| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899 | 
[[kotlin-config]]= Kotlin ConfigurationSpring Security Kotlin Configuration support has been available since Spring Security 5.3.It enables users to easily configure Spring Security using a native Kotlin DSL.NOTE: Spring Security provides https://github.com/spring-projects/spring-security-samples/tree/main/servlet/spring-boot/kotlin/hello-security[a sample application] which demonstrates the use of Spring Security Kotlin Configuration.[[kotlin-config-httpsecurity]]== HttpSecurityHow does Spring Security know that we want to require all users to be authenticated?How does Spring Security know we want to support form based authentication?Actually, there is a bean that is being invoked behind the scenes called `SecurityFilterChain`.It is configured with the following default implementation:[source,kotlin]----@Beanopen fun filterChain(http: HttpSecurity): SecurityFilterChain {   http {        authorizeRequests {            authorize(anyRequest, authenticated)        }       formLogin { }       httpBasic { }    }    return http.build()}----The default configuration above:* Ensures that any request to our application requires the user to be authenticated* Allows users to authenticate with form based login* Allows users to authenticate with HTTP Basic authenticationYou will notice that this configuration is quite similar the XML Namespace configuration:[source,xml]----<http>	<intercept-url pattern="/**" access="authenticated"/>	<form-login />	<http-basic /></http>----== Multiple HttpSecurityWe can configure multiple HttpSecurity instances just as we can have multiple `<http>` blocks.The key is to register multiple `SecurityFilterChain` ``@Bean``s.For example, the following is an example of having a different configuration for URL's that start with `/api/`.[source,kotlin]----@EnableWebSecurityclass MultiHttpSecurityConfig {    @Bean                                                            <1>    public fun userDetailsService(): UserDetailsService {        val users: User.UserBuilder = User.withDefaultPasswordEncoder()        val manager = InMemoryUserDetailsManager()        manager.createUser(users.username("user").password("password").roles("USER").build())        manager.createUser(users.username("admin").password("password").roles("USER","ADMIN").build())        return manager    }    @Order(1)                                                        <2>    @Bean    open fun apiFilterChain(http: HttpSecurity): SecurityFilterChain {        http {            securityMatcher("/api/**")                               <3>            authorizeRequests {                authorize(anyRequest, hasRole("ADMIN"))            }            httpBasic { }        }        return http.build()    }    @Bean                                                            <4>    open fun formLoginFilterChain(http: HttpSecurity): SecurityFilterChain {        http {            authorizeRequests {                authorize(anyRequest, authenticated)            }            formLogin { }        }        return http.build()    }}----<1> Configure Authentication as normal<2> Expose an instance of `SecurityFilterChain` that contains `@Order` to specify which `SecurityFilterChain` should be considered first.<3> The `http.antMatcher` states that this `HttpSecurity` will only be applicable to URLs that start with `/api/`<4> Expose another instance of `SecurityFilterChain`.If the URL does not start with `/api/` this configuration will be used.This configuration is considered after `apiFilterChain` since it has an `@Order` value after `1` (no `@Order` defaults to last).
 |