| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307308309310311312313314315316317318319320321322323324325326327328329330331332333334335336337338339340341342343344345346347348349350351352353354355356357358359360361362363364365366367368369370371372373374375376377378379380381382383384385386387388389390391392393394395396397398399400401402403404405406407408409410411412413414415416417418419420421422423424425426427428429430431432433434435436437438439440441442443444445446447448449450451452453454455456457458459460461462463464465466467468469470471472473474475476477478479480481482483484485486487488489490491492493494 | [[servlet-authorization-authorizationfilter]]= Authorize HttpServletRequests with AuthorizationFilter:figures: servlet/authorizationThis section builds on xref:servlet/architecture.adoc#servlet-architecture[Servlet Architecture and Implementation] by digging deeper into how xref:servlet/authorization/index.adoc#servlet-authorization[authorization] works within Servlet-based applications.[NOTE]`AuthorizationFilter` supersedes xref:servlet/authorization/authorize-requests.adoc#servlet-authorization-filtersecurityinterceptor[`FilterSecurityInterceptor`].To remain backward compatible, `FilterSecurityInterceptor` remains the default.This section discusses how `AuthorizationFilter` works and how to override the default configuration.The {security-api-url}org/springframework/security/web/access/intercept/AuthorizationFilter.html[`AuthorizationFilter`] provides xref:servlet/authorization/index.adoc#servlet-authorization[authorization] for ``HttpServletRequest``s.It is inserted into the xref:servlet/architecture.adoc#servlet-filterchainproxy[FilterChainProxy] as one of the xref:servlet/architecture.adoc#servlet-security-filters[Security Filters].You can override the default when you declare a `SecurityFilterChain`.Instead of using xref:servlet/authorization/authorize-http-requests.adoc#servlet-authorize-requests-defaults[`authorizeRequests`], use `authorizeHttpRequests`, like so:.Use authorizeHttpRequests[tabs]======Java::+[source,java,role="primary"]----@BeanSecurityFilterChain web(HttpSecurity http) throws AuthenticationException {    http        .authorizeHttpRequests((authorize) -> authorize            .anyRequest().authenticated();        )        // ...    return http.build();}----======This improves on `authorizeRequests` in a number of ways:1. Uses the simplified `AuthorizationManager` API instead of metadata sources, config attributes, decision managers, and voters.This simplifies reuse and customization.2. Delays `Authentication` lookup.Instead of the authentication needing to be looked up for every request, it will only look it up in requests where an authorization decision requires authentication.3. Bean-based configuration support.When `authorizeHttpRequests` is used instead of `authorizeRequests`, then {security-api-url}org/springframework/security/web/access/intercept/AuthorizationFilter.html[`AuthorizationFilter`] is used instead of xref:servlet/authorization/authorize-requests.adoc#servlet-authorization-filtersecurityinterceptor[`FilterSecurityInterceptor`]..Authorize HttpServletRequestimage::{figures}/authorizationfilter.png[]* image:{icondir}/number_1.png[] First, the `AuthorizationFilter` obtains an  xref:servlet/authentication/architecture.adoc#servlet-authentication-authentication[Authentication] from the xref:servlet/authentication/architecture.adoc#servlet-authentication-securitycontextholder[SecurityContextHolder].It wraps this in an `Supplier` in order to delay lookup.* image:{icondir}/number_2.png[] Second, it passes the `Supplier<Authentication>` and the `HttpServletRequest` to the xref:servlet/architecture.adoc#authz-authorization-manager[`AuthorizationManager`].** image:{icondir}/number_3.png[] If authorization is denied, an `AccessDeniedException` is thrown.In this case the xref:servlet/architecture.adoc#servlet-exceptiontranslationfilter[`ExceptionTranslationFilter`] handles the `AccessDeniedException`.** image:{icondir}/number_4.png[] If access is granted, `AuthorizationFilter` continues with the xref:servlet/architecture.adoc#servlet-filters-review[FilterChain] which allows the application to process normally.We can configure Spring Security to have different rules by adding more rules in order of precedence..Authorize Requests[tabs]======Java::+[source,java,role="primary"]----@BeanSecurityFilterChain web(HttpSecurity http) throws Exception {	http		// ...		