hasAuthority("SCOPE_message:read"))
 
-             authorize(anyExchange, authenticated)
 
-         }
 
-         oauth2ResourceServer {
 
-             opaqueToken {
 
-                 introspector = myIntrospector()
 
-             }
 
-         }
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- The above requires the scope of `message:read` for any URL that starts with `/messages/`.
 
- Methods on the `oauth2ResourceServer` DSL will also override or replace auto configuration.
 
- For example, the second `@Bean` Spring Boot creates is a `ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector`, which decodes `String` tokens into validated instances of `OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal`:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- public ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector introspector() {
 
-     return new NimbusReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector(introspectionUri, clientId, clientSecret);
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun introspector(): ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector {
 
-     return NimbusReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector(introspectionUri, clientId, clientSecret)
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- If the application doesn't expose a `ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector` bean, then Spring Boot will expose the above default one.
 
- And its configuration can be overridden using `introspectionUri()` and `introspectionClientCredentials()` or replaced using `introspector()`.
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-introspectionuri-dsl]]
 
- ==== Using `introspectionUri()`
 
- An authorization server's Introspection Uri can be configured <<webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-introspectionuri,as a configuration property>> or it can be supplied in the DSL:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @EnableWebFluxSecurity
 
- public class DirectlyConfiguredIntrospectionUri {
 
-     @Bean
 
-     SecurityWebFilterChain springSecurityFilterChain(ServerHttpSecurity http) {
 
-         http
 
-             .authorizeExchange(exchanges -> exchanges
 
-                 .anyExchange().authenticated()
 
-             )
 
-             .oauth2ResourceServer(oauth2 -> oauth2
 
-                 .opaqueToken(opaqueToken -> opaqueToken
 
-                     .introspectionUri("https://idp.example.com/introspect")
 
-                     .introspectionClientCredentials("client", "secret")
 
-                 )
 
-             );
 
-         return http.build();
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun springSecurityFilterChain(http: ServerHttpSecurity): SecurityWebFilterChain {
 
-     return http {
 
-         authorizeExchange {
 
-             authorize(anyExchange, authenticated)
 
-         }
 
-         oauth2ResourceServer {
 
-             opaqueToken {
 
-                 introspectionUri = "https://idp.example.com/introspect"
 
-                 introspectionClientCredentials("client", "secret")
 
-             }
 
-         }
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- Using `introspectionUri()` takes precedence over any configuration property.
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-introspector-dsl]]
 
- ==== Using `introspector()`
 
- More powerful than `introspectionUri()` is `introspector()`, which will completely replace any Boot auto configuration of `ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector`:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @EnableWebFluxSecurity
 
- public class DirectlyConfiguredIntrospector {
 
-     @Bean
 
-     SecurityWebFilterChain springSecurityFilterChain(ServerHttpSecurity http) {
 
-         http
 
-             .authorizeExchange(exchanges -> exchanges
 
-                 .anyExchange().authenticated()
 
-             )
 
-             .oauth2ResourceServer(oauth2 -> oauth2
 
-                 .opaqueToken(opaqueToken -> opaqueToken
 
-                     .introspector(myCustomIntrospector())
 
-                 )
 
-             );
 
-         return http.build();
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun springSecurityFilterChain(http: ServerHttpSecurity): SecurityWebFilterChain {
 
-     return http {
 
-         authorizeExchange {
 
-             authorize(anyExchange, authenticated)
 
-         }
 
-         oauth2ResourceServer {
 
-             opaqueToken {
 
-                 introspector = myCustomIntrospector()
 
-             }
 
-         }
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- This is handy when deeper configuration, like <<webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-authorization-extraction,authority mapping>>or <<webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-jwt-introspector,JWT revocation>> is necessary.
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-introspector-bean]]
 
- ==== Exposing a `ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector` `@Bean`
 
- Or, exposing a `ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector` `@Bean` has the same effect as `introspector()`:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- public ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector introspector() {
 
-     return new NimbusReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector(introspectionUri, clientId, clientSecret);
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun introspector(): ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector {
 
-     return NimbusReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector(introspectionUri, clientId, clientSecret)
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-authorization]]
 
- === Configuring Authorization
 
- An OAuth 2.0 Introspection endpoint will typically return a `scope` attribute, indicating the scopes (or authorities) it's been granted, for example:
 
- `{ ..., "scope" : "messages contacts"}`
 
- When this is the case, Resource Server will attempt to coerce these scopes into a list of granted authorities, prefixing each scope with the string "SCOPE_".
 
