acegi.xml 262 KB

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  1. <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
  2. <!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
  3. "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd">
  4. <!--
  5. * ========================================================================
  6. *
  7. * Copyright 2004 Acegi Technology Pty Limited
  8. *
  9. * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
  10. * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
  11. * You may obtain a copy of the License at
  12. *
  13. * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
  14. *
  15. * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
  16. * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
  17. * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
  18. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
  19. * limitations under the License.
  20. *
  21. * ========================================================================
  22. -->
  23. <book>
  24. <bookinfo>
  25. <title>Acegi Security System for Spring</title>
  26. <subtitle>Reference Documentation</subtitle>
  27. <releaseinfo>0.9.0</releaseinfo>
  28. <authorgroup>
  29. <author>
  30. <firstname>Ben</firstname>
  31. <surname>Alex</surname>
  32. </author>
  33. </authorgroup>
  34. </bookinfo>
  35. <toc></toc>
  36. <preface id="preface">
  37. <title>Preface</title>
  38. <para>This document provides a reference guide to the Acegi Security
  39. System for Spring, which is a series of classes that deliver
  40. authentication and authorization services within the Spring
  41. Framework.</para>
  42. <para>I would like to acknowledge this reference was prepared using the
  43. DocBook configuration included with the Spring Framework. The Spring team
  44. in turn acknowledge Chris Bauer (Hibernate) for his assistance with their
  45. DocBook.</para>
  46. </preface>
  47. <chapter id="security">
  48. <title>Security</title>
  49. <sect1 id="security-before-you-begin">
  50. <title>Before You Begin</title>
  51. <para>For your security, each official release JAR of Acegi Security has
  52. been signed by the project leader. This does not in any way alter the
  53. liability disclaimer contained in the License, but it does ensure you
  54. are using a properly reviewed, official build of Acegi Security. Please
  55. refer to the <literal>readme.txt</literal> file in the root of the
  56. release distribution for instructions on how to validate the JARs are
  57. correctly signed, and which certificate has been used to sign
  58. them.</para>
  59. </sect1>
  60. <sect1 id="security-introduction">
  61. <title>Introduction</title>
  62. <para>The Acegi Security System for Spring provides authentication and
  63. authorization capabilities for Spring-powered projects, with optional
  64. integration with popular web containers. The security architecture was
  65. designed from the ground up using "The Spring Way" of development, which
  66. includes using bean contexts, interceptors and interface-driven
  67. programming. As a consequence, the Acegi Security System for Spring is
  68. useful out-of-the-box for those seeking to secure their Spring-based
  69. applications, and can be easily adapted to complex customized
  70. requirements.</para>
  71. <para>Security involves two distinct operations, authentication and
  72. authorization. The former relates to resolving whether or not a caller
  73. is who they claim to be. Authorization on the other hand relates to
  74. determining whether or not an authenticated caller is permitted to
  75. perform a given operation.</para>
  76. <para>Throughout the Acegi Security System for Spring, the user, system
  77. or agent that needs to be authenticated is referred to as a "principal".
  78. The security architecture does not have a notion of roles or groups,
  79. which you may be familiar with from other security implementations,
  80. although equivalent functionality is fully accommodated by Acegi
  81. Security.</para>
  82. <sect2 id="security-introduction-status">
  83. <title>Current Status</title>
  84. <para>The Acegi Security System for Spring is widely used by members
  85. of the Spring Community. The APIs are considered stable and only minor
  86. changes are expected. Having said that, like many other projects we
  87. need to strike a balance between backward compatibility and
  88. improvement. Effective version 0.6.1, Acegi Security uses the Apache
  89. Portable Runtime Project versioning guidelines, available from
  90. <literal>http://apr.apache.org/versioning.html</literal>.</para>
  91. <para>Some minor improvements are currently intended prior to the
  92. 1.0.0 release, although each of these represent additional
  93. functionality that will in no way modify the project's central
  94. interfaces or classes. Users of Acegi Security System for Spring
  95. should therefore be comfortable depending on the current version of
  96. the project in their applications.</para>
  97. </sect2>
  98. </sect1>
  99. <sect1 id="security-high-level-design">
  100. <title>High Level Design</title>
  101. <sect2 id="security-high-level-design-key-components">
  102. <title>Key Components</title>
  103. <para>Most enterprise applications have four basic security
  104. requirements. First, they need to be able to authenticate a principal.
  105. Second, they need to be able to secure web requests. Third, enterprise
  106. applications need to be able to secure services layer methods.
  107. Finally, quite often an enterprise application will need to secure
  108. domain object instances. Acegi Security provides a comprehensive
  109. framework for achieving all of these four common enterprise
  110. application security requirements.</para>
  111. <para>The Acegi Security System for Spring essentially comprises eight
  112. key functional parts:</para>
  113. <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
  114. <listitem>
  115. <para>An <literal>Authentication</literal> object which holds the
  116. principal, credentials and the authorities granted to the
  117. principal. The object can also store additional information
  118. associated with an authentication request, such as the source
  119. TCP/IP address.</para>
  120. </listitem>
  121. <listitem>
  122. <para>A <literal>ContextHolder</literal> which holds the
  123. <literal>Authentication</literal> object in a
  124. <literal>ThreadLocal</literal>-bound object.</para>
  125. </listitem>
  126. <listitem>
  127. <para>An <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> to authenticate
  128. the <literal>Authentication</literal> object presented via the
  129. <literal>ContextHolder</literal>.</para>
  130. </listitem>
  131. <listitem>
  132. <para>An <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> to authorize a
  133. given operation.</para>
  134. </listitem>
  135. <listitem>
  136. <para>A <literal>RunAsManager</literal> to optionally replace the
  137. <literal>Authentication</literal> object whilst a given operation
  138. is being executed.</para>
  139. </listitem>
  140. <listitem>
  141. <para>A "secure object" interceptor, which coordinates the
  142. authentication, authorization, run-as replacement, after
  143. invocation handling and execution of a given operation.</para>
  144. </listitem>
  145. <listitem>
  146. <para>An <literal>AfterInvocationManager</literal> which can
  147. modify an <literal>Object</literal> returned from a "secure
  148. object" invocation, such as removing <literal>Collection</literal>
  149. elements a principal does not have authority to access.</para>
  150. </listitem>
  151. <listitem>
  152. <para>An acess control list (ACL) management package, which can be
  153. used to obtain the ACLs applicable for domain object
  154. instances.</para>
  155. </listitem>
  156. </itemizedlist>
  157. <para>A "secure object" interceptor executes most of the Acegi
  158. Security key classes and in doing so delivers the framework's major
  159. features. Given its importance, Figure 1 shows the key relationships
  160. and concrete implementations of
  161. <literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal>.</para>
  162. <para><mediaobject>
  163. <imageobject role="html">
  164. <imagedata align="center"
  165. fileref="images/SecurityInterception.gif"
  166. format="GIF" />
  167. </imageobject>
  168. <caption>
  169. <para>Figure 1: The key "secure object" model</para>
  170. </caption>
  171. </mediaobject></para>
  172. <para>Each "secure object" interceptor (hereinafter called a "security
  173. interceptor") works with a particular type of "secure object". So,
  174. what is a secure object? Secure objects refer to any type of object
  175. that can have security applied to it. A secure object must provide
  176. some form of callback, so that the security interceptor can
  177. transparently do its work as required, and callback the object when it
  178. is time for it to proceed with the requested operation. If secure
  179. objects cannot provide a native callback approach, a wrapper needs to
  180. be written so this becomes possible.</para>
  181. <para>Each secure object has its own package under
  182. <literal>net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept</literal>. Every other package
  183. in the security system is secure object independent, in that it can
  184. support any type of secure object presented.</para>
  185. <para>Only developers contemplating an entirely new way of
  186. intercepting and authorizing requests would need to use secure objects
  187. directly. For example, it would be possible to build a new secure
  188. object to secure calls to a messaging system that does not use
  189. <literal>MethodInvocation</literal>s. Most Spring applications will
  190. simply use the three currently supported secure object types (AOP
  191. Alliance <literal>MethodInvocation</literal>, AspectJ
  192. <literal>JoinPoint</literal> and web request
  193. <literal>FilterInterceptor</literal>) with complete
  194. transparency.</para>
  195. <para>Each of the eight key parts of Acegi Security are discussed in
  196. detail throughout this document.</para>
  197. </sect2>
  198. <sect2 id="security-high-level-design-supported-secure-objects">
  199. <title>Supported Secure Objects</title>
  200. <para>As shown in the base of Figure 1, the Acegi Security System for
  201. Spring currently supports three secure objects.</para>
  202. <para>The first handles an AOP Alliance
  203. <literal>MethodInvocation</literal>. This is the secure object type
  204. used to protect Spring beans. Developers will generally use this
  205. secure object type to secure their business objects. To make a
  206. standard Spring-hosted bean available as a
  207. <literal>MethodInvocation</literal>, the bean is simply published
  208. through a <literal>ProxyFactoryBean</literal> or
  209. <literal>BeanNameAutoProxyCreator</literal> or
  210. <literal>DefaultAdvisorAutoProxyCreator</literal>. Most Spring
  211. developers would already be familiar with these due to their use in
  212. transactions and other areas of Spring.</para>
  213. <para>The second type is an AspectJ <literal>JoinPoint</literal>.
  214. AspectJ has a particular use in securing domain object instances, as
  215. these are most often managed outside the Spring bean container. By
  216. using AspectJ, standard constructs such as <literal>new
  217. Person();</literal> can be used and full security will be applied to
  218. them by Acegi Security. The
  219. <literal>AspectJSecurityInterceptor</literal> is still managed by
  220. Spring, which creates the aspect singleton and wires it with the
  221. appropriate authentication managers, access decision managers and so
  222. on.</para>
  223. <para>The third type is a <literal>FilterInvocation</literal>. This is
  224. an object included with the Acegi Security System for Spring. It is
  225. created by an included filter and simply wraps the HTTP
  226. <literal>ServletRequest</literal>, <literal>ServletResponse</literal>
  227. and <literal>FilterChain</literal>. The
  228. <literal>FilterInvocation</literal> enables HTTP resources to be
  229. secured. Developers do not usually need to understand the mechanics of
  230. how this works, because they just add the filters to their
  231. <literal>web.xml</literal> and let the security system do its
  232. work.</para>
  233. </sect2>
  234. <sect2 id="security-high-level-design-configuration-attributes">
  235. <title>Configuration Attributes</title>
  236. <para>Every secure object can represent an infinite number of
  237. individual requests. For example, a
  238. <literal>MethodInvocation</literal> can represent the invocation of
  239. any method with any arguments, whilst a
  240. <literal>FilterInvocation</literal> can represent any HTTP URL.</para>
  241. <para>The Acegi Security System for Spring needs to record the
  242. configuration that applies to each of these possible requests. The
  243. security configuration of a request to
  244. <literal>BankManager.getBalance(int accountNumber)</literal> needs to
  245. be very different from the security configuration of a request to
  246. <literal>BankManager.approveLoan(int applicationNumber)</literal>.
  247. Similarly, the security configuration of a request to
  248. <literal>http://some.bank.com/index.htm</literal> needs to be very
  249. different from the security configuration of
  250. <literal>http://some.bank.com/manage/timesheet.jsp</literal>.</para>
  251. <para>To store the various security configurations associated with
  252. different requests, a configuration attribute is used. At an
  253. implementation level a configuration attribute is represented by the
  254. <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal> interface. One concrete
  255. implementation of <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal> is provided,
  256. <literal>SecurityConfig</literal>, which simply stores a configuration
  257. attribute as a <literal>String</literal>.</para>
  258. <para>The collection of <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal>s associated
  259. with a particular request is held in a
  260. <literal>ConfigAttributeDefinition</literal>. This concrete class is
  261. simply a holder of <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal>s and does
  262. nothing special.</para>
  263. <para>When a request is received by the security interceptor, it needs
  264. to determine which configuration attributes apply. In other words, it
  265. needs to find the <literal>ConfigAttributeDefinition</literal> which
  266. applies to the request. This decision is handled by the
  267. <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal> interface. The main method
  268. provided by this interface is <literal>public
  269. ConfigAttributeDefinition getAttributes(Object object)</literal>, with
  270. the <literal>Object</literal> being the secure object. Recall the
  271. secure object contains details of the request, so the
  272. <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal> implementation will be able
  273. to extract the details it requires to lookup the relevant
  274. <literal>ConfigAttributeDefinition</literal>.</para>
  275. </sect2>
  276. </sect1>
  277. <sect1 id="security-request-contexts">
  278. <title>Request Contexts</title>
  279. <sect2 id="security-contexts-history">
  280. <title>Historical Approach</title>
  281. <para>Prior to release 0.9.0, Acegi Security used a
  282. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> to store a <literal>Context</literal>
  283. between sessions. A particular subclass of <literal>Context</literal>,
  284. <literal>SecureContext</literal> defined an interface used for storage
  285. of the <literal>Authentication</literal> object. The
  286. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> was a <literal>ThreadLocal</literal>.
