| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183 | [[servlet-authorization-filtersecurityinterceptor]]= Authorize HttpServletRequest with FilterSecurityInterceptor:figures: servlet/authorization[NOTE]====`FilterSecurityInterceptor` is in the process of being replaced by xref:servlet/authorization/authorize-http-requests.adoc[`AuthorizationFilter`].Consider using that instead.====This 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.The {security-api-url}org/springframework/security/web/access/intercept/FilterSecurityInterceptor.html[`FilterSecurityInterceptor`] provides xref:servlet/authorization/index.adoc#servlet-authorization[authorization] for `HttpServletRequest` instances.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].The following image shows the role of `FilterSecurityInterceptor`:.Authorize HttpServletRequestimage::{figures}/filtersecurityinterceptor.png[]image:{icondir}/number_1.png[] The `FilterSecurityInterceptor` obtains an xref:servlet/authentication/architecture.adoc#servlet-authentication-authentication[Authentication] from the xref:servlet/authentication/architecture.adoc#servlet-authentication-securitycontextholder[SecurityContextHolder].image:{icondir}/number_2.png[] `FilterSecurityInterceptor` creates a {security-api-url}org/springframework/security/web/FilterInvocation.html[`FilterInvocation`] from the `HttpServletRequest`, `HttpServletResponse`, and `FilterChain` that are passed into the `FilterSecurityInterceptor`.image:{icondir}/number_3.png[] It passes the `FilterInvocation` to `SecurityMetadataSource` to get the ``ConfigAttribute``s.image:{icondir}/number_4.png[] It passes the `Authentication`, `FilterInvocation`, and ``ConfigAttribute``s to the `AccessDecisionManager`.image:{icondir}/number_5.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_6.png[] If access is granted, `FilterSecurityInterceptor` continues with the xref:servlet/architecture.adoc#servlet-filters-review[`FilterChain`], which lets the application process normally.// configuration (xml/java)By default, Spring Security's authorization requires all requests to be authenticated.The following listing shows the explicit configuration:[[servlet-authorize-requests-defaults]].Every Request Must be Authenticated====.Java[source,java,role="primary"]----@Beanpublic SecurityFilterChain filterChain(HttpSecurity http) throws Exception {	http		// ...		.authorizeRequests(authorize -> authorize			.anyRequest().authenticated()		);	return http.build();}----.XML[source,xml,role="secondary"]----<http>	<!-- ... -->	<intercept-url pattern="/**" access="authenticated"/></http>----.Kotlin[source,kotlin,role="secondary"]----@Beanopen fun filterChain(http: HttpSecurity): SecurityFilterChain {    http {        // ...        authorizeRequests {            authorize(anyRequest, authenticated)        }    }    return http.build()}----====We can configure Spring Security to have different rules by adding more rules in order of precedence:.Authorize Requests====.Java[source,java,role="primary"]----@Beanpublic SecurityFilterChain filterChain(HttpSecurity http) throws Exception {	http		// ...		.authorizeRequests(authorize -> authorize                                  // <1>			.requestMatchers("/resources/**", "/signup", "/about").permitAll()         // <2>			.requestMatchers("/admin/**").hasRole("ADMIN")                             // <3>			.requestMatchers("/db/**").access("hasRole('ADMIN') and hasRole('DBA')")   // <4>			.anyRequest().denyAll()                                                // <5>		);	return http.build();}----.XML[source,xml,role="secondary"]----<http> <!--1-->	<!-- ... -->	<!--2-->	<intercept-url pattern="/resources/**" access="permitAll"/>	<intercept-url pattern="/signup" access="permitAll"/>	<intercept-url pattern="/about" access="permitAll"/>	<intercept-url pattern="/admin/**" access="hasRole('ADMIN')"/> <!--3-->	<intercept-url pattern="/db/**" access="hasRole('ADMIN') and hasRole('DBA')"/> <!--4-->	<intercept-url pattern="/**" access="denyAll"/> <!--5--></http>----.Kotlin[source,kotlin,role="secondary"]----@Beanopen fun filterChain(http: HttpSecurity): SecurityFilterChain {   http {        authorizeRequests { // <1>            authorize("/resources/**", permitAll) // <2>            authorize("/signup", permitAll)            authorize("/about", permitAll)            authorize("/admin/**", hasRole("ADMIN")) // <3>            authorize("/db/**", "hasRole('ADMIN') and hasRole('DBA')") // <4>            authorize(anyRequest, denyAll) // <5>        }    }    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> 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.====[[filtersecurityinterceptor-every-request]]== Configure FilterSecurityInterceptor with Dispatcher TypesBy default, the `FilterSecurityInterceptor` applies to every request.This means that if a request is dispatched from a request that was already filtered, the `FilterSecurityInterceptor` will perform the same authorization checks on the dispatched request.In some scenarios, you may not want to apply authorization on some dispatcher types:.Permit ASYNC and ERROR dispatcher types====.Java[source,java,role="primary"]----@BeanSecurityFilterChain web(HttpSecurity http) throws Exception {    http        .authorizeRequests((authorize) -> authorize            .dispatcherTypeMatchers(DispatcherType.ASYNC, DispatcherType.ERROR).permitAll()            .anyRequest.authenticated()        )        // ...    return http.build();}----.XML[source,xml]----<http auto-config="true">    <intercept-url request-matcher-ref="dispatcherTypeMatcher" access="permitAll" />    <intercept-url pattern="/**" access="authenticated"/></http><b:bean id="dispatcherTypeMatcher" class="org.springframework.security.web.util.matcher.DispatcherTypeRequestMatcher">    <b:constructor-arg value="ASYNC"/>    <b:constructor-arg value="ERROR"/></b:bean>----====
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