- This means that to protect an endpoint or method with a scope derived from an Opaque Token, the corresponding expressions should include this prefix:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @EnableWebFluxSecurity
 
- public class MappedAuthorities {
 
-     @Bean
 
-     SecurityWebFilterChain springSecurityFilterChain(ServerHttpSecurity http) {
 
-         http
 
-             .authorizeExchange(exchange -> exchange
 
-                 .pathMatchers("/contacts/**").hasAuthority("SCOPE_contacts")
 
-                 .pathMatchers("/messages/**").hasAuthority("SCOPE_messages")
 
-                 .anyExchange().authenticated()
 
-             )
 
-             .oauth2ResourceServer(ServerHttpSecurity.OAuth2ResourceServerSpec::opaqueToken);
 
-         return http.build();
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun springSecurityFilterChain(http: ServerHttpSecurity): SecurityWebFilterChain {
 
-     return http {
 
-         authorizeExchange {
 
-             authorize("/contacts/**", hasAuthority("SCOPE_contacts"))
 
-             authorize("/messages/**", hasAuthority("SCOPE_messages"))
 
-             authorize(anyExchange, authenticated)
 
-         }
 
-         oauth2ResourceServer {
 
-             opaqueToken { }
 
-         }
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- Or similarly with method security:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @PreAuthorize("hasAuthority('SCOPE_messages')")
 
- public Flux<Message> getMessages(...) {}
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @PreAuthorize("hasAuthority('SCOPE_messages')")
 
- fun getMessages(): Flux<Message> { }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-authorization-extraction]]
 
- ==== Extracting Authorities Manually
 
- By default, Opaque Token support will extract the scope claim from an introspection response and parse it into individual `GrantedAuthority` instances.
 
- For example, if the introspection response were:
 
- [source,json]
 
- ----
 
- {
 
-     "active" : true,
 
-     "scope" : "message:read message:write"
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- Then Resource Server would generate an `Authentication` with two authorities, one for `message:read` and the other for `message:write`.
 
- This can, of course, be customized using a custom `ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector` that takes a look at the attribute set and converts in its own way:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- public class CustomAuthoritiesOpaqueTokenIntrospector implements ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector {
 
-     private ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector delegate =
 
-             new NimbusReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector("https://idp.example.org/introspect", "client", "secret");
 
-     public Mono<OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal> introspect(String token) {
 
-         return this.delegate.introspect(token)
 
-                 .map(principal -> new DefaultOAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal(
 
-                         principal.getName(), principal.getAttributes(), extractAuthorities(principal)));
 
-     }
 
-     private Collection<GrantedAuthority> extractAuthorities(OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal principal) {
 
-         List<String> scopes = principal.getAttribute(OAuth2IntrospectionClaimNames.SCOPE);
 
-         return scopes.stream()
 
-                 .map(SimpleGrantedAuthority::new)
 
-                 .collect(Collectors.toList());
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- class CustomAuthoritiesOpaqueTokenIntrospector : ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector {
 
-     private val delegate: ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector = NimbusReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector("https://idp.example.org/introspect", "client", "secret")
 
-     override fun introspect(token: String): Mono<OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal> {
 
-         return delegate.introspect(token)
 
-                 .map { principal: OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal ->
 
-                     DefaultOAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal(
 
-                             principal.name, principal.attributes, extractAuthorities(principal))
 
-                 }
 
-     }
 
-     private fun extractAuthorities(principal: OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal): Collection<GrantedAuthority> {
 
-         val scopes = principal.getAttribute<List<String>>(OAuth2IntrospectionClaimNames.SCOPE)
 
-         return scopes
 
-                 .map { SimpleGrantedAuthority(it) }
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- Thereafter, this custom introspector can be configured simply by exposing it as a `@Bean`:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- public ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector introspector() {
 
-     return new CustomAuthoritiesOpaqueTokenIntrospector();
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun introspector(): ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector {
 
-     return CustomAuthoritiesOpaqueTokenIntrospector()
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-jwt-introspector]]
 
- === Using Introspection with JWTs
 
- A common question is whether or not introspection is compatible with JWTs.
 