  287. This was removed from 0.9.0 after discussion with other Spring
  288. developers for the sake of consistency. See for example
  289. <literal>http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.java.springframework.devel/8290</literal>.
  290. This history is mentioned as the long period
  291. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> was used will likely mean that
  292. certain documentation you encounter concerning Acegi Security might
  293. still refer to <literal>ContextHolder</literal>. Generally you can
  294. just substitute "<literal>SecurityContextHolder</literal>" for
  295. "<literal>ContextHolder</literal>", and
  296. "<literal>SecurityContext</literal>" for
  297. "<literal>SecureContext</literal>", and you'll have the primary
  298. meaning of such documentation.</para>
  299. </sect2>
  300. <sect2 id="security-contexts-security-context">
  301. <title>SecurityContext</title>
  302. <para>The Acegi Security System for Spring uses a
  303. <literal>SecurityContextHolder</literal> to store the
  304. <literal>SecurityContext</literal>. The
  305. <literal>SecurityContext</literal> contains a single getter/setter for
  306. <literal>Authentication</literal>. All Acegi Security classes query
  307. the <literal>SecurityContextHolder</literal> for obtaining the current
  308. <literal>SecurityContext</literal> (and in turn the principal).
  309. <literal>SecurityContextHolder</literal> is an
  310. <literal>InheritableThreadLocal</literal>, meaning it is associated
  311. with the current thread of execution.</para>
  312. </sect2>
  313. <sect2 id="security-contexts-storage">
  314. <title>Context Storage</title>
  315. <para>Central to Acegi Security's design is that the contents of the
  316. <literal>SecurityContextHolder</literal> (which is simply a
  317. <literal>SecurityContext</literal> implementation) can be stored
  318. between web requests. This is so that a successfully authenticated
  319. principal can be identified on subsequent requests through the
  320. <literal>Authentication</literal> stored inside the
  321. <literal>SecurityContext</literal> obtained from the
  322. <literal>SecurityContextHolder</literal>. The
  323. <literal>HttpSessionContextIntegrationFilter</literal> exists to
  324. automatically copy the contents of a well-defined
  325. <literal>HttpSession</literal> attribute into the
  326. <literal>SecurityContextHolder</literal>, then at the end of each
  327. request, copy the <literal>SecurityContextHolder</literal> contents
  328. back into the <literal>HttpSession</literal> ready for next
  329. request.</para>
  330. <para>It is essential - and an extremely common error of end users -
  331. that <literal>HttpSessionContextIntegrationFilter</literal> appears
  332. before any other Acegi Security filter. Acegi Security filters expect
  333. to be able to modify the <literal>SecurityContextHolder</literal>
  334. contents as they see fit, and something else (namely
  335. <literal>HttpSessionContextIntegrationFilter</literal>) will store
  336. those between requests if necessary. This is why
  337. <literal>HttpSessionContextIntegrationFilter</literal> must be the
  338. first filter used.</para>
  339. <para>You can define a custom <literal>SecurityContext</literal>
  340. implementation be used in your application by setting the
  341. <literal>context</literal> property on the
  342. <literal>HttpSessionContextIntegrationFilter</literal> bean.</para>
  343. </sect2>
  344. </sect1>
  345. <sect1 id="security-interception">
  346. <title>Security Interception</title>
  347. <sect2 id="security-interception-all-secure-objects">
  348. <title>All Secure Objects</title>
  349. <para>As described in the High Level Design section, each secure
  350. object has its own security interceptor which is responsible for
  351. handling each request. Handling involves a number of
  352. operations:</para>
  353. <orderedlist>
  354. <listitem>
  355. <para>Store the configuration attributes that are associated with
  356. each secure request.</para>
  357. </listitem>
  358. <listitem>
  359. <para>Extract the <literal>ConfigAttributeDefinition</literal>
  360. that applies to the request from the relevant
  361. <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal>.</para>
  362. </listitem>
  363. <listitem>
  364. <para>Obtain the <literal>Authentication</literal> object from the
  365. <literal>SecureContext</literal>, which is held in the
  366. <literal>ContextHolder</literal>.</para>
  367. </listitem>
  368. <listitem>
  369. <para>Pass the <literal>Authentication</literal> object to the
  370. <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>, update the
  371. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> with the response.</para>
  372. </listitem>
  373. <listitem>
  374. <para>Pass the <literal>Authentication</literal> object, the
  375. <literal>ConfigAttributeDefinition</literal>, and the secure
  376. object to the <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal>.</para>
  377. </listitem>
  378. <listitem>
  379. <para>Pass the <literal>Authentication</literal> object, the
  380. <literal>ConfigAttributeDefinition</literal>, and the secure
  381. object to the <literal>RunAsManager</literal>.</para>
  382. </listitem>
  383. <listitem>
  384. <para>If the <literal>RunAsManager</literal> returns a new
  385. <literal>Authentication</literal> object, update the
  386. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> with it.</para>
  387. </listitem>
  388. <listitem>
  389. <para>Proceed with the request execution of the secure
  390. object.</para>
  391. </listitem>
  392. <listitem>
  393. <para>If the <literal>RunAsManager</literal> earlier returned a
  394. new <literal>Authentication</literal> object, update the
  395. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> with the
  396. <literal>Authentication</literal> object that was previously
  397. returned by the <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>.</para>
  398. </listitem>
  399. <listitem>
  400. <para>If an <literal>AfterInvocationManager</literal> is defined,
  401. pass it the result of the secure object execution so that it may
  402. throw an <literal>AccessDeniedException</literal> or mutate the
  403. returned object if required.</para>
  404. </listitem>
  405. <listitem>
  406. <para>Return any result received from the
  407. <literal>AfterInvocationManager</literal>, or if no
  408. <literal>AfterInvocationManager</literal> is defined, simply
  409. return the result provided by the secure object execution.</para>
  410. </listitem>
  411. </orderedlist>
  412. <para>Whilst this may seem quite involved, don't worry. Developers
  413. interact with the security process by simply implementing basic
  414. interfaces (such as <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal>), which
  415. are fully discussed below.</para>
  416. <para>The <literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal> handles the
  417. majority of the flow listed above. As shown in Figure 1, each secure
  418. object has its own security interceptor which subclasses
  419. <literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal>. Each of these secure
  420. object-specific security interceptors are discussed below.</para>
  421. </sect2>
  422. <sect2 id="security-interception-aopalliance">
  423. <title>AOP Alliance (MethodInvocation) Security Interceptor</title>
  424. <para>To secure <literal>MethodInvocation</literal>s, developers
  425. simply add a properly configured
  426. <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal> into the application
  427. context. Next the beans requiring security are chained into the
  428. interceptor. This chaining is accomplished using Spring’s
  429. <literal>ProxyFactoryBean</literal> or
  430. <literal>BeanNameAutoProxyCreator</literal>, as commonly used by many
  431. other parts of Spring (refer to the sample application for examples).
  432. Alternatively, Acegi Security provides a
  433. <literal>MethodDefinitionSourceAdvisor</literal> which may be used
  434. with Spring's <literal>DefaultAdvisorAutoProxyCreator</literal> to
  435. automatically chain the security interceptor in front of any beans
  436. defined against the <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal>. The
  437. <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal> itself is configured as
  438. follows:</para>
  439. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="bankManagerSecurity" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.method.aopalliance.MethodSecurityInterceptor"&gt;
  440. &lt;property name="validateConfigAttributes"&gt;&lt;value&gt;true&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  441. &lt;property name="authenticationManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="authenticationManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  442. &lt;property name="accessDecisionManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="accessDecisionManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  443. &lt;property name="runAsManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="runAsManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  444. &lt;property name="afterInvocationManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="afterInvocationManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  445. &lt;property name="objectDefinitionSource"&gt;
  446. &lt;value&gt;
  447. net.sf.acegisecurity.context.BankManager.delete*=ROLE_SUPERVISOR,RUN_AS_SERVER
  448. net.sf.acegisecurity.context.BankManager.getBalance=ROLE_TELLER,ROLE_SUPERVISOR,BANKSECURITY_CUSTOMER,RUN_AS_SERVER
  449. &lt;/value&gt;
  450. &lt;/property&gt;
  451. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  452. <para>As shown above, the <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal>
  453. is configured with a reference to an
  454. <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>,
  455. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> and
  456. <literal>RunAsManager</literal>, which are each discussed in separate
  457. sections below. In this case we've also defined an
  458. <literal>AfterInvocationManager</literal>, although this is entirely
  459. optional. The <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal> is also
  460. configured with configuration attributes that apply to different
  461. method signatures. A full discussion of configuration attributes is
  462. provided in the High Level Design section of this document.</para>
  463. <para>The <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal> can be
  464. configured with configuration attributes in three ways. The first is
  465. via a property editor and the application context, which is shown
  466. above. The second is via defining the configuration attributes in your
  467. source code using Jakarta Commons Attributes or Java 5 Annotations.
  468. The third is via writing your own
  469. <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal>, although this is beyond the
  470. scope of this document. Irrespective of the approach used, the
  471. <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal> is responsible for returning
  472. a <literal>ConfigAttributeDefinition</literal> object that contains
  473. all of the configuration attributes associated with a single secure
  474. method.</para>
  475. <para>It should be noted that the
  476. <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor.setObjectDefinitionSource()</literal>
  477. method actually expects an instance of
  478. <literal>MethodDefinitionSource</literal>. This is a marker interface
  479. which subclasses <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal>. It simply
  480. denotes the <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal> understands
  481. <literal>MethodInvocation</literal>s. In the interests of simplicity
  482. we'll continue to refer to the
  483. <literal>MethodDefinitionSource</literal> as an
  484. <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal>, as the distinction is of
  485. little relevance to most users of the
  486. <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal>.</para>
  487. <para>If using the application context property editor approach (as
  488. shown above), commas are used to delimit the different configuration
  489. attributes that apply to a given method pattern. Each configuration
  490. attribute is assigned into its own <literal>SecurityConfig</literal>
  491. object. The <literal>SecurityConfig</literal> object is discussed in
  492. the High Level Design section.</para>
  493. <para>If you are using the Jakarta Commons Attributes approach, your
  494. bean context will be configured differently:</para>
  495. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="attributes" class="org.springframework.metadata.commons.CommonsAttributes"/&gt;
  496. &lt;bean id="objectDefinitionSource" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.method.MethodDefinitionAttributes"&gt;
  497. &lt;property name="attributes"&gt;&lt;ref local="attributes"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  498. &lt;/bean&gt;
  499. &lt;bean id="bankManagerSecurity" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.method.MethodSecurityInterceptor"&gt;
  500. &lt;property name="validateConfigAttributes"&gt;&lt;value&gt;false&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  501. &lt;property name="authenticationManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="authenticationManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  502. &lt;property name="accessDecisionManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="accessDecisionManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  503. &lt;property name="runAsManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="runAsManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  504. &lt;property name="objectDefinitionSource"&gt;&lt;ref bean="objectDefinitionSource"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  505. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  506. <para>In addition, your source code will contain Jakarta Commons
  507. Attributes tags that refer to a concrete implementation of
  508. <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal>. The following example uses the
  509. <literal>SecurityConfig</literal> implementation to represent the
  510. configuration attributes, and results in the same security
  511. configuration as provided by the property editor approach
  512. above:</para>
  513. <para><programlisting>public interface BankManager {
  514. /**
  515. * @@SecurityConfig("ROLE_SUPERVISOR")
  516. * @@SecurityConfig("RUN_AS_SERVER")
  517. */
  518. public void deleteSomething(int id);
  519. /**
  520. * @@SecurityConfig("ROLE_SUPERVISOR")
  521. * @@SecurityConfig("RUN_AS_SERVER")
  522. */
  523. public void deleteAnother(int id);
  524. /**
  525. * @@SecurityConfig("ROLE_TELLER")
  526. * @@SecurityConfig("ROLE_SUPERVISOR")
  527. * @@SecurityConfig("BANKSECURITY_CUSTOMER")
  528. * @@SecurityConfig("RUN_AS_SERVER")
  529. */
  530. public float getBalance(int id);
  531. }</programlisting></para>
  532. <para>If you are using the Spring Security Java 5 Annotations
  533. approach, your bean context will be configured as follows:</para>
  534. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="attributes" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.annotation.SecurityAnnotationAttributes"/&gt;
  535. &lt;bean id="objectDefinitionSource" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.method.MethodDefinitionAttributes"&gt;
  536. &lt;property name="attributes"&gt;&lt;ref local="attributes"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  537. &lt;/bean&gt;
  538. &lt;bean id="bankManagerSecurity" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.method.MethodSecurityInterceptor"&gt;
  539. &lt;property name="validateConfigAttributes"&gt;&lt;value&gt;false&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  540. &lt;property name="authenticationManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="authenticationManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  541. &lt;property name="accessDecisionManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="accessDecisionManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  542. &lt;property name="runAsManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="runAsManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  543. &lt;property name="objectDefinitionSource"&gt;&lt;ref bean="objectDefinitionSource"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  544. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  545. <para>In addition, your source code will contain the Acegi Java 5
  546. Security Annotations that represent the
  547. <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal>. The following example uses the
  548. <literal>@Secured</literal> annotations to represent the configuration
  549. attributes, and results in the same security configuration as provided
  550. by the property editor approach:</para>
  551. <para><programlisting>import net.sf.acegisecurity.annotation.Secured;
  552. public interface BankManager {
  553. /**
  554. * Delete something
  555. */
  556. @Secured({"ROLE_SUPERVISOR","RUN_AS_SERVER" })
  557. public void deleteSomething(int id);
  558. /**
  559. * Delete another
  560. */
  561. @Secured({"ROLE_SUPERVISOR","RUN_AS_SERVER" })
  562. public void deleteAnother(int id);
  563. /**
  564. * Get balance
  565. */
  566. @Secured({"ROLE_TELLER","ROLE_SUPERVISOR","BANKSECURITY_CUSTOMER","RUN_AS_SERVER" })
  567. public float getBalance(int id);
  568. }</programlisting></para>
  569. <para>You might have noticed the
  570. <literal>validateConfigAttributes</literal> property in the above
  571. <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal> examples. When set to
  572. <literal>true</literal> (the default), at startup time the
  573. <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal> will evaluate if the