.authorizeHttpRequests(authorize -> authorize                                  // <1>			.requestMatchers("/resources/**", "/signup", "/about").permitAll()         // <2>			.requestMatchers("/admin/**").hasRole("ADMIN")                             // <3>			.requestMatchers("/db/**").access(new WebExpressionAuthorizationManager("hasRole('ADMIN') and hasRole('DBA')"))   // <4>			// .requestMatchers("/db/**").access(AuthorizationManagers.allOf(AuthorityAuthorizationManager.hasRole("ADMIN"), AuthorityAuthorizationManager.hasRole("DBA")))   // <5>			.anyRequest().denyAll()                                                // <6>		);	return http.build();}----======<1> There are multiple authorization rules specified.Each rule is considered in the order they were declared.<2> We specified multiple URL patterns that any user can access.Specifically, any user can access a request if the URL starts with "/resources/", equals "/signup", or equals "/about".<3> Any URL that starts with "/admin/" will be restricted to users who have the role "ROLE_ADMIN".You will notice that since we are invoking the `hasRole` method we do not need to specify the "ROLE_" prefix.<4> Any URL that starts with "/db/" requires the user to have both "ROLE_ADMIN" and "ROLE_DBA".You will notice that since we are using the `hasRole` expression we do not need to specify the "ROLE_" prefix.<5> The same rule from 4, could be written by combining multiple `AuthorizationManager`.<6> Any URL that has not already been matched on is denied access.This is a good strategy if you do not want to accidentally forget to update your authorization rules.You can take a bean-based approach by constructing your own xref:servlet/authorization/architecture.adoc#authz-delegate-authorization-manager[`RequestMatcherDelegatingAuthorizationManager`] like so:.Configure RequestMatcherDelegatingAuthorizationManager[tabs]======Java::+[source,java,role="primary"]----@BeanSecurityFilterChain web(HttpSecurity http, AuthorizationManager<RequestAuthorizationContext> access)        throws AuthenticationException {    http        .authorizeHttpRequests((authorize) -> authorize            .anyRequest().access(access)        )        // ...    return http.build();}@BeanAuthorizationManager<RequestAuthorizationContext> requestMatcherAuthorizationManager(HandlerMappingIntrospector introspector) {    MvcRequestMatcher.Builder mvcMatcherBuilder = new MvcRequestMatcher.Builder(introspector);    RequestMatcher permitAll =            new AndRequestMatcher(                    mvcMatcherBuilder.pattern("/resources/**"),                    mvcMatcherBuilder.pattern("/signup"),                    mvcMatcherBuilder.pattern("/about"));    RequestMatcher admin = mvcMatcherBuilder.pattern("/admin/**");    RequestMatcher db = mvcMatcherBuilder.pattern("/db/**");    RequestMatcher any = AnyRequestMatcher.INSTANCE;    AuthorizationManager<HttpServletRequest> manager = RequestMatcherDelegatingAuthorizationManager.builder()            .add(permitAll, (context) -> new AuthorizationDecision(true))            .add(admin, AuthorityAuthorizationManager.hasRole("ADMIN"))            .add(db, AuthorityAuthorizationManager.hasRole("DBA"))            .add(any, new AuthenticatedAuthorizationManager())            .build();    return (context) -> manager.check(context.getRequest());}----======You can also wire xref:servlet/authorization/architecture.adoc#authz-custom-authorization-manager[your own custom authorization managers] for any request matcher.[[custom-authorization-manager]]Here is an example of mapping a custom authorization manager to the `my/authorized/endpoint`:.Custom Authorization Manager[tabs]======Java::+[source,java,role="primary"]----@BeanSecurityFilterChain web(HttpSecurity http) throws Exception {    http        .authorizeHttpRequests((authorize) -> authorize            .requestMatchers("/my/authorized/endpoint").access(new CustomAuthorizationManager());        )        // ...    return http.build();}----======Or you can provide it for all requests as seen below:.Custom Authorization Manager for All Requests[tabs]======Java::+[source,java,role="primary"]----@BeanSecurityFilterChain web(HttpSecurity http) throws Exception {    http        .authorizeHttpRequests((authorize) -> authorize            .anyRequest().access(new CustomAuthorizationManager());        )        // ...    return http.build();}----======By default, the `AuthorizationFilter` does not apply to `DispatcherType.ERROR` and `DispatcherType.ASYNC`.We can configure Spring Security to apply the authorization rules to all dispatcher types by using the `shouldFilterAllDispatcherTypes` method:.Set shouldFilterAllDispatcherTypes to true[tabs]======Java::+[source,java,role="primary"]----@BeanSecurityFilterChain web(HttpSecurity http) throws Exception {    http        .authorizeHttpRequests((authorize) -> authorize            .shouldFilterAllDispatcherTypes(true)            .anyRequest.authenticated()        )        // ...    