- Spring Security's Opaque Token support has been designed to not care about the format of the token -- it will gladly pass any token to the introspection endpoint provided.
 
- So, let's say that you've got a requirement that requires you to check with the authorization server on each request, in case the JWT has been revoked.
 
- Even though you are using the JWT format for the token, your validation method is introspection, meaning you'd want to do:
 
- [source,yaml]
 
- ----
 
- spring:
 
-   security:
 
-     oauth2:
 
-       resourceserver:
 
-         opaque-token:
 
-           introspection-uri: https://idp.example.org/introspection
 
-           client-id: client
 
-           client-secret: secret
 
- ----
 
- In this case, the resulting `Authentication` would be `BearerTokenAuthentication`.
 
- Any attributes in the corresponding `OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal` would be whatever was returned by the introspection endpoint.
 
- But, let's say that, oddly enough, the introspection endpoint only returns whether or not the token is active.
 
- Now what?
 
- In this case, you can create a custom `ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector` that still hits the endpoint, but then updates the returned principal to have the JWTs claims as the attributes:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- public class JwtOpaqueTokenIntrospector implements ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector {
 
- 	private ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector delegate =
 
- 			new NimbusReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector("https://idp.example.org/introspect", "client", "secret");
 
- 	private ReactiveJwtDecoder jwtDecoder = new NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder(new ParseOnlyJWTProcessor());
 
- 	public Mono<OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal> introspect(String token) {
 
- 		return this.delegate.introspect(token)
 
- 				.flatMap(principal -> this.jwtDecoder.decode(token))
 
- 				.map(jwt -> new DefaultOAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal(jwt.getClaims(), NO_AUTHORITIES));
 
- 	}
 
- 	private static class ParseOnlyJWTProcessor implements Converter<JWT, Mono<JWTClaimsSet>> {
 
- 		public Mono<JWTClaimsSet> convert(JWT jwt) {
 
- 			try {
 
- 				return Mono.just(jwt.getJWTClaimsSet());
 
- 			} catch (Exception ex) {
 
- 				return Mono.error(ex);
 
- 			}
 
- 		}
 
- 	}
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- class JwtOpaqueTokenIntrospector : ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector {
 
-     private val delegate: ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector = NimbusReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector("https://idp.example.org/introspect", "client", "secret")
 
-     private val jwtDecoder: ReactiveJwtDecoder = NimbusReactiveJwtDecoder(ParseOnlyJWTProcessor())
 
-     override fun introspect(token: String): Mono<OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal> {
 
-         return delegate.introspect(token)
 
-                 .flatMap { jwtDecoder.decode(token) }
 
-                 .map { jwt: Jwt -> DefaultOAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal(jwt.claims, NO_AUTHORITIES) }
 
-     }
 
-     private class ParseOnlyJWTProcessor : Converter<JWT, Mono<JWTClaimsSet>> {
 
-         override fun convert(jwt: JWT): Mono<JWTClaimsSet> {
 
-             return try {
 
-                 Mono.just(jwt.jwtClaimsSet)
 
-             } catch (e: Exception) {
 
-                 Mono.error(e)
 
-             }
 
-         }
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- Thereafter, this custom introspector can be configured simply by exposing it as a `@Bean`:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- public ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector introspector() {
 
-     return new JwtOpaqueTokenIntropsector();
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun introspector(): ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector {
 
-     return JwtOpaqueTokenIntrospector()
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-opaque-userinfo]]
 
- === Calling a `/userinfo` Endpoint
 
- Generally speaking, a Resource Server doesn't care about the underlying user, but instead about the authorities that have been granted.
 
- That said, at times it can be valuable to tie the authorization statement back to a user.
 
- If an application is also using `spring-security-oauth2-client`, having set up the appropriate `ClientRegistrationRepository`, then this is quite simple with a custom `OpaqueTokenIntrospector`.
 