  574. provided configuration attributes are valid. It does this by checking
  575. each configuration attribute can be processed by either the
  576. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> or the
  577. <literal>RunAsManager</literal>. If neither of these can process a
  578. given configuration attribute, an exception is thrown. If using the
  579. Jakarta Commons Attributes method of configuration, you should set
  580. <literal>validateConfigAttributes</literal> to
  581. <literal>false</literal>.</para>
  582. </sect2>
  583. <sect2 id="security-interception-aspectj">
  584. <title>AspectJ (JoinPoint) Security Interceptor</title>
  585. <para>The AspectJ security interceptor is very similar to the AOP
  586. Alliance security interceptor discussed in the previous section.
  587. Indeed we will only discuss the differences in this section.</para>
  588. <para>The AspectJ interceptor is named
  589. <literal>AspectJSecurityInterceptor</literal>. Unlike the AOP Alliance
  590. security interceptor, which relies on the Spring application context
  591. to weave in the security interceptor via proxying, the
  592. <literal>AspectJSecurityInterceptor</literal> is weaved in via the
  593. AspectJ compiler. It would not be uncommon to use both types of
  594. security interceptors in the same application, with
  595. <literal>AspectJSecurityInterceptor</literal> being used for domain
  596. object instance security and the AOP Alliance
  597. <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal> being used for services
  598. layer security.</para>
  599. <para>Let's first consider how the
  600. <literal>AspectJSecurityInterceptor</literal> is configured in the
  601. Spring application context:</para>
  602. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="bankManagerSecurity" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.method.aspectj.AspectJSecurityInterceptor"&gt;
  603. &lt;property name="validateConfigAttributes"&gt;&lt;value&gt;true&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  604. &lt;property name="authenticationManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="authenticationManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  605. &lt;property name="accessDecisionManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="accessDecisionManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  606. &lt;property name="runAsManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="runAsManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  607. &lt;property name="afterInvocationManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="afterInvocationManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  608. &lt;property name="objectDefinitionSource"&gt;
  609. &lt;value&gt;
  610. net.sf.acegisecurity.context.BankManager.delete*=ROLE_SUPERVISOR,RUN_AS_SERVER
  611. net.sf.acegisecurity.context.BankManager.getBalance=ROLE_TELLER,ROLE_SUPERVISOR,BANKSECURITY_CUSTOMER,RUN_AS_SERVER
  612. &lt;/value&gt;
  613. &lt;/property&gt;
  614. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  615. <para>As you can see, aside from the class name, the
  616. <literal>AspectJSecurityInterceptor</literal> is exactly the same as
  617. the AOP Alliance security interceptor. Indeed the two interceptors can
  618. share the same <literal>objectDefinitionSource</literal>, as the
  619. <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal> works with
  620. <literal>java.lang.reflect.Method</literal>s rather than an AOP
  621. library-specific class. Of course, your access decisions have access
  622. to the relevant AOP library-specific invocation (ie
  623. <literal>MethodInvocation</literal> or <literal>JoinPoint</literal>)
  624. and as such can consider a range of addition criteria when making
  625. access decisions (such as method arguments).</para>
  626. <para>Next you'll need to define an AspectJ <literal>aspect</literal>.
  627. For example:</para>
  628. <para><programlisting>package net.sf.acegisecurity.samples.aspectj;
  629. import net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.method.aspectj.AspectJSecurityInterceptor;
  630. import net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.method.aspectj.AspectJCallback;
  631. import org.springframework.beans.factory.InitializingBean;
  632. public aspect DomainObjectInstanceSecurityAspect implements InitializingBean {
  633. private AspectJSecurityInterceptor securityInterceptor;
  634. pointcut domainObjectInstanceExecution(): target(PersistableEntity)
  635. &amp;&amp; execution(public * *(..)) &amp;&amp; !within(DomainObjectInstanceSecurityAspect);
  636. Object around(): domainObjectInstanceExecution() {
  637. if (this.securityInterceptor != null) {
  638. AspectJCallback callback = new AspectJCallback() {
  639. public Object proceedWithObject() {
  640. return proceed();
  641. }
  642. };
  643. return this.securityInterceptor.invoke(thisJoinPoint, callback);
  644. } else {
  645. return proceed();
  646. }
  647. }
  648. public AspectJSecurityInterceptor getSecurityInterceptor() {
  649. return securityInterceptor;
  650. }
  651. public void setSecurityInterceptor(AspectJSecurityInterceptor securityInterceptor) {
  652. this.securityInterceptor = securityInterceptor;
  653. }
  654. public void afterPropertiesSet() throws Exception {
  655. if (this.securityInterceptor == null)
  656. throw new IllegalArgumentException("securityInterceptor required");
  657. }
  658. }</programlisting></para>
  659. <para>In the above example, the security interceptor will be applied
  660. to every instance of <literal>PersistableEntity</literal>, which is an
  661. abstract class not shown (you can use any other class or
  662. <literal>pointcut</literal> expression you like). For those curious,
  663. <literal>AspectJCallback</literal> is needed because the
  664. <literal>proceed();</literal> statement has special meaning only
  665. within an <literal>around()</literal> body. The
  666. <literal>AspectJSecurityInterceptor</literal> calls this anonymous
  667. <literal>AspectJCallback</literal> class when it wants the target
  668. object to continue.</para>
  669. <para>You will need to configure Spring to load the aspect and wire it
  670. with the <literal>AspectJSecurityInterceptor</literal>. A bean
  671. declaration which achieves this is shown below:</para>
  672. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="domainObjectInstanceSecurityAspect"
  673. class="net.sf.acegisecurity.samples.aspectj.DomainObjectInstanceSecurityAspect"
  674. factory-method="aspectOf"&gt;
  675. &lt;property name="securityInterceptor"&gt;&lt;ref bean="aspectJSecurityInterceptor"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  676. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  677. <para>That's it! Now you can create your beans from anywhere within
  678. your application, using whatever means you think fit (eg <literal>new
  679. Person();</literal>) and they will have the security interceptor
  680. applied.</para>
  681. </sect2>
  682. <sect2 id="security-interception-filterinvocation">
  683. <title>FilterInvocation Security Interceptor</title>
  684. <para>To secure <literal>FilterInvocation</literal>s, developers need
  685. to add a filter to their <literal>web.xml</literal> that delegates to
  686. the <literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal>. A typical
  687. configuration example is provided below: <programlisting>&lt;filter&gt;
  688. &lt;filter-name&gt;Acegi HTTP Request Security Filter&lt;/filter-name&gt;
  689. &lt;filter-class&gt;net.sf.acegisecurity.util.FilterToBeanProxy&lt;/filter-class&gt;
  690. &lt;init-param&gt;
  691. &lt;param-name&gt;targetClass&lt;/param-name&gt;
  692. &lt;param-value&gt;net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.web.SecurityEnforcementFilter&lt;/param-value&gt;
  693. &lt;/init-param&gt;
  694. &lt;/filter&gt;
  695. &lt;filter-mapping&gt;
  696. &lt;filter-name&gt;Acegi HTTP Request Security Filter&lt;/filter-name&gt;
  697. &lt;url-pattern&gt;/*&lt;/url-pattern&gt;
  698. &lt;/filter-mapping&gt;</programlisting></para>
  699. <para>Notice that the filter is actually a
  700. <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal>. Most of the filters used by the
  701. Acegi Security System for Spring use this class. Refer to the Filters
  702. section to learn more about this bean.</para>
  703. <para>In the application context you will need to configure three
  704. beans:</para>
  705. <programlisting>&lt;bean id="securityEnforcementFilter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.web.SecurityEnforcementFilter"&gt;
  706. &lt;property name="filterSecurityInterceptor"&gt;&lt;ref bean="filterInvocationInterceptor"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  707. &lt;property name="authenticationEntryPoint"&gt;&lt;ref bean="authenticationEntryPoint"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  708. &lt;/bean&gt;
  709. &lt;bean id="authenticationEntryPoint" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.webapp.AuthenticationProcessingFilterEntryPoint"&gt;
  710. &lt;property name="loginFormUrl"&gt;&lt;value&gt;/acegilogin.jsp&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  711. &lt;property name="forceHttps"&gt;&lt;value&gt;false&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  712. &lt;/bean&gt;
  713. &lt;bean id="filterInvocationInterceptor" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.web.FilterSecurityInterceptor"&gt;
  714. &lt;property name="authenticationManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="authenticationManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  715. &lt;property name="accessDecisionManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="accessDecisionManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  716. &lt;property name="runAsManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="runAsManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  717. &lt;property name="objectDefinitionSource"&gt;
  718. &lt;value&gt;
  719. CONVERT_URL_TO_LOWERCASE_BEFORE_COMPARISON
  720. \A/secure/super/.*\Z=ROLE_WE_DONT_HAVE
  721. \A/secure/.*\Z=ROLE_SUPERVISOR,ROLE_TELLER
  722. &lt;/value&gt;
  723. &lt;/property&gt;
  724. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting>
  725. <para>The <literal>AuthenticationEntryPoint</literal> will be called
  726. if the user requests a secure HTTP resource but they are not
  727. authenticated. The class handles presenting the appropriate response
  728. to the user so that authentication can begin. Three concrete
  729. implementations are provided with the Acegi Security System for
  730. Spring: <literal>AuthenticationProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal>
  731. for commencing a form-based authentication,
  732. <literal>BasicProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> for commencing a
  733. HTTP Basic authentication process, and
  734. <literal>CasProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> for commencing a Yale
  735. Central Authentication Service (CAS) login. The
  736. <literal>AuthenticationProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> and
  737. <literal>CasProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> have optional
  738. properties related to forcing the use of HTTPS, so please refer to the
  739. JavaDocs if you require this.</para>
  740. <para>The <literal>PortMapper</literal> provides information on which
  741. HTTPS ports correspond to which HTTP ports. This is used by the
  742. <literal>AuthenticationProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> and
  743. several other beans. The default implementation,
  744. <literal>PortMapperImpl</literal>, knows the common HTTP ports 80 and
  745. 8080 map to HTTPS ports 443 and 8443 respectively. You can customise
  746. this mapping if desired.</para>
  747. <para>The <literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal> primarily
  748. provides session management support and initiates authentication when
  749. required. It delegates actual <literal>FilterInvocation</literal>
  750. security decisions to the configured
  751. <literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor</literal>.</para>
  752. <para>Like any other security interceptor, the
  753. <literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor</literal> requires a reference to
  754. an <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>,
  755. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> and
  756. <literal>RunAsManager</literal>, which are each discussed in separate
  757. sections below. The <literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor</literal> is
  758. also configured with configuration attributes that apply to different
  759. HTTP URL requests. A full discussion of configuration attributes is
  760. provided in the High Level Design section of this document.</para>
  761. <para>The <literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor</literal> can be
  762. configured with configuration attributes in two ways. The first is via
  763. a property editor and the application context, which is shown above.
  764. The second is via writing your own
  765. <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal>, although this is beyond the
  766. scope of this document. Irrespective of the approach used, the
  767. <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal> is responsible for returning
  768. a <literal>ConfigAttributeDefinition</literal> object that contains
  769. all of the configuration attributes associated with a single secure
  770. HTTP URL.</para>
  771. <para>It should be noted that the
  772. <literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor.setObjectDefinitionSource()</literal>
  773. method actually expects an instance of
  774. <literal>FilterInvocationDefinitionSource</literal>. This is a marker
  775. interface which subclasses <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal>.