return http.build();}----Kotlin::+[source,kotlin,role="secondary"]----@Beanopen fun web(http: HttpSecurity): SecurityFilterChain {    http {        authorizeHttpRequests {            shouldFilterAllDispatcherTypes = true            authorize(anyRequest, authenticated)        }    }    return http.build()}----======Now with the authorization rules applying to all dispatcher types, you have more control of the authorization on them.For example, you may want to configure `shouldFilterAllDispatcherTypes` to `true` but not apply authorization on requests with dispatcher type `ASYNC` or `FORWARD`..Permit ASYNC and FORWARD dispatcher type[tabs]======Java::+[source,java,role="primary"]----@BeanSecurityFilterChain web(HttpSecurity http) throws Exception {    http        .authorizeHttpRequests((authorize) -> authorize            .shouldFilterAllDispatcherTypes(true)            .dispatcherTypeMatchers(DispatcherType.ASYNC, DispatcherType.FORWARD).permitAll()            .anyRequest().authenticated()        )        // ...    return http.build();}----Kotlin::+[source,kotlin,role="secondary"]----@Beanopen fun web(http: HttpSecurity): SecurityFilterChain {    http {        authorizeHttpRequests {            shouldFilterAllDispatcherTypes = true            authorize(DispatcherTypeRequestMatcher(DispatcherType.ASYNC, DispatcherType.FORWARD), permitAll)            authorize(anyRequest, authenticated)        }    }    return http.build()}----======You can also customize it to require a specific role for a dispatcher type:.Require ADMIN for Dispatcher Type ERROR[tabs]======Java::+[source,java,role="primary"]----@BeanSecurityFilterChain web(HttpSecurity http) throws Exception {    http        .authorizeHttpRequests((authorize) -> authorize            .shouldFilterAllDispatcherTypes(true)            .dispatcherTypeMatchers(DispatcherType.ERROR).hasRole("ADMIN")            .anyRequest().authenticated()        )        // ...    return http.build();}----Kotlin::+[source,kotlin,role="secondary"]----@Beanopen fun web(http: HttpSecurity): SecurityFilterChain {    http {        authorizeHttpRequests {            shouldFilterAllDispatcherTypes = true            authorize(DispatcherTypeRequestMatcher(DispatcherType.ERROR), hasRole("ADMIN"))            authorize(anyRequest, authenticated)        }    }    return http.build()}----======== Request MatchersThe `RequestMatcher` interface is used to determine if a request matches a given rule.We use `securityMatchers` to determine if a given `HttpSecurity` should be applied to a given request.The same way, we can use `requestMatchers` to determine the authorization rules that we should apply to a given request.Look at the following example:[tabs]======Java::+[source,java,role="primary"]----@Configuration@EnableWebSecuritypublic class SecurityConfig {	@Bean	public SecurityFilterChain securityFilterChain(HttpSecurity http) throws Exception {		http			.securityMatcher("/api/**")                            <1>			.authorizeHttpRequests(authorize -> authorize				.requestMatchers("/user/**").hasRole("USER")       <2>				.requestMatchers("/admin/**").hasRole("ADMIN")     <3>				.anyRequest().authenticated()                      <4>			)			.formLogin(withDefaults());		return http.build();	}}----Kotlin::+[source,kotlin,role="secondary"]----@Configuration@EnableWebSecurityopen class SecurityConfig {    @Bean    open fun web(http: HttpSecurity): SecurityFilterChain {        http {            securityMatcher("/api/**")                                           <1>            authorizeHttpRequests {                authorize("/user/**", hasRole("USER"))                           <2>                authorize("/admin/**", hasRole("ADMIN"))                         <3>                authorize(anyRequest, authenticated)                             <4>            }        }        return http.build()    }}----======<1> Configure `HttpSecurity` to only be applied to URLs that start with `/api/`<2> Allow access to URLs that start with `/user/` to users with the `USER` role<3> Allow access to URLs that start with `/admin/` to users with the `ADMIN` role<4> Any other request that doesn't match the rules above, will require authenticationThe `securityMatcher(s)` and `requestMatcher(s)` methods will decide