- This implementation below does three things:
 
- * Delegates to the introspection endpoint, to affirm the token's validity
 
- * Looks up the appropriate client registration associated with the `/userinfo` endpoint
 
- * Invokes and returns the response from the `/userinfo` endpoint
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- public class UserInfoOpaqueTokenIntrospector implements ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector {
 
- 	private final ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector delegate =
 
- 			new NimbusReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector("https://idp.example.org/introspect", "client", "secret");
 
- 	private final ReactiveOAuth2UserService<OAuth2UserRequest, OAuth2User> oauth2UserService =
 
- 			new DefaultReactiveOAuth2UserService();
 
- 	private final ReactiveClientRegistrationRepository repository;
 
- 	// ... constructor
 
- 	@Override
 
- 	public Mono<OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal> introspect(String token) {
 
- 		return Mono.zip(this.delegate.introspect(token), this.repository.findByRegistrationId("registration-id"))
 
- 				.map(t -> {
 
- 					OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal authorized = t.getT1();
 
- 					ClientRegistration clientRegistration = t.getT2();
 
- 					Instant issuedAt = authorized.getAttribute(ISSUED_AT);
 
- 					Instant expiresAt = authorized.getAttribute(OAuth2IntrospectionClaimNames.EXPIRES_AT);
 
- 					OAuth2AccessToken accessToken = new OAuth2AccessToken(BEARER, token, issuedAt, expiresAt);
 
- 					return new OAuth2UserRequest(clientRegistration, accessToken);
 
- 				})
 
- 				.flatMap(this.oauth2UserService::loadUser);
 
- 	}
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- class UserInfoOpaqueTokenIntrospector : ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector {
 
-     private val delegate: ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector = NimbusReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector("https://idp.example.org/introspect", "client", "secret")
 
-     private val oauth2UserService: ReactiveOAuth2UserService<OAuth2UserRequest, OAuth2User> = DefaultReactiveOAuth2UserService()
 
-     private val repository: ReactiveClientRegistrationRepository? = null
 
-     // ... constructor
 
-     override fun introspect(token: String?): Mono<OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal> {
 
-         return Mono.zip<OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal, ClientRegistration>(delegate.introspect(token), repository!!.findByRegistrationId("registration-id"))
 
-                 .map<OAuth2UserRequest> { t: Tuple2<OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal, ClientRegistration> ->
 
-                     val authorized = t.t1
 
-                     val clientRegistration = t.t2
 
-                     val issuedAt: Instant? = authorized.getAttribute(ISSUED_AT)
 
-                     val expiresAt: Instant? = authorized.getAttribute(OAuth2IntrospectionClaimNames.EXPIRES_AT)
 
-                     val accessToken = OAuth2AccessToken(BEARER, token, issuedAt, expiresAt)
 
-                     OAuth2UserRequest(clientRegistration, accessToken)
 
-                 }
 
-                 .flatMap { userRequest: OAuth2UserRequest -> oauth2UserService.loadUser(userRequest) }
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- If you aren't using `spring-security-oauth2-client`, it's still quite simple.
 
- You will simply need to invoke the `/userinfo` with your own instance of `WebClient`:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- public class UserInfoOpaqueTokenIntrospector implements ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector {
 
-     private final ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector delegate =
 
-             new NimbusReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector("https://idp.example.org/introspect", "client", "secret");
 
-     private final WebClient rest = WebClient.create();
 
-     @Override
 
-     public Mono<OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal> introspect(String token) {
 
-         return this.delegate.introspect(token)
 
- 		        .map(this::makeUserInfoRequest);
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- class UserInfoOpaqueTokenIntrospector : ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector {
 
-     private val delegate: ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector = NimbusReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector("https://idp.example.org/introspect", "client", "secret")
 
-     private val rest: WebClient = WebClient.create()
 
-     override fun introspect(token: String): Mono<OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal> {
 
-         return delegate.introspect(token)
 
-                 .map(this::makeUserInfoRequest)
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- Either way, having created your `ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector`, you should publish it as a `@Bean` to override the defaults:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector introspector() {
 
-     return new UserInfoOpaqueTokenIntrospector();
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun introspector(): ReactiveOpaqueTokenIntrospector {
 
-     return UserInfoOpaqueTokenIntrospector()
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-multitenancy]]
 
- == Multi-tenancy
 
- A resource server is considered multi-tenant when there are multiple strategies for verifying a bearer token, keyed by some tenant identifier.
 