  776. It simply denotes the <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal>
  777. understands <literal>FilterInvocation</literal>s. In the interests of
  778. simplicity we'll continue to refer to the
  779. <literal>FilterInvocationDefinitionSource</literal> as an
  780. <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal>, as the distinction is of
  781. little relevance to most users of the
  782. <literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor</literal>.</para>
  783. <para>If using the application context property editor approach (as
  784. shown above), commas are used to delimit the different configuration
  785. attributes that apply to each HTTP URL. Each configuration attribute
  786. is assigned into its own <literal>SecurityConfig</literal> object. The
  787. <literal>SecurityConfig</literal> object is discussed in the High
  788. Level Design section. The <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal>
  789. created by the property editor,
  790. <literal>FilterInvocationDefinitionSource</literal>, matches
  791. configuration attributes against <literal>FilterInvocations</literal>
  792. based on expression evaluation of the request URL. Two standard
  793. expression syntaxes are supported. The default is to treat all
  794. expressions as regular expressions. Alternatively, the presence of a
  795. <literal>PATTERN_TYPE_APACHE_ANT</literal> directive will cause all
  796. expressions to be treated as Apache Ant paths. It is not possible to
  797. mix expression syntaxes within the same definition. For example, the
  798. earlier configuration could be generated using Apache Ant paths as
  799. follows:</para>
  800. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="filterInvocationInterceptor" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.web.FilterSecurityInterceptor"&gt;
  801. &lt;property name="authenticationManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="authenticationManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  802. &lt;property name="accessDecisionManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="accessDecisionManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  803. &lt;property name="runAsManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="runAsManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  804. &lt;property name="objectDefinitionSource"&gt;
  805. &lt;value&gt;
  806. CONVERT_URL_TO_LOWERCASE_BEFORE_COMPARISON
  807. PATTERN_TYPE_APACHE_ANT
  808. /secure/super/**=ROLE_WE_DONT_HAVE
  809. /secure/**=ROLE_SUPERVISOR,ROLE_TELLER
  810. &lt;/value&gt;
  811. &lt;/property&gt;
  812. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  813. <para>Irrespective of the type of expression syntax used, expressions
  814. are always evaluated in the order they are defined. Thus it is
  815. important that more specific expressions are defined higher in the
  816. list than less specific expressions. This is reflected in our example
  817. above, where the more specific <literal>/secure/super/</literal>
  818. pattern appears higher than the less specific
  819. <literal>/secure/</literal> pattern. If they were reversed, the
  820. <literal>/secure/</literal> pattern would always match and the
  821. <literal>/secure/super/</literal> pattern would never be
  822. evaluated.</para>
  823. <para>The special keyword
  824. <literal>CONVERT_URL_TO_LOWERCASE_BEFORE_COMPARISON</literal> causes
  825. the <literal>FilterInvocationDefinitionSource</literal> to
  826. automatically convert a request URL to lowercase before comparison
  827. against the expressions. Whilst by default the case of the request URL
  828. is not converted, it is generally recommended to use
  829. <literal>CONVERT_URL_TO_LOWERCASE_BEFORE_COMPARISON</literal> and
  830. write each expression assuming lowercase.</para>
  831. <para>As with other security interceptors, the
  832. <literal>validateConfigAttributes</literal> property is observed. When
  833. set to <literal>true</literal> (the default), at startup time the
  834. <literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor</literal> will evaluate if the
  835. provided configuration attributes are valid. It does this by checking
  836. each configuration attribute can be processed by either the
  837. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> or the
  838. <literal>RunAsManager</literal>. If neither of these can process a
  839. given configuration attribute, an exception is thrown.</para>
  840. </sect2>
  841. </sect1>
  842. <sect1 id="security-authentication">
  843. <title>Authentication</title>
  844. <sect2 id="security-authentication-requests">
  845. <title>Authentication Requests</title>
  846. <para>Authentication requires a way for client code to present its
  847. security identification to the Acegi Security System for Spring. This
  848. is the role of the <literal>Authentication</literal> interface. The
  849. <literal>Authentication</literal> interface holds three important
  850. objects: the principal (the identity of the caller), the credentials
  851. (the proof of the identity of the caller, such as a password), and the
  852. authorities that have been granted to the principal. The principal and
  853. its credentials are populated by the client code, whilst the granted
  854. authorities are populated by the
  855. <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>.</para>
  856. <para><mediaobject>
  857. <imageobject role="html">
  858. <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/Authentication.gif"
  859. format="GIF" />
  860. </imageobject>
  861. <caption>
  862. <para>Figure 3: Key Authentication Architecture</para>
  863. </caption>
  864. </mediaobject></para>
  865. <para>As shown in Figure 3, the Acegi Security System for Spring
  866. includes several concrete <literal>Authentication</literal>
  867. implementations:</para>
  868. <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
  869. <listitem>
  870. <para><literal>UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken</literal>
  871. allows a username and password to be presented as the principal
  872. and credentials respectively. It is also what is created by the
  873. HTTP Session Authentication system.</para>
  874. </listitem>
  875. <listitem>
  876. <para><literal>TestingAuthenticationToken</literal> facilitates
  877. unit testing by automatically being considered an authenticated
  878. object by its associated
  879. <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal>.</para>
  880. </listitem>
  881. <listitem>
  882. <para><literal>RunAsUserToken</literal> is used by the default
  883. run-as authentication replacement implementation. This is
  884. discussed further in the Run-As Authentication Replacement
  885. section.</para>
  886. </listitem>
  887. <listitem>
  888. <para><literal>CasAuthenticationToken</literal> is used to
  889. represent a successful Yale Central Authentication Service (CAS)
  890. authentication. This is discussed further in the CAS
  891. section.</para>
  892. </listitem>
  893. <listitem>
  894. <para><literal>PrincipalAcegiUserToken</literal> and
  895. <literal>JettyAcegiUserToken</literal> implement
  896. <literal>AuthByAdapter</literal> (a subclass of
  897. <literal>Authentication</literal>) and are used whenever
  898. authentication is completed by Acegi Security System for Spring
  899. container adapters. This is discussed further in the Container
  900. Adapters section.</para>
  901. </listitem>
  902. </itemizedlist>
  903. <para>The authorities granted to a principal are represented by the
  904. <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> interface. The
  905. <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> interface is discussed at length
  906. in the Authorization section.</para>
  907. </sect2>
  908. <sect2 id="security-authentication-manager">
  909. <title>Authentication Manager</title>
  910. <para>As discussed in the Security Interception section, the
  911. <literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal> extracts the
  912. <literal>Authentication</literal> object from the
  913. <literal>SecureContext</literal> in the
  914. <literal>ContextHolder</literal>. This is then passed to an
  915. <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>. The
  916. <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> interface is very
  917. simple:</para>
  918. <programlisting>public Authentication authenticate(Authentication authentication) throws AuthenticationException;</programlisting>
  919. <para>Implementations of <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> are
  920. required to throw an <literal>AuthenticationException</literal> should
  921. authentication fail, or return a fully populated
  922. <literal>Authentication</literal> object. In particular, the returned
  923. <literal>Authentication</literal> object should contain an array of
  924. <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> objects. The
  925. <literal>SecurityInterceptor</literal> places the populated
  926. <literal>Authentication</literal> object back in the
  927. <literal>SecureContext</literal> in the
  928. <literal>ContextHolder</literal>, overwriting the original
  929. <literal>Authentication</literal> object.</para>
  930. <para>The <literal>AuthenticationException</literal> has a number of
  931. subclasses. The most important are
  932. <literal>BadCredentialsException</literal> (an incorrect principal or
  933. credentials), <literal>DisabledException</literal> and
  934. <literal>LockedException</literal>. The latter two exceptions indicate
  935. the principal was found, but the credentials were not checked and
  936. authentication is denied. An
  937. <literal>AuthenticationServiceException</literal> is also provided,
  938. which indicates the authentication system could not process the
  939. request (eg a database was unavailable).
  940. <literal>AuthenticationException</literal> also has a
  941. <literal>CredentialsExpiredException</literal> and
  942. <literal>AccoungtExpiredException</literal> subclass, although these
  943. are less commonly used.</para>
  944. </sect2>
  945. <sect2 id="security-authentication-provider">
  946. <title>Provider-Based Authentication</title>
  947. <para>Whilst the basic <literal>Authentication</literal> and
  948. <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> interfaces enable users to
  949. develop their own authentication systems, users should consider using
  950. the provider-based authentication packages provided by the Acegi
  951. Security System for Spring. The key class,
  952. <literal>ProviderManager</literal>, is configured via the bean context
  953. with a list of <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal>s:</para>
  954. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="authenticationManager" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.ProviderManager"&gt;
  955. &lt;property name="providers"&gt;
  956. &lt;list&gt;
  957. &lt;ref bean="daoAuthenticationProvider"/&gt;
  958. &lt;ref bean="someOtherAuthenticationProvider"/&gt;
  959. &lt;/list&gt;
  960. &lt;/property&gt;
  961. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  962. <para><literal>ProviderManager</literal> calls a series of registered
  963. <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> implementations, until one
  964. is found that indicates it is able to authenticate a given
  965. <literal>Authentication</literal> class. When the first compatible
  966. <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> is located, it is passed the
  967. authentication request. The <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal>
  968. will then either throw an <literal>AuthenticationException</literal>
  969. or return a fully populated <literal>Authentication</literal>
  970. object.</para>
  971. <para>Note the <literal>ProviderManager</literal> may throw a
  972. <literal>ProviderNotFoundException</literal> (a subclass of
  973. <literal>AuthenticationException</literal>) if it none of the
  974. registered <literal>AuthenticationProviders</literal> can validate the
  975. <literal>Authentication</literal> object.</para>
  976. <para>Several <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal>
  977. implementations are provided with the Acegi Security System for
  978. Spring:</para>
  979. <para><itemizedlist spacing="compact">
  980. <listitem>
  981. <para><literal>TestingAuthenticationProvider</literal> is able
  982. to authenticate a <literal>TestingAuthenticationToken</literal>.
  983. The limit of its authentication is simply to treat whatever is
  984. contained in the <literal>TestingAuthenticationToken</literal>
  985. as valid. This makes it ideal for use during unit testing, as
  986. you can create an <literal>Authentication</literal> object with
  987. precisely the <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> objects
  988. required for calling a given method. You definitely would not
  989. register this <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> on a
  990. production system.</para>
  991. </listitem>
  992. <listitem>
  993. <para><literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> is able to
  994. authenticate a
  995. <literal>UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken</literal> by
  996. accessing an authentication respository via a data access
  997. object. This is discussed further below, as it is the main way
  998. authentication is initially handled.</para>
  999. </listitem>
  1000. <listitem>
  1001. <para><literal>RunAsImplAuthenticationProvider</literal> is able
  1002. to authenticate a <literal>RunAsUserToken</literal>. This is
  1003. discussed further in the Run-As Authentication Replacement
  1004. section. You would not register this
  1005. <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> if you were not using
  1006. run-as replacement.</para>
  1007. </listitem>
  1008. <listitem>
  1009. <para><literal>AuthByAdapterProvider</literal> is able to
  1010. authenticate any <literal>AuthByAdapter</literal> (a subclass of
  1011. <literal>Authentication</literal> used with container adapters).
  1012. This is discussed further in the Container Adapters section. You
  1013. would not register this
  1014. <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> if you were not using
  1015. container adapters.</para>
  1016. </listitem>
  1017. <listitem>
  1018. <para><literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> is able to
  1019. authenticate Yale Central Authentication Service (CAS) tickets.
  1020. This is discussed further in the CAS Single Sign On
  1021. section.</para>
  1022. </listitem>
  1023. <listitem>
  1024. <para><literal>JaasAuthenticationProvider</literal> is able to
  1025. delegate authentication requests to a JAAS
  1026. <literal>LoginModule</literal>. This is discussed further
  1027. below.</para>
  1028. </listitem>
  1029. </itemizedlist></para>
  1030. </sect2>
  1031. <sect2 id="security-authentication-provider-dao">
  1032. <title>Data Access Object Authentication Provider</title>
  1033. <para>The Acegi Security System for Spring includes a
  1034. production-quality <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal>
  1035. implementation called <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal>.
