| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166 | [[concurrency]]= Concurrency SupportIn most environments, Security is stored on a per `Thread` basis.This means that when work is done on a new `Thread`, the `SecurityContext` is lost.Spring Security provides some infrastructure to help make this much easier for users.Spring Security provides low level abstractions for working with Spring Security in multi-threaded environments.In fact, this is what Spring Security builds on to integration with xref:servlet/integrations/servlet-api.adoc#servletapi-start-runnable[`AsyncContext.start(Runnable)`] and xref:servlet/integrations/mvc.adoc#mvc-async[Spring MVC Async Integration].== DelegatingSecurityContextRunnableOne of the most fundamental building blocks within Spring Security's concurrency support is the `DelegatingSecurityContextRunnable`.It wraps a delegate `Runnable` in order to initialize the `SecurityContextHolder` with a specified `SecurityContext` for the delegate.It then invokes the delegate Runnable ensuring to clear the `SecurityContextHolder` afterwards.The `DelegatingSecurityContextRunnable` looks something like this:[source,java]----public void run() {try {	SecurityContextHolder.setContext(securityContext);	delegate.run();} finally {	SecurityContextHolder.clearContext();}}----While very simple, it makes it seamless to transfer the SecurityContext from one Thread to another.This is important since, in most cases, the SecurityContextHolder acts on a per Thread basis.For example, you might have used Spring Security's xref:servlet/appendix/namespace/method-security.adoc#nsa-global-method-security[`<global-method-security>`] support to secure one of your services.You can now easily transfer the `SecurityContext` of the current `Thread` to the `Thread` that invokes the secured service.An example of how you might do this can be found below:[source,java]----Runnable originalRunnable = new Runnable() {public void run() {	// invoke secured service}};SecurityContext context = SecurityContextHolder.getContext();DelegatingSecurityContextRunnable wrappedRunnable =	new DelegatingSecurityContextRunnable(originalRunnable, context);new Thread(wrappedRunnable).start();----The code above performs the following steps:* Creates a `Runnable` that will be invoking our secured service.Notice that it is not aware of Spring Security* Obtains the `SecurityContext` that we wish to use from the `SecurityContextHolder` and initializes the `DelegatingSecurityContextRunnable`* Use the `DelegatingSecurityContextRunnable` to create a Thread* Start the Thread we createdSince it is quite common to create a `DelegatingSecurityContextRunnable` with the `SecurityContext` from the `SecurityContextHolder` there is a shortcut constructor for it.The following code is the same as the code above:[source,java]----Runnable originalRunnable = new Runnable() {public void run() {	// invoke secured service}};DelegatingSecurityContextRunnable wrappedRunnable =	new DelegatingSecurityContextRunnable(originalRunnable);new Thread(wrappedRunnable).start();----The code we have is simple to use, but it still requires knowledge that we are using Spring Security.In the next section we will take a look at how we can utilize `DelegatingSecurityContextExecutor` to hide the fact that we are using Spring Security.== DelegatingSecurityContextExecutorIn the previous section we found that it was easy to use the `DelegatingSecurityContextRunnable`, but it was not ideal since we had to be aware of Spring Security in order to use it.Let's take a look at how `DelegatingSecurityContextExecutor` can shield our code from any knowledge that we are using Spring Security.The design of `DelegatingSecurityContextExecutor` is very similar to that of `DelegatingSecurityContextRunnable` except it accepts a delegate `Executor` instead of a delegate `Runnable`.You can see an example of how it might be used below:[source,java]----SecurityContext context = SecurityContextHolder.createEmptyContext();Authentication authentication =	new UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken("user","doesnotmatter", AuthorityUtils.createAuthorityList("ROLE_USER"));context.setAuthentication(authentication);SimpleAsyncTaskExecutor delegateExecutor =	new SimpleAsyncTaskExecutor();DelegatingSecurityContextExecutor executor =	new DelegatingSecurityContextExecutor(delegateExecutor, context);Runnable originalRunnable = new Runnable() {public void run() {	// invoke secured service}};executor.execute(originalRunnable);----The code performs the following steps:* Creates the `SecurityContext` to be used for our `DelegatingSecurityContextExecutor`.Note that in this example we simply create the `SecurityContext` by hand.However, it does not matter where or how we get the `SecurityContext` (i.e. we could obtain it from the `SecurityContextHolder` if we wanted).* Creates a delegateExecutor that is in charge of executing submitted ``Runnable``s* Finally we create a `DelegatingSecurityContextExecutor` which is in charge of wrapping any Runnable that is passed into the execute method with a `DelegatingSecurityContextRunnable`.It then passes the wrapped Runnable to the delegateExecutor.In this instance, the same `SecurityContext` will be used for every Runnable submitted to our `DelegatingSecurityContextExecutor`.This is nice if we are running background tasks that need to be run by a user with elevated privileges.* At this point you may be asking yourself "How does this shield my code of any knowledge of Spring Security?" Instead of creating the `SecurityContext` and the `DelegatingSecurityContextExecutor` in our own code, we can inject an already initialized instance of `DelegatingSecurityContextExecutor`.[source,java]----@Autowiredprivate Executor executor; // becomes an instance of our DelegatingSecurityContextExecutorpublic void submitRunnable() {Runnable originalRunnable = new Runnable() {	public void run() {	// invoke secured service	}};executor.execute(originalRunnable);}----Now our code is unaware that the `SecurityContext` is being propagated to the `Thread`, then the `originalRunnable` is run, and then the `SecurityContextHolder` is cleared out.In this example, the same user is being used to run each thread.What if we wanted to use the user from `SecurityContextHolder` at the time we invoked `executor.execute(Runnable)` (i.e. the currently logged in user) to process ``originalRunnable``?This can be done by removing the `SecurityContext` argument from our `DelegatingSecurityContextExecutor` constructor.For example:[source,java]----SimpleAsyncTaskExecutor delegateExecutor = new SimpleAsyncTaskExecutor();DelegatingSecurityContextExecutor executor =	new DelegatingSecurityContextExecutor(delegateExecutor);----Now anytime `executor.execute(Runnable)` is executed the `SecurityContext` is first obtained by the `SecurityContextHolder` and then that `SecurityContext` is used to create our `DelegatingSecurityContextRunnable`.This means that we are running our `Runnable` with the same user that was used to invoke the `executor.execute(Runnable)` code.== Spring Security Concurrency ClassesRefer to the Javadoc for additional integrations with both the Java concurrent APIs and the Spring Task abstractions.They are quite self-explanatory once you understand the previous code.* `DelegatingSecurityContextCallable`* `DelegatingSecurityContextExecutor`* `DelegatingSecurityContextExecutorService`* `DelegatingSecurityContextRunnable`* `DelegatingSecurityContextScheduledExecutorService`* `DelegatingSecurityContextSchedulingTaskExecutor`* `DelegatingSecurityContextAsyncTaskExecutor`* `DelegatingSecurityContextTaskExecutor`* `DelegatingSecurityContextTaskScheduler`
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