- For example, your resource server may accept bearer tokens from two different authorization servers.
 
- Or, your authorization server may represent a multiplicity of issuers.
 
- In each case, there are two things that need to be done and trade-offs associated with how you choose to do them:
 
- 1. Resolve the tenant
 
- 2. Propagate the tenant
 
- === Resolving the Tenant By Claim
 
- One way to differentiate tenants is by the issuer claim. Since the issuer claim accompanies signed JWTs, this can be done with the `JwtIssuerReactiveAuthenticationManagerResolver`, like so:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- JwtIssuerReactiveAuthenticationManagerResolver authenticationManagerResolver = new JwtIssuerReactiveAuthenticationManagerResolver
 
-     ("https://idp.example.org/issuerOne", "https://idp.example.org/issuerTwo");
 
- http
 
-     .authorizeExchange(exchanges -> exchanges
 
-         .anyExchange().authenticated()
 
-     )
 
-     .oauth2ResourceServer(oauth2 -> oauth2
 
-         .authenticationManagerResolver(authenticationManagerResolver)
 
-     );
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- val customAuthenticationManagerResolver = JwtIssuerReactiveAuthenticationManagerResolver("https://idp.example.org/issuerOne", "https://idp.example.org/issuerTwo")
 
- return http {
 
-     authorizeExchange {
 
-         authorize(anyExchange, authenticated)
 
-     }
 
-     oauth2ResourceServer {
 
-         authenticationManagerResolver = customAuthenticationManagerResolver
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- This is nice because the issuer endpoints are loaded lazily.
 
- In fact, the corresponding `JwtReactiveAuthenticationManager` is instantiated only when the first request with the corresponding issuer is sent.
 
- This allows for an application startup that is independent from those authorization servers being up and available.
 
- ==== Dynamic Tenants
 
- Of course, you may not want to restart the application each time a new tenant is added.
 
- In this case, you can configure the `JwtIssuerReactiveAuthenticationManagerResolver` with a repository of `ReactiveAuthenticationManager` instances, which you can edit at runtime, like so:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- private Mono<ReactiveAuthenticationManager> addManager(
 
- 		Map<String, ReactiveAuthenticationManager> authenticationManagers, String issuer) {
 
- 	return Mono.fromCallable(() -> ReactiveJwtDecoders.fromIssuerLocation(issuer))
 
-             .subscribeOn(Schedulers.boundedElastic())
 
-             .map(JwtReactiveAuthenticationManager::new)
 
-             .doOnNext(authenticationManager -> authenticationManagers.put(issuer, authenticationManager));
 
- }
 
- // ...
 
- JwtIssuerReactiveAuthenticationManagerResolver authenticationManagerResolver =
 
-         new JwtIssuerReactiveAuthenticationManagerResolver(authenticationManagers::get);
 
- http
 
-     .authorizeExchange(exchanges -> exchanges
 
-         .anyExchange().authenticated()
 
-     )
 
-     .oauth2ResourceServer(oauth2 -> oauth2
 
-         .authenticationManagerResolver(authenticationManagerResolver)
 
-     );
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- private fun addManager(
 
-         authenticationManagers: MutableMap<String, ReactiveAuthenticationManager>, issuer: String): Mono<JwtReactiveAuthenticationManager> {
 
-     return Mono.fromCallable { ReactiveJwtDecoders.fromIssuerLocation(issuer) }
 
-             .subscribeOn(Schedulers.boundedElastic())
 
-             .map { jwtDecoder: ReactiveJwtDecoder -> JwtReactiveAuthenticationManager(jwtDecoder) }
 
-             .doOnNext { authenticationManager: JwtReactiveAuthenticationManager -> authenticationManagers[issuer] = authenticationManager }
 
- }
 
- // ...
 
- var customAuthenticationManagerResolver = JwtIssuerReactiveAuthenticationManagerResolver(authenticationManagers::get)
 
- return http {
 
-     authorizeExchange {
 
-         authorize(anyExchange, authenticated)
 
-     }
 
-     oauth2ResourceServer {
 
-         authenticationManagerResolver = customAuthenticationManagerResolver
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- In this case, you construct `JwtIssuerReactiveAuthenticationManagerResolver` with a strategy for obtaining the `ReactiveAuthenticationManager` given the issuer.
 