  1036. This authentication provider is able to authenticate a
  1037. <literal>UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken</literal> by obtaining
  1038. authentication details from a data access object configured at bean
  1039. creation time:</para>
  1040. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="daoAuthenticationProvider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.dao.DaoAuthenticationProvider"&gt;
  1041. &lt;property name="authenticationDao"&gt;&lt;ref bean="inMemoryDaoImpl"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1042. &lt;property name="saltSource"&gt;&lt;ref bean="saltSource"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1043. &lt;property name="passwordEncoder"&gt;&lt;ref bean="passwordEncoder"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1044. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  1045. <para>The <literal>PasswordEncoder</literal> and
  1046. <literal>SaltSource</literal> are optional. A
  1047. <literal>PasswordEncoder</literal> provides encoding and decoding of
  1048. passwords obtained from the authentication repository. A
  1049. <literal>SaltSource</literal> enables the passwords to be populated
  1050. with a "salt", which enhances the security of the passwords in the
  1051. authentication repository. <literal>PasswordEncoder</literal>
  1052. implementations are provided with the Acegi Security System for Spring
  1053. covering MD5, SHA and cleartext encodings. Two
  1054. <literal>SaltSource</literal> implementations are also provided:
  1055. <literal>SystemWideSaltSource</literal> which encodes all passwords
  1056. with the same salt, and <literal>ReflectionSaltSource</literal>, which
  1057. inspects a given property of the returned
  1058. <literal>UserDetails</literal> object to obtain the salt. Please refer
  1059. to the JavaDocs for further details on these optional features.</para>
  1060. <para>In addition to the properties above, the
  1061. <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> supports optional caching
  1062. of <literal>UserDetails</literal> objects. The
  1063. <literal>UserCache</literal> interface enables the
  1064. <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> to place a
  1065. <literal>UserDetails</literal> object into the cache, and retrieve it
  1066. from the cache upon subsequent authentication attempts for the same
  1067. username. By default the <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal>
  1068. uses the <literal>NullUserCache</literal>, which performs no caching.
  1069. A usable caching implementation is also provided,
  1070. <literal>EhCacheBasedUserCache</literal>, which is configured as
  1071. follows:</para>
  1072. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="daoAuthenticationProvider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.dao.DaoAuthenticationProvider"&gt;
  1073. &lt;property name="authenticationDao"&gt;&lt;ref bean="authenticationDao"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1074. &lt;property name="userCache"&gt;&lt;ref bean="userCache"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1075. &lt;/bean&gt;
  1076. &lt;bean id="cacheManager" class="org.springframework.cache.ehcache.EhCacheManagerFactoryBean"&gt;
  1077. &lt;property name="configLocation"&gt;
  1078. &lt;value&gt;classpath:/ehcache-failsafe.xml&lt;/value&gt;
  1079. &lt;/property&gt;
  1080. &lt;/bean&gt;
  1081. &lt;bean id="userCacheBackend" class="org.springframework.cache.ehcache.EhCacheFactoryBean"&gt;
  1082. &lt;property name="cacheManager"&gt;
  1083. &lt;ref local="cacheManager"/&gt;
  1084. &lt;/property&gt;
  1085. &lt;property name="cacheName"&gt;
  1086. &lt;value&gt;userCache&lt;/value&gt;
  1087. &lt;/property&gt;
  1088. &lt;/bean&gt;
  1089. &lt;bean id="userCache" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.dao.cache.EhCacheBasedUserCache"&gt;
  1090. &lt;property name="cache"&gt;&lt;ref local="userCacheBackend"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1091. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  1092. <para>All Acegi Security EH-CACHE implementations (including
  1093. <literal>EhCacheBasedUserCache</literal>) require an EH-CACHE
  1094. <literal>Cache</literal> object. The <literal>Cache</literal> object
  1095. can be obtained from wherever you like, although we recommend you use
  1096. Spring's factory classes as shown in the above configuration. If using
  1097. Spring's factory classes, please refer to the Spring documentation for
  1098. further details on how to optimise the cache storage location, memory
  1099. usage, eviction policies, timeouts etc.</para>
  1100. <para>For a class to be able to provide the
  1101. <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> with access to an
  1102. authentication repository, it must implement the
  1103. <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal> interface:</para>
  1104. <para><programlisting>public UserDetails loadUserByUsername(String username) throws UsernameNotFoundException, DataAccessException;</programlisting></para>
  1105. <para>The <literal>UserDetails</literal> is an interface that provides
  1106. getters that guarantee non-null provision of basic authentication
  1107. information such as the username, password, granted authorities and
  1108. whether the user is enabled or disabled. A concrete implementation,
  1109. <literal>User</literal>, is also provided. Acegi Security users will
  1110. need to decide when writing their <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal>
  1111. what type of <literal>UserDetails</literal> to return. In most cases
  1112. <literal>User</literal> will be used directly or subclassed, although
  1113. special circumstances (such as object relational mappers) may require
  1114. users to write their own <literal>UserDetails</literal> implementation
  1115. from scratch. <literal>UserDetails</literal> is often used to store
  1116. additional principal-related properties (such as their telephone
  1117. number and email address), so they can be easily used by web
  1118. views.</para>
  1119. <para>Given <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal> is so simple to
  1120. implement, it should be easy for users to retrieve authentication
  1121. information using a persistence strategy of their choice.</para>
  1122. <para>A design decision was made not to support account locking in the
  1123. <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal>, as doing so would have
  1124. increased the complexity of the <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal>
  1125. interface. For instance, a method would be required to increase the
  1126. count of unsuccessful authentication attempts. Such functionality
  1127. could be easily provided by leveraging the application event
  1128. publishing features discussed below.</para>
  1129. <para><literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> returns an
  1130. <literal>Authentication</literal> object which in turn has its
  1131. <literal>principal</literal> property set. The principal will be
  1132. either a <literal>String</literal> (which is essentially the username)
  1133. or a <literal>UserDetails</literal> object (which was looked up from
  1134. the <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal>). By default the
  1135. <literal>UserDetails</literal> is returned, as this enables
  1136. applications to add extra properties potentially of use in
  1137. applications, such as the user's full name, email address etc. If
  1138. using container adapters, or if your applications were written to
  1139. operate with <literal>String</literal>s (as was the case for releases
  1140. prior to Acegi Security 0.6), you should set the
  1141. <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider.forcePrincipalAsString</literal>
  1142. property to <literal>true</literal> in your application
  1143. context.</para>
  1144. </sect2>
  1145. <sect2 id="security-authentication-provider-events">
  1146. <title>Event Publishing</title>
  1147. <para>The <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> automatically
  1148. obtains the <literal>ApplicationContext</literal> it is running in at
  1149. startup time. This allows the provider to publish events through the
  1150. standard Spring event framework. Three types of event messages are
  1151. published:</para>
  1152. <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
  1153. <listitem>
  1154. <para><literal>AuthenticationSuccessEvent</literal> is published
  1155. when an authentication request is successful.</para>
  1156. </listitem>
  1157. <listitem>
  1158. <para><literal>AuthenticationFailureDisabledEvent</literal> is
  1159. published when an authentication request is unsuccessful because
  1160. the returned <literal>UserDetails</literal> is disabled. This is
  1161. normally the case when an account is locked.</para>
  1162. </listitem>
  1163. <listitem>
  1164. <para><literal>AuthenticationFailureAccountExpiredEvent</literal>
  1165. is published when an authentication request is unsuccessful
  1166. because the returned <literal>UserDetails</literal> indicates the
  1167. account has expired. Some applications may wish to distinguish
  1168. between an account being disabled and expired.</para>
  1169. </listitem>
  1170. <listitem>
  1171. <para><literal>AuthenticationFailureCredentialsExpiredEvent</literal>
  1172. is published when an authentication request is unsuccessful
  1173. because the returned <literal>UserDetails</literal> indicates the
  1174. account's credentials have expired. Some applications may wish to
  1175. expire the credentials if, for example, a password is not changed
  1176. with sufficient regularity.</para>
  1177. </listitem>
  1178. <listitem>
  1179. <para><literal>AuthenticationFailureUsernameNotFoundEvent</literal>
  1180. is published when an authentication request is unsuccessful
  1181. because the <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal> could not locate
  1182. the <literal>UserDetails</literal>.</para>
  1183. </listitem>
  1184. <listitem>
  1185. <para><literal>AuthenticationFailurePasswordEvent</literal> is
  1186. published when an authentication request is unsuccessful because
  1187. the presented password did not match that in the
  1188. <literal>UserDetails</literal>.</para>
  1189. </listitem>
  1190. </itemizedlist>
  1191. <para>Each event contains two objects: the
  1192. <literal>Authentication</literal> object that represented the
  1193. authentication request, and the <literal>UserDetails</literal> object
  1194. that was found in response to the authentication request (clearly the
  1195. latter will be a dummy object in the case of
  1196. <literal>AuthenticationFailureUsernameNotFoundEvent</literal>). The
  1197. <literal>Authentication</literal> interface provides a
  1198. <literal>getDetails()</literal> method which often includes
  1199. information that event consumers may find useful (eg the TCP/IP
  1200. address that the authentication request originated from).</para>
  1201. <para>As per standard Spring event handling, you can receive these
  1202. events by adding a bean to the application context which implements
  1203. the <literal>ApplicationListener</literal> interface. Included with
  1204. Acegi Security is a <literal>LoggerListener</literal> class which
  1205. receives these events and publishes their details to Commons Logging.
  1206. Refer to the JavaDocs for <literal>LoggerListener</literal> for
  1207. details on the logging priorities used for different message
  1208. types.</para>
  1209. <para>This event publishing system enables you to implement account
  1210. locking and record authentication event history. This might be of
  1211. interest to application users, who can be advised of the times and
  1212. source IP address of all unsuccessful password attempts (and account
  1213. lockouts) since their last successful login. Such capabilities are
  1214. simple to implement and greatly improve the security of your
  1215. application.</para>
  1216. </sect2>
  1217. <sect2 id="security-authentication-provider-in-memory">
  1218. <title>In-Memory Authentication</title>
  1219. <para>Whilst it is easy to use the
  1220. <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> and create a custom
  1221. <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal> implementation that extracts
  1222. information from a persistence engine of choice, many applications do
  1223. not require such complexity. One alternative is to configure an
  1224. authentication repository in the application context itself using the
  1225. <literal>InMemoryDaoImpl</literal>:</para>
  1226. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="inMemoryDaoImpl" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.dao.memory.InMemoryDaoImpl"&gt;
  1227. &lt;property name="userMap"&gt;
  1228. &lt;value&gt;
  1229. marissa=koala,ROLE_TELLER,ROLE_SUPERVISOR
  1230. dianne=emu,ROLE_TELLER
  1231. scott=wombat,ROLE_TELLER
  1232. peter=opal,disabled,ROLE_TELLER
  1233. &lt;/value&gt;
  1234. &lt;/property&gt;
  1235. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  1236. <para>The <literal>userMap</literal> property contains each of the
  1237. usernames, passwords, a list of granted authorities and an optional
  1238. enabled/disabled keyword. Commas delimit each token. The username must
  1239. appear to the left of the equals sign, and the password must be the
  1240. first token to the right of the equals sign. The
  1241. <literal>enabled</literal> and <literal>disabled</literal> keywords
  1242. (case insensitive) may appear in the second or any subsequent token.
  1243. Any remaining tokens are treated as granted authorities, which are
  1244. created as <literal>GrantedAuthorityImpl</literal> objects (refer to
  1245. the Authorization section for further discussion on granted
  1246. authorities). Note that if a user has no password and/or no granted
  1247. authorities, the user will not be created in the in-memory
  1248. authentication repository.</para>
  1249. </sect2>
  1250. <sect2 id="security-authentication-provider-jdbc">
  1251. <title>JDBC Authentication</title>
  1252. <para>The Acegi Security System for Spring also includes an
  1253. authentication provider that can obtain authentication information
  1254. from a JDBC data source. The typical configuration for the
  1255. <literal>JdbcDaoImpl</literal> is shown below:</para>
  1256. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="dataSource" class="org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.DriverManagerDataSource"&gt;
  1257. &lt;property name="driverClassName"&gt;&lt;value&gt;org.hsqldb.jdbcDriver&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1258. &lt;property name="url"&gt;&lt;value&gt;jdbc:hsqldb:hsql://localhost:9001&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1259. &lt;property name="username"&gt;&lt;value&gt;sa&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1260. &lt;property name="password"&gt;&lt;value&gt;&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1261. &lt;/bean&gt;
  1262. &lt;bean id="jdbcDaoImpl" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.dao.jdbc.JdbcDaoImpl"&gt;
  1263. &lt;property name="dataSource"&gt;&lt;ref bean="dataSource"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1264. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  1265. <para>You can use different relational database management systems by
  1266. modifying the <literal>DriverManagerDataSource</literal> shown above.
  1267. Irrespective of the database used, a standard schema must be used as
  1268. indicated in <literal>dbinit.txt</literal>.</para>
  1269. <para>If you default schema is unsuitable for your needs,
  1270. <literal>JdbcDaoImpl</literal> provides two properties that allow
  1271. customisation of the SQL statements. You may also subclass the
  1272. <literal>JdbcDaoImpl</literal> if further customisation is necessary.
  1273. Please refer to the JavaDocs for details.</para>
  1274. <para>The Acegi Security System for Spring ships with a Hypersonic SQL
  1275. instance that has the required authentication information and sample
  1276. data already populated. To use this server, simply execute the
  1277. <literal>server.bat</literal> or <literal>server.sh</literal> script
  1278. included in the distribution. This will load a new database server
  1279. instance that will service requests made to the URL indicated in the
  1280. bean context configuration shown above.</para>
  1281. </sect2>
  1282. <sect2 id="security-authentication-concurrent-login">
  1283. <title>Concurrent Session Support</title>
  1284. <para>Acegi Security is able to stop the same principal authenticating
  1285. to the same web application multiple times concurrently. Put
  1286. differently, you can stop user "Batman" from logging into a web
  1287. application twice at the same time.</para>
  1288. <para>To use concurrent session support, you'll need to add the
  1289. following to web.xml:</para>
  1290. <para><programlisting>&lt;listener&gt;
  1291. &lt;listener-class&gt;net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.session.HttpSessionEventPublisher&lt;/listener-class&gt;
  1292. &lt;/listener&gt;</programlisting></para>
  1293. <para>The above code causes an <literal>ApplicationEvent</literal> to
  1294. be published to the Spring <literal>ApplicationContext</literal> every
  1295. time a <literal>HttpSession</literal> commences or terminates. This is
  1296. critical, as it allows the
  1297. <literal>ConcurrentSessionControllerImpl</literal> to be notified when
  1298. a session ends. Next up you'll need to wire the
  1299. <literal>ConcurrentSessionControllerImpl</literal> into your existing
  1300. <literal>ProviderManager</literal>:</para>
  1301. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="authenticationManager" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.ProviderManager"&gt;
  1302. &lt;property name="providers"&gt;
  1303. &lt;!-- your providers go here --&gt;
  1304. &lt;/property&gt;
  1305. &lt;property name="sessionController"&gt;&lt;ref bean="concurrentSessionController"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1306. &lt;/bean&gt;
  1307. &lt;bean id="concurrentSessionController" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.ConcurrentSessionControllerImpl"&gt;
  1308. &lt;property name="maxSessions"&gt;&lt;value&gt;1&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1309. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  1310. <para>Ensure you do not in-line the
  1311. <literal>ConcurrentSessionControllerImpl</literal> when declaring it
  1312. in your XML. This is important, as it appears that in-lined bean
  1313. declarations do not receive ApplicationEvents.</para>
  1314. <para>The <literal>ConcurrentSessionControllerImpl</literal> relies
  1315. heavily on the
  1316. <literal>Authentication.getPrincipal().equals()</literal> method. If
  1317. you are using a custom <literal>Authentication</literal> object,
  1318. please keep this in mind. In order for the
  1319. <literal>ConcurrentSessionControllerImpl</literal> to release a given
  1320. <literal>HttpSession</literal>, and thus let the user log in to a new
  1321. <literal>HttpSession</literal>, the existing
  1322. <literal>HttpSession</literal> must be invalidated. For example, if
  1323. "Batman" logs into the web application, checks for crimes being
  1324. commited, and the just closes his browser with out "logging out", he
  1325. will not be able to log back in until his
  1326. <literal>HttpSession</literal> is timed out by the server (and a
  1327. corresponding <literal>ApplicationEvent</literal> is published via
  1328. <literal>HttpSessionEventPublisher</literal> to the
  1329. <literal>ConcurrentSessionControllerImpl</literal>). You would have to
  1330. look at your container's documentation to determine the default
  1331. timeout period. You can also configure the session timeout in your
  1332. <literal>web.xml</literal>:<programlisting>&lt;session-config&gt;
  1333. &lt;session-timeout&gt;30&lt;/session-timeout&gt;
  1334. &lt;/session-config&gt;</programlisting></para>
  1335. </sect2>
  1336. <sect2 id="security-authentication-provider-jaas">
  1337. <title>JAAS Authentication</title>
  1338. <para>Acegi Security provides a package able to delegate
  1339. authentication requests to the Java Authentication and Authorization
  1340. Service (JAAS). This package is discussed in detail below.</para>
  1341. <para>Central to JAAS operation are login configuration files. To
  1342. learn more about JAAS login configuration files, consult the JAAS
  1343. reference documentation available from Sun Microsystems. We expect you
  1344. to have a basic understanding of JAAS and its login configuration file
  1345. syntax in order to understand this section.</para>
  1346. <sect3>
  1347. <title>JaasAuthenticationProvider</title>
  1348. <para>The <literal>JaasAuthenticationProvider</literal> attempts to
  1349. authenticate a user’s principal and credentials through JAAS.</para>
  1350. <para>Let’s assume we have a JAAS login configuration file,
  1351. <literal>/WEB-INF/login.conf</literal>, with the following
  1352. contents:</para>
  1353. <para><programlisting>JAASTest {
  1354. sample.SampleLoginModule required;
  1355. };</programlisting></para>
  1356. <para>Like all Acegi Security beans, the
  1357. <literal>JaasAuthenticationProvider</literal> is configured via the
  1358. application context. The following definitions would correspond to
  1359. the above JAAS login configuration file:</para>
  1360. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="jaasAuthenticationProvider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.jaas.JaasAuthenticationProvider"&gt;
  1361. &lt;property name="loginConfig"&gt;
  1362. &lt;value&gt;/WEB-INF/login.conf&lt;/value&gt;
  1363. &lt;/property&gt;
  1364. &lt;property name="loginContextName"&gt;
  1365. &lt;value&gt;JAASTest&lt;/value&gt;
  1366. &lt;/property&gt;
  1367. &lt;property name="callbackHandlers"&gt;
  1368. &lt;list&gt;
  1369. &lt;bean class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.jaas.JaasNameCallbackHandler"/&gt;
  1370. &lt;bean class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.jaas.JaasPasswordCallbackHandler"/&gt;
  1371. &lt;/list&gt;
  1372. &lt;/property&gt;
  1373. &lt;property name="authorityGranters"&gt;
  1374. &lt;list&gt;
  1375. &lt;bean class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.jaas.TestAuthorityGranter"/&gt;
  1376. &lt;/list&gt;
  1377. &lt;/property&gt;
  1378. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  1379. <para>The <literal>CallbackHandler</literal>s and
  1380. <literal>AuthorityGranter</literal>s are discussed below.</para>
  1381. </sect3>
  1382. <sect3>
  1383. <title>Callbacks</title>
  1384. <para>Most JAAS <literal>LoginModule</literal>s require a callback
  1385. of some sort. These callbacks are usually used to obtain the
  1386. username and password from the user. In an Acegi Security
  1387. deployment, Acegi Security is responsible for this user interaction
  1388. (typically via a reference to a
  1389. <literal>ContextHolder</literal>-managed
  1390. <literal>Authentication</literal> object). The JAAS package for
  1391. Acegi Security provides two default callback handlers,
  1392. <literal>JaasNameCallbackHandler</literal> and
  1393. <literal>JaasPasswordCallbackHandler</literal>. Each of these
  1394. callback handlers implement
  1395. <literal>JaasAuthenticationCallbackHandler</literal>. In most cases
  1396. these callback handlers can simply be used without understanding the
  1397. internal mechanics. For those needing full control over the callback
  1398. behavior, internally <literal>JaasAutheticationProvider</literal>
  1399. wraps these <literal>JaasAuthenticationCallbackHandler</literal>s
  1400. with an <literal>InternalCallbackHandler</literal>. The
  1401. <literal>InternalCallbackHandler</literal> is the class that
  1402. actually implements JAAS’ normal <literal>CallbackHandler</literal>
  1403. interface. Any time that the JAAS <literal>LoginModule</literal> is
  1404. used, it is passed a list of application context configured
  1405. <literal>InternalCallbackHandler</literal>s. If the
  1406. <literal>LoginModule</literal> requests a callback against the
  1407. <literal>InternalCallbackHandler</literal>s, the callback is in-turn
  1408. passed to the <literal>JaasAuthenticationCallbackHandler</literal>s
  1409. being wrapped.</para>
  1410. </sect3>
  1411. <sect3>
  1412. <title>AuthorityGranters</title>
  1413. <para>JAAS works with principals. Even “roles” are represented as
  1414. principals in JAAS. Acegi Security, on the other hand, works with
  1415. <literal>Authentication</literal> objects. Each
  1416. <literal>Authentication</literal> object contains a single
  1417. principal, and multiple <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>[]s. To
  1418. facilitate mapping between these different concepts, the Acegi
  1419. Security JAAS package includes an
  1420. <literal>AuthorityGranter</literal> interface. An
  1421. <literal>AuthorityGranter</literal> is responsible for inspecting a
  1422. JAAS principal and returning a <literal>String</literal>. The
  1423. <literal>JaasAuthenticationProvider</literal> then creates a
  1424. <literal>JaasGrantedAuthority</literal> (which implements Acegi
  1425. Security’s <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> interface) containing
  1426. both the <literal>AuthorityGranter</literal>-returned
  1427. <literal>String</literal> and the JAAS principal that the
  1428. <literal>AuthorityGranter</literal> was passed. The
  1429. <literal>JaasAuthenticationProvider</literal> obtains the JAAS
  1430. principals by firstly successfully authenticating the user’s
  1431. credentials using the JAAS <literal>LoginModule</literal>, and then
  1432. accessing the <literal>LoginContext</literal> it returns. A call to
  1433. <literal>LoginContext.getSubject().getPrincipals()</literal> is
  1434. made, with each resulting principal passed to each
  1435. <literal>AuthorityGranter</literal> defined against the
  1436. <literal>JaasAuthenticationProvider.setAuthorityGranters(List)</literal>
  1437. property. Acegi Security does not include any production
  1438. <literal>AuthorityGranter</literal>s given every JAAS principal has
  1439. an implementation-specific meaning. However, there is a
  1440. <literal>TestAuthorityGranter</literal> in the unit tests that
  1441. demonstrates a simple <literal>AuthorityGranter</literal>
  1442. implementation.</para>
  1443. </sect3>
  1444. </sect2>
  1445. <sect2 id="security-authentication-recommendations">
  1446. <title>Authentication Recommendations</title>
  1447. <para>With the heavy use of interfaces throughout the authentication
  1448. system (<literal>Authentication</literal>,
  1449. <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>,
  1450. <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> and
  1451. <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal>) it might be confusing to a new
  1452. user to know which part of the authentication system to customize. In
  1453. general, the following is recommended:</para>
  1454. <itemizedlist>
  1455. <listitem>
  1456. <para>Use the
  1457. <literal>UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken</literal>
  1458. implementation where possible.</para>
  1459. </listitem>
  1460. <listitem>
  1461. <para>If you simply need to implement a new authentication
  1462. repository (eg to obtain user details from your application’s
  1463. existing database), use the
  1464. <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> along with the
  1465. <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal>. It is the fastest and safest
  1466. way to integrate an external database.</para>
  1467. </listitem>
  1468. <listitem>
  1469. <para>If you're using Container Adapters or a
  1470. <literal>RunAsManager</literal> that replaces the
  1471. <literal>Authentication</literal> object, ensure you have
  1472. registered the <literal>AuthByAdapterProvider</literal> and
  1473. <literal>RunAsManagerImplProvider</literal> respectively with your
  1474. <literal>ProviderManager</literal>.</para>
  1475. </listitem>
  1476. <listitem>
  1477. <para>Never enable the
  1478. <literal>TestingAuthenticationProvider</literal> on a production
  1479. system. Doing so will allow any client to simply present a
  1480. <literal>TestingAuthenticationToken</literal> and obtain whatever
  1481. access they request.</para>
  1482. </listitem>
  1483. <listitem>
  1484. <para>Adding a new <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> is
  1485. sufficient to support most custom authentication requirements.
  1486. Only unusual requirements would require the
  1487. <literal>ProviderManager</literal> to be replaced with a different
  1488. <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>.</para>
  1489. </listitem>
  1490. </itemizedlist>
  1491. </sect2>
  1492. </sect1>
  1493. <sect1 id="security-authorization">
  1494. <title>Authorization</title>
  1495. <sect2 id="security-authorization-granted-authorities">
  1496. <title>Granted Authorities</title>
  1497. <para>As briefly mentioned in the Authentication section, all
  1498. <literal>Authentication</literal> implementations are required to
  1499. store an array of <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> objects. These
  1500. represent the authorities that have been granted to the principal. The
  1501. <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> objects are inserted into the
  1502. <literal>Authentication</literal> object by the
  1503. <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> and are later read by
  1504. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal>s when making authorization
  1505. decisions.</para>
  1506. <para><literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> is an interface with only
  1507. one method:</para>
  1508. <para><programlisting>public String getAuthority();</programlisting></para>
  1509. <para>This method allows <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal>s to
  1510. obtain a precise <literal>String</literal> representation of the
  1511. <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>. By returning a representation as
  1512. a <literal>String</literal>, a <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> can
  1513. be easily "read" by most <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal>s. If
  1514. a <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> cannot be precisely represented
  1515. as a <literal>String</literal>, the
  1516. <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> is considered "complex" and
  1517. <literal>getAuthority()</literal> must return
  1518. <literal>null</literal>.</para>
  1519. <para>An example of a "complex" <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>
  1520. would be an implementation that stores a list of operations and
  1521. authority thresholds that apply to different customer account numbers.
  1522. Representing this complex <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> as a
  1523. <literal>String</literal> would be quite complex, and as a result the
  1524. <literal>getAuthority()</literal> method should return
  1525. <literal>null</literal>. This will indicate to any
  1526. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> that it will need to
  1527. specifically support the <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>
  1528. implementation in order to understand its contents.</para>
  1529. <para>The Acegi Security System for Spring includes one concrete
  1530. <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> implementation,
  1531. <literal>GrantedAuthorityImpl</literal>. This allows any
  1532. user-specified <literal>String</literal> to be converted into a
  1533. <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>. All
  1534. <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal>s included with the security
  1535. architecture use <literal>GrantedAuthorityImpl</literal> to populate
  1536. the <literal>Authentication</literal> object.</para>
  1537. </sect2>
  1538. <sect2 id="security-authorization-access-decision-managers">
  1539. <title>Access Decision Managers</title>
  1540. <para>The <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> is called by the
  1541. <literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal> and is responsible for
  1542. making final access control decisions. The
  1543. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> interface contains three
  1544. methods:</para>
  1545. <para><programlisting>public void decide(Authentication authentication, Object object, ConfigAttributeDefinition config) throws AccessDeniedException;
  1546. public boolean supports(ConfigAttribute attribute);
  1547. public boolean supports(Class clazz);</programlisting></para>
  1548. <para>As can be seen from the first method, the
  1549. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> is passed via method
  1550. parameters all information that is likely to be of value in assessing
  1551. an authorization decision. In particular, passing the secure
  1552. <literal>Object</literal> enables those arguments contained in the
  1553. actual secure object invocation to be inspected. For example, let's
  1554. assume the secure object was a <literal>MethodInvocation</literal>. It
  1555. would be easy to query the <literal>MethodInvocation</literal> for any
  1556. <literal>Customer</literal> argument, and then implement some sort of
  1557. security logic in the <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> to
  1558. ensure the principal is permitted to operate on that customer.
  1559. Implementations are expected to throw an
  1560. <literal>AccessDeniedException</literal> if access is denied.</para>
  1561. <para>The <literal>supports(ConfigAttribute)</literal> method is
  1562. called by the <literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal> at
  1563. startup time to determine if the
  1564. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> can process the passed
  1565. <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal>. The
  1566. <literal>supports(Class)</literal> method is called by a security
  1567. interceptor implementation to ensure the configured
  1568. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> supports the type of secure
  1569. object that the security interceptor will present.</para>
  1570. </sect2>
  1571. <sect2 id="security-authorization-voting-decision-manager">
  1572. <title>Voting Decision Manager</title>
  1573. <para>Whilst users can implement their own
  1574. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> to control all aspects of
  1575. authorization, the Acegi Security System for Spring includes several
  1576. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> implementations that are
  1577. based on voting. Figure 4 illustrates the relevant classes.</para>
  1578. <para><mediaobject>
  1579. <imageobject role="html">
  1580. <imagedata align="center"
  1581. fileref="images/AccessDecisionVoting.gif"
  1582. format="GIF" />
  1583. </imageobject>
  1584. <caption>
  1585. <para>Figure 4: Voting Decision Manager</para>
  1586. </caption>
  1587. </mediaobject></para>
  1588. <para>Using this approach, a series of
  1589. <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> implementations are polled on
  1590. an authorization decision. The
  1591. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> then decides whether or not
  1592. to throw an <literal>AccessDeniedException</literal> based on its
  1593. assessment of the votes.</para>
  1594. <para>The <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> interface has three
  1595. methods:</para>
  1596. <para><programlisting>public int vote(Authentication authentication, Object object, ConfigAttributeDefinition config);
  1597. public boolean supports(ConfigAttribute attribute);
  1598. public boolean supports(Class clazz);</programlisting></para>
  1599. <para>Concrete implementations return an <literal>int</literal>, with
  1600. possible values being reflected in the
  1601. <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> static fields
  1602. <literal>ACCESS_ABSTAIN</literal>, <literal>ACCESS_DENIED</literal>
  1603. and <literal>ACCESS_GRANTED</literal>. A voting implementation will
  1604. return <literal>ACCESS_ABSTAIN</literal> if it has no opinion on an
  1605. authorization decision. If it does have an opinion, it must return
  1606. either <literal>ACCESS_DENIED</literal> or
  1607. <literal>ACCESS_GRANTED</literal>.</para>
  1608. <para>There are three concrete
  1609. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal>s provided with the Acegi
  1610. Security System for Spring that tally the votes. The
  1611. <literal>ConsensusBased</literal> implementation will grant or deny
  1612. access based on the consensus of non-abstain votes. Properties are
  1613. provided to control behavior in the event of an equality of votes or
  1614. if all votes are abstain. The <literal>AffirmativeBased</literal>
  1615. implementation will grant access if one or more
  1616. <literal>ACCESS_GRANTED</literal> votes were received (ie a deny vote
  1617. will be ignored, provided there was at least one grant vote). Like the
  1618. <literal>ConsensusBased</literal> implementation, there is a parameter
  1619. that controls the behavior if all voters abstain. The
  1620. <literal>UnanimousBased</literal> provider expects unanimous
  1621. <literal>ACCESS_GRANTED</literal> votes in order to grant access,
  1622. ignoring abstains. It will deny access if there is any
  1623. <literal>ACCESS_DENIED</literal> vote. Like the other implementations,
  1624. there is a parameter that controls the behaviour if all voters
  1625. abstain.</para>
  1626. <para>It is possible to implement a custom
  1627. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> that tallies votes
  1628. differently. For example, votes from a particular
  1629. <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> might receive additional
  1630. weighting, whilst a deny vote from a particular voter may have a veto
  1631. effect.</para>
  1632. <para>There are two concrete <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal>
  1633. implementations provided with the Acegi Security System for Spring.
  1634. The <literal>RoleVoter</literal> class will vote if any
  1635. ConfigAttribute begins with <literal>ROLE_</literal>. It will vote to
  1636. grant access if there is a <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> which
  1637. returns a <literal>String</literal> representation (via the
  1638. <literal>getAuthority()</literal> method) exactly equal to one or more
  1639. <literal>ConfigAttributes</literal> starting with
  1640. <literal>ROLE_</literal>. If there is no exact match of any
  1641. <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal> starting with
  1642. <literal>ROLE_</literal>, the <literal>RoleVoter</literal> will vote
  1643. to deny access. If no <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal> begins with
  1644. <literal>ROLE_</literal>, the voter will abstain.
  1645. <literal>RoleVoter</literal> is case sensitive on comparisons as well
  1646. as the <literal>ROLE_</literal> prefix.</para>
  1647. <para>BasicAclEntryVoter is the other concrete voter included with
  1648. Acegi Security. It integrates with Acegi Security's
  1649. <literal>AclManager</literal> (discussed later). This voter is
  1650. designed to have multiple instances in the same application context,
  1651. such as:</para>
  1652. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="aclContactReadVoter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.vote.BasicAclEntryVoter"&gt;
  1653. &lt;property name="processConfigAttribute"&gt;&lt;value&gt;ACL_CONTACT_READ&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1654. &lt;property name="processDomainObjectClass"&gt;&lt;value&gt;sample.contact.Contact&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1655. &lt;property name="aclManager"&gt;&lt;ref local="aclManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1656. &lt;property name="requirePermission"&gt;
  1657. &lt;list&gt;
  1658. &lt;ref local="net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry.ADMINISTRATION"/&gt;
  1659. &lt;ref local="net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry.READ"/&gt;
  1660. &lt;/list&gt;
  1661. &lt;/property&gt;
  1662. &lt;/bean&gt;
  1663. &lt;bean id="aclContactDeleteVoter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.vote.BasicAclEntryVoter"&gt;
  1664. &lt;property name="processConfigAttribute"&gt;&lt;value&gt;ACL_CONTACT_DELETE&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1665. &lt;property name="processDomainObjectClass"&gt;&lt;value&gt;sample.contact.Contact&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1666. &lt;property name="aclManager"&gt;&lt;ref local="aclManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1667. &lt;property name="requirePermission"&gt;
  1668. &lt;list&gt;
  1669. &lt;ref local="net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry.ADMINISTRATION"/&gt;
  1670. &lt;ref local="net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry.DELETE"/&gt;
  1671. &lt;/list&gt;
  1672. &lt;/property&gt;
  1673. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  1674. <para>In the above example, you'd define
  1675. <literal>ACL_CONTACT_READ</literal> or
  1676. <literal>ACL_CONTACT_DELETE</literal> against some methods on a
  1677. <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal> or
  1678. <literal>AspectJSecurityInterceptor</literal>. When those methods are
  1679. invoked, the above applicable voter defined above would vote to grant
  1680. or deny access. The voter would look at the method invocation to
  1681. locate the first argument of type
  1682. <literal>sample.contact.Contact</literal>, and then pass that
  1683. <literal>Contact</literal> to the <literal>AclManager</literal>. The
  1684. <literal>AclManager</literal> will then return an access control list
  1685. (ACL) that applies to the current <literal>Authentication</literal>.
  1686. Assuming that ACL contains one of the listed
  1687. <literal>requirePermission</literal>s, the voter will vote to grant
  1688. access. If the ACL does not contain one of the permissions defined
  1689. against the voter, the voter will vote to deny access.
  1690. <literal>BasicAclEntryVoter</literal> is an important class as it
  1691. allows you to build truly complex applications with domain object
  1692. security entirely defined in the application context. If you're
  1693. interested in learning more about Acegi Security's ACL capabilities
  1694. and how best to apply them, please see the ACL and "After Invocation"
  1695. sections of this reference guide, and the Contacts sample
  1696. application.</para>
  1697. <para>It is also possible to implement a custom
  1698. <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal>. Several examples are provided
  1699. in the Acegi Security System for Spring unit tests, including
  1700. <literal>ContactSecurityVoter</literal> and
  1701. <literal>DenyVoter</literal>. The
  1702. <literal>ContactSecurityVoter</literal> abstains from voting decisions
  1703. where a <literal>CONTACT_OWNED_BY_CURRENT_USER</literal>
  1704. <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal> is not found. If voting, it queries
  1705. the <literal>MethodInvocation</literal> to extract the owner of the
  1706. <literal>Contact</literal> object that is subject of the method call.
  1707. It votes to grant access if the <literal>Contact</literal> owner
  1708. matches the principal presented in the
  1709. <literal>Authentication</literal> object. It could have just as easily
  1710. compared the <literal>Contact</literal> owner with some
  1711. <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> the
  1712. <literal>Authentication</literal> object presented. All of this is
  1713. achieved with relatively few lines of code and demonstrates the
  1714. flexibility of the authorization model.</para>
  1715. </sect2>
  1716. <sect2 id="security-authorization-taglib">
  1717. <title>Authorization-Related Tag Libraries</title>
  1718. <para>The Acegi Security System for Spring comes bundled with several
  1719. JSP tag libraries that eases JSP writing. The tag libraries are known
  1720. as <literal>authz</literal> and provide a range of different
  1721. services.</para>
  1722. <para>All taglib classes are included in the core
  1723. <literal>acegi-security-xx.jar</literal> file, with the
  1724. <literal>authz.tld</literal> located in the JAR's
  1725. <literal>META-INF</literal> directory. This means for JSP 1.2+ web
  1726. containers you can simply include the JAR in the WAR's
  1727. <literal>WEB-INF/lib</literal> directory and it will be available. If
  1728. you're using a JSP 1.1 container, you'll need to declare the JSP
  1729. taglib in your <literal>web.xml file</literal>, and include
  1730. <literal>authz.tld</literal> in the <literal>WEB-INF/lib</literal>
  1731. directory. The following fragment is added to
  1732. <literal>web.xml</literal>:</para>
  1733. <para><programlisting>&lt;taglib&gt;
  1734. &lt;taglib-uri&gt;http://acegisecurity.sf.net/authz&lt;/taglib-uri&gt;
  1735. &lt;taglib-location&gt;/WEB-INF/authz.tld&lt;/taglib-location&gt;
  1736. &lt;/taglib&gt;</programlisting></para>
  1737. <sect3>
  1738. <title>AuthorizeTag</title>
  1739. <para><literal>AuthorizeTag</literal> is used to include content if
  1740. the current principal holds certain
  1741. <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>s.</para>
  1742. <para>The following JSP fragment illustrates how to use the
  1743. <literal>AuthorizeTag</literal>:</para>
  1744. <para><programlisting>&lt;authz:authorize ifAllGranted="ROLE_SUPERVISOR"&gt;
  1745. &lt;td&gt;
  1746. &lt;A HREF="del.htm?id=&lt;c:out value="${contact.id}"/&gt;"&gt;Del&lt;/A&gt;
  1747. &lt;/td&gt;
  1748. &lt;/authz:authorize&gt;</programlisting></para>
  1749. <para>This tag would cause the tag's body to be output if the
  1750. principal has been granted ROLE_SUPERVISOR.</para>
  1751. <para>The <literal>authz:authorize</literal> tag declares the
  1752. following attributes:</para>
  1753. <para><itemizedlist spacing="compact">
  1754. <listitem>
  1755. <para><literal>ifAllGranted</literal>: All the listed roles
  1756. must be granted for the tag to output its body.</para>
  1757. </listitem>
  1758. <listitem>
  1759. <para><literal>ifAnyGranted</literal>: Any of the listed roles
  1760. must be granted for the tag to output its body.</para>
  1761. </listitem>
  1762. <listitem>
  1763. <para><literal>ifNotGranted</literal>: None of the listed
  1764. roles must be granted for the tag to output its body.</para>
  1765. </listitem>
  1766. </itemizedlist></para>
  1767. <para>You'll note that in each attribute you can list multiple
  1768. roles. Simply separate the roles using a comma. The
  1769. <literal>authorize</literal> tag ignores whitespace in
  1770. attributes.</para>
  1771. <para>The tag library logically ANDs all of it's parameters
  1772. together. This means that if you combine two or more attributes, all
  1773. attributes must be true for the tag to output it's body. Don't add
  1774. an <literal>ifAllGranted="ROLE_SUPERVISOR"</literal>, followed by an
  1775. <literal>ifNotGranted="ROLE_SUPERVISOR"</literal>, or you'll be
  1776. surprised to never see the tag's body.</para>
  1777. <para>By requiring all attributes to return true, the authorize tag
  1778. allows you to create more complex authorization scenarios. For
  1779. example, you could declare an
  1780. <literal>ifAllGranted="ROLE_SUPERVISOR"</literal> and an
  1781. <literal>ifNotGranted="ROLE_NEWBIE_SUPERVISOR"</literal> in the same
  1782. tag, in order to prevent new supervisors from seeing the tag body.
  1783. However it would no doubt be simpler to use
  1784. <literal>ifAllGranted="ROLE_EXPERIENCED_SUPERVISOR"</literal> rather
  1785. than inserting NOT conditions into your design.</para>
  1786. <para>One last item: the tag verifies the authorizations in a
  1787. specific order: first <literal>ifNotGranted</literal>, then
  1788. <literal>ifAllGranted</literal>, and finally,
  1789. <literal>ifAnyGranted</literal>.</para>
  1790. </sect3>
  1791. <sect3>
  1792. <title>AuthenticationTag</title>
  1793. <para><literal>AuthenticationTag</literal> is used to simply output
  1794. the current principal to the web page.</para>
  1795. <para>The following JSP fragment illustrates how to use the
  1796. <literal>AuthenticationTag</literal>:</para>
  1797. <para><programlisting>&lt;authz:authentication operation="principal"/&gt;</programlisting></para>
  1798. <para>This tag would cause the principal's name to be output. The
  1799. taglib properly supports the various types of principals that can
  1800. exist in the <literal>Authentication</literal> object, such as a
  1801. <literal>String</literal> or <literal>UserDetails</literal>
  1802. instance.</para>
  1803. <para>The "operation" attribute must always be "principal". This may
  1804. be expanded in the future, such as obtaining other
  1805. <literal>Authentication</literal>-related properties such as email
  1806. address or telephone numbers.</para>
  1807. </sect3>
  1808. <sect3>
  1809. <title>AclTag</title>
  1810. <para><literal>AclTag</literal> is used to include content if the
  1811. current principal has a ACL to the indicated domain object.</para>
  1812. <para>The following JSP fragment illustrates how to use the
  1813. <literal>AclTag</literal>:</para>
  1814. <para><programlisting>&lt;authz:acl domainObject="${contact}" hasPermission="16,1"&gt;
  1815. &lt;td&gt;&lt;A HREF="&lt;c:url value="del.htm"&gt;&lt;c:param name="contactId" value="${contact.id}"/&gt;&lt;/c:url&gt;"&gt;Del&lt;/A&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
  1816. &lt;/authz:acl&gt;</programlisting></para>
  1817. <para>This tag would cause the tag's body to be output if the
  1818. principal holds either permission 16 or permission 1 for the
  1819. "contact" domain object. The numbers are actually integers that are
  1820. used with <literal>AbstractBasicAclEntry</literal> bit masking.
  1821. Please refer tro the ACL section of this reference guide to
  1822. understand more about the ACL capabilities of Acegi Security.</para>
  1823. </sect3>
  1824. </sect2>
  1825. <sect2 id="security-authorization-recommendations">
  1826. <title>Authorization Recommendations</title>
  1827. <para>Given there are several ways to achieve similar authorization
  1828. outcomes in the Acegi Security System for Spring, the following
  1829. general recommendations are made:</para>
  1830. <itemizedlist>
  1831. <listitem>
  1832. <para>Grant authorities using
  1833. <literal>GrantedAuthorityImpl</literal> where possible. Because it
  1834. is already supported by the Acegi Security System for Spring, you
  1835. avoid the need to create custom
  1836. <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> or
  1837. <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> implementations simply
  1838. to populate the <literal>Authentication</literal> object with a
  1839. custom <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>.</para>
  1840. </listitem>
  1841. <listitem>
  1842. <para>Writing an <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal>
  1843. implementation and using either <literal>ConsensusBased</literal>,
  1844. <literal>AffirmativeBased</literal> or
  1845. <literal>UnanimousBased</literal> as the
  1846. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> may be the best approach
  1847. to implementing your custom access decision rules.</para>
  1848. </listitem>
  1849. </itemizedlist>
  1850. </sect2>
  1851. </sect1>
  1852. <sect1 id="afterinvocation">
  1853. <title>After Invocation Handling</title>
  1854. <sect2 id="afterinvocation-overview">
  1855. <title>Overview</title>
  1856. <para>Whilst the <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> is called by
  1857. the <literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal> before proceeding
  1858. with the secure object invocation, some applications need a way of
  1859. modifying the object actually returned by the secure object
  1860. invocation. Whilst you could easily implement your own AOP concern to
  1861. achieve this, Acegi Security provides a convenient hook that has
  1862. several concrete implementations that integrate with its ACL
  1863. capabilities.</para>
  1864. <para>Figure 5 illustrates Acegi Security's
  1865. <literal>AfterInvocationManager</literal> and its concrete
  1866. implementations.</para>
  1867. <para><mediaobject>
  1868. <imageobject role="html">
  1869. <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/AfterInvocation.gif"
  1870. format="GIF" />
  1871. </imageobject>
  1872. <caption>
  1873. <para>Figure 5: After Invocation Implementation</para>
  1874. </caption>
  1875. </mediaobject></para>
  1876. <para>Like many other parts of Acegi Security,
  1877. <literal>AfterInvocationManager</literal> has a single concrete
  1878. implementation, <literal>AfterInvocationProvider</literal>, which
  1879. polls a list of <literal>AfterInvocationProvider</literal>s. Each
  1880. <literal>AfterInvocationProvider</literal> is allowed to modify the
  1881. return object or throw an <literal>AccessDeniedException</literal>.
  1882. Indeed multiple providers can modify the object, as the result of the
  1883. previous provider is passed to the next in the list. Let's now
  1884. consider our ACL-aware implementations of
  1885. <literal>AfterInvocationProvider</literal>.</para>
  1886. <para>Please be aware that if you're using
  1887. <literal>AfterInvocationManager</literal>, you will still need
  1888. configuration attributes that allow the
  1889. <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal>'s
  1890. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> to allow an operation. If
  1891. you're using the typical Acegi Security included
  1892. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> implementations, having no
  1893. configuration attributes defined for a particular secure method
  1894. invocation will cause each <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> to
  1895. abstain from voting. In turn, if the
  1896. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> property
  1897. "<literal>allowIfAllAbstainDecisions</literal>" is
  1898. <literal>false</literal>, an <literal>AccessDeniedException</literal>
  1899. will be thrown. You may avoid this potential issue by either (i)
  1900. setting "<literal>allowIfAllAbstainDecisions</literal>" to
  1901. <literal>true</literal> (although this is generally not recommended)
  1902. or (ii) simply ensure that there is at least one configuration
  1903. attribute that an <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> will vote to
  1904. grant access for. This latter (recommended) approach is usually
  1905. achieved through a <literal>ROLE_USER</literal> or
  1906. <literal>ROLE_AUTHENTICATED</literal> configuration attribute.</para>
  1907. </sect2>
  1908. <sect2 id="afterinvocation-acl-aware">
  1909. <title>ACL-Aware AfterInvocationProviders</title>
  1910. <para>A common services layer method we've all written at one stage or
  1911. another looks like this:</para>
  1912. <para><programlisting>public Contact getById(Integer id);</programlisting></para>
  1913. <para>Quite often, only principals with permission to read the
  1914. <literal>Contact</literal> should be allowed to obtain it. In this
  1915. situation the <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> approach
  1916. provided by the <literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal> will
  1917. not suffice. This is because the identity of the
  1918. <literal>Contact</literal> is all that is available before the secure
  1919. object is invoked. The
  1920. <literal>BasicAclAfterInvocationProvider</literal> delivers a
  1921. solution, and is configured as follows:</para>
  1922. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="afterAclRead" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.afterinvocation.BasicAclEntryAfterInvocationProvider"&gt;
  1923. &lt;property name="aclManager"&gt;&lt;ref local="aclManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1924. &lt;property name="requirePermission"&gt;
  1925. &lt;list&gt;
  1926. &lt;ref local="net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry.ADMINISTRATION"/&gt;
  1927. &lt;ref local="net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry.READ"/&gt;
  1928. &lt;/list&gt;
  1929. &lt;/property&gt;
  1930. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  1931. <para>In the above example, the <literal>Contact</literal> will be
  1932. retrieved and passed to the
  1933. <literal>BasicAclEntryAfterInvocationProvider</literal>. The provider
  1934. will thrown an <literal>AccessDeniedException</literal> if one of the
  1935. listed <literal>requirePermission</literal>s is not held by the
  1936. <literal>Authentication</literal>. The
  1937. <literal>BasicAclEntryAfterInvocationProvider</literal> queries the
  1938. <literal>AclManager</literal> to determine the ACL that applies for
  1939. this domain object to this <literal>Authentication</literal>.</para>
  1940. <para>Similar to the
  1941. <literal>BasicAclEntryAfterInvocationProvider</literal> is
  1942. <literal>BasicAclEntryAfterInvocationCollectionFilteringProvider</literal>.
  1943. It is designed to remove <literal>Collection</literal> or array
  1944. elements for which a principal does not have access. It never thrown
  1945. an <literal>AccessDeniedException</literal> - simply silently removes
  1946. the offending elements. The provider is configured as follows:</para>
  1947. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="afterAclCollectionRead" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.afterinvocation.BasicAclEntryAfterInvocationCollectionFilteringProvider"&gt;
  1948. &lt;property name="aclManager"&gt;&lt;ref local="aclManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  1949. &lt;property name="requirePermission"&gt;
  1950. &lt;list&gt;
  1951. &lt;ref local="net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry.ADMINISTRATION"/&gt;
  1952. &lt;ref local="net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry.READ"/&gt;
  1953. &lt;/list&gt;
  1954. &lt;/property&gt;
  1955. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  1956. <para>As you can imagine, the returned <literal>Object</literal> must
  1957. be a <literal>Collection</literal> or array for this provider to
  1958. operate. It will remove any element if the
  1959. <literal>AclManager</literal> indicates the
  1960. <literal>Authentication</literal> does not hold one of the listed
  1961. <literal>requirePermission</literal>s.</para>
  1962. <para>The Contacts sample application demonstrates these two
  1963. <literal>AfterInvocationProvider</literal>s.</para>
  1964. </sect2>
  1965. </sect1>
  1966. <sect1 id="security-run-as">
  1967. <title>Run-As Authentication Replacement</title>
  1968. <sect2 id="security-run-as-purpose">
  1969. <title>Purpose</title>
  1970. <para>The <literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal> is able to
  1971. temporarily replace the <literal>Authentication</literal> object in
  1972. the <literal>SecureContext</literal> and
  1973. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> during the
  1974. <literal>SecurityInterceptorCallback</literal>. This only occurs if
  1975. the original <literal>Authentication</literal> object was successfully
  1976. processed by the <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> and
  1977. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal>. The
  1978. <literal>RunAsManager</literal> will indicate the replacement
  1979. <literal>Authentication</literal> object, if any, that should be used
  1980. during the <literal>SecurityInterceptorCallback</literal>.</para>
  1981. <para>By temporarily replacing the <literal>Authentication</literal>
  1982. object during a <literal>SecurityInterceptorCallback</literal>, the
  1983. secured invocation will be able to call other objects which require
  1984. different authentication and authorization credentials. It will also
  1985. be able to perform any internal security checks for specific
  1986. <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> objects. Because Acegi Security
  1987. provides a number of helper classes that automatically configure
  1988. remoting protocols based on the contents of the
  1989. <literal>ContextHolder</literal>, these run-as replacements are
  1990. particularly useful when calling remote web services.</para>
  1991. </sect2>
  1992. <sect2 id="security-run-as-usage">
  1993. <title>Usage</title>
  1994. <para>A <literal>RunAsManager</literal> interface is provided by the
  1995. Acegi Security System for Spring:</para>
  1996. <para><programlisting>public Authentication buildRunAs(Authentication authentication, Object object, ConfigAttributeDefinition config);
  1997. public boolean supports(ConfigAttribute attribute);