which `RequestMatcher` implementation fits best for your application: If Spring MVC is in the classpath, then `MvcRequestMatcher` will be used, otherwise, `AntPathRequestMatcher` will be used.You can read more about the Spring MVC integration xref:servlet/integrations/mvc.adoc[here].If you want to use a specific `RequestMatcher`, just pass an implementation to the `securityMatcher` and/or `requestMatcher` methods:[tabs]======Java::+[source,java,role="primary"]----import static org.springframework.security.web.util.matcher.AntPathRequestMatcher.antMatcher; <1>import static org.springframework.security.web.util.matcher.RegexRequestMatcher.regexMatcher;@Configuration@EnableWebSecuritypublic class SecurityConfig {	@Bean	public SecurityFilterChain securityFilterChain(HttpSecurity http) throws Exception {		http			.securityMatcher(antMatcher("/api/**"))                              <2>			.authorizeHttpRequests(authorize -> authorize				.requestMatchers(antMatcher("/user/**")).hasRole("USER")         <3>				.requestMatchers(regexMatcher("/admin/.*")).hasRole("ADMIN")     <4>				.requestMatchers(new MyCustomRequestMatcher()).hasRole("SUPERVISOR")     <5>				.anyRequest().authenticated()			)			.formLogin(withDefaults());		return http.build();	}}public class MyCustomRequestMatcher implements RequestMatcher {    @Override    public boolean matches(HttpServletRequest request) {        // ...    }}----Kotlin::+[source,kotlin,role="secondary"]----import org.springframework.security.web.util.matcher.AntPathRequestMatcher.antMatcher <1>import org.springframework.security.web.util.matcher.RegexRequestMatcher.regexMatcher@Configuration@EnableWebSecurityopen class SecurityConfig {    @Bean    open fun web(http: HttpSecurity): SecurityFilterChain {        http {            securityMatcher(antMatcher("/api/**"))                               <2>            authorizeHttpRequests {                authorize(antMatcher("/user/**"), hasRole("USER"))               <3>                authorize(regexMatcher("/admin/**"), hasRole("ADMIN"))           <4>                authorize(MyCustomRequestMatcher(), hasRole("SUPERVISOR"))       <5>                authorize(anyRequest, authenticated)            }        }        return http.build()    }}----======<1> Import the static factory methods from `AntPathRequestMatcher` and `RegexRequestMatcher` to create `RequestMatcher` instances.<2> Configure `HttpSecurity` to only be applied to URLs that start with `/api/`, using `AntPathRequestMatcher`<3> Allow access to URLs that start with `/user/` to users with the `USER` role, using `AntPathRequestMatcher`<4> Allow access to URLs that start with `/admin/` to users with the `ADMIN` role, using `RegexRequestMatcher`<5> Allow access to URLs that match the `MyCustomRequestMatcher` to users with the `SUPERVISOR` role, using a custom `RequestMatcher`== ExpressionsIt is recommended that you use type-safe authorization managers instead of SpEL.However, `WebExpressionAuthorizationManager` is available to help migrate legacy SpEL.To use `WebExpressionAuthorizationManager`, you can construct one with the expression you are trying to migrate, like so:[tabs]======Java::+[source,java,role="primary"]----.requestMatchers("/test/**").access(new WebExpressionAuthorizationManager("hasRole('ADMIN') && hasRole('USER')"))----Kotlin::+[source,kotlin,role="secondary"]----.requestMatchers("/test/**").access(WebExpressionAuthorizationManager("hasRole('ADMIN') && hasRole('USER')"))----======If you are referring to a bean in your expression like so: `@webSecurity.check(authentication, request)`, it's recommended that you instead call the bean directly, which will look something like the following:[tabs]======Java::+[source,java,role="primary"]----.requestMatchers("/test/**").access((authentication, context) ->    new AuthorizationDecision(webSecurity.check(authentication.get(), context.getRequest())))----Kotlin::+[source,kotlin,role="secondary"]----.requestMatchers("/test/**").access((authentication, context): AuthorizationManager<RequestAuthorizationContext> ->    AuthorizationDecision(webSecurity.check(authentication.get(), context.getRequest())))----======For complex instructions that include bean references as well as other expressions, it is recommended that you change those to implement `AuthorizationManager` and refer to them by calling `.access(AuthorizationManager)`.If you are not able to do that, you can configure a `DefaultHttpSecurityExpressionHandler` with a bean resolver and supply that to `WebExpressionAuthorizationManager#setExpressionhandler`.
 |