- This approach allows us to add and remove elements from the repository (shown as a `Map` in the snippet) at runtime.
 
- NOTE: It would be unsafe to simply take any issuer and construct an `ReactiveAuthenticationManager` from it.
 
- The issuer should be one that the code can verify from a trusted source like an allowed list of issuers.
 
- [[webflux-oauth2resourceserver-bearertoken-resolver]]
 
- == Bearer Token Resolution
 
- By default, Resource Server looks for a bearer token in the `Authorization` header.
 
- This, however, can be customized.
 
- For example, you may have a need to read the bearer token from a custom header.
 
- To achieve this, you can wire an instance of `ServerBearerTokenAuthenticationConverter` into the DSL, as you can see in the following example:
 
- .Custom Bearer Token Header
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- ServerBearerTokenAuthenticationConverter converter = new ServerBearerTokenAuthenticationConverter();
 
- converter.setBearerTokenHeaderName(HttpHeaders.PROXY_AUTHORIZATION);
 
- http
 
-     .oauth2ResourceServer(oauth2 -> oauth2
 
-         .bearerTokenConverter(converter)
 
-     );
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- val converter = ServerBearerTokenAuthenticationConverter()
 
- converter.setBearerTokenHeaderName(HttpHeaders.PROXY_AUTHORIZATION)
 
- return http {
 
-     oauth2ResourceServer {
 
-         bearerTokenConverter = converter
 
-     }
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- == Bearer Token Propagation
 
- Now that you're in possession of a bearer token, it might be handy to pass that to downstream services.
 
- This is quite simple with `{security-api-url}org/springframework/security/oauth2/server/resource/web/reactive/function/client/ServerBearerExchangeFilterFunction.html[ServerBearerExchangeFilterFunction]`, which you can see in the following example:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- public WebClient rest() {
 
-     return WebClient.builder()
 
-             .filter(new ServerBearerExchangeFilterFunction())
 
-             .build();
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- @Bean
 
- fun rest(): WebClient {
 
-     return WebClient.builder()
 
-             .filter(ServerBearerExchangeFilterFunction())
 
-             .build()
 
- }
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- When the above `WebClient` is used to perform requests, Spring Security will look up the current `Authentication` and extract any `{security-api-url}org/springframework/security/oauth2/core/AbstractOAuth2Token.html[AbstractOAuth2Token]` credential.
 
- Then, it will propagate that token in the `Authorization` header.
 
- For example:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- this.rest.get()
 
-         .uri("https://other-service.example.com/endpoint")
 
-         .retrieve()
 
-         .bodyToMono(String.class)
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- this.rest.get()
 
-         .uri("https://other-service.example.com/endpoint")
 
-         .retrieve()
 
-         .bodyToMono<String>()
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- Will invoke the `https://other-service.example.com/endpoint`, adding the bearer token `Authorization` header for you.
 
- In places where you need to override this behavior, it's a simple matter of supplying the header yourself, like so:
 
- ====
 
- .Java
 
- [source,java,role="primary"]
 
- ----
 
- this.rest.get()
 
-         .uri("https://other-service.example.com/endpoint")
 
-         .headers(headers -> headers.setBearerAuth(overridingToken))
 
-         .retrieve()
 
-         .bodyToMono(String.class)
 
- ----
 
- .Kotlin
 
- [source,kotlin,role="secondary"]
 
- ----
 
- rest.get()
 
-         .uri("https://other-service.example.com/endpoint")
 
-         .headers { it.setBearerAuth(overridingToken) }
 
-         .retrieve()
 
-         .bodyToMono<String>()
 
- ----
 
- ====
 
- In this case, the filter will fall back and simply forward the request onto the rest of the web filter chain.
 
- [NOTE]
 
- Unlike the https://docs.spring.io/spring-security/site/docs/current-SNAPSHOT/api/org/springframework/security/oauth2/client/web/reactive/function/client/ServerOAuth2AuthorizedClientExchangeFilterFunction.html[OAuth 2.0 Client filter function], this filter function makes no attempt to renew the token, should it be expired.
 
- To obtain this level of support, please use the OAuth 2.0 Client filter.
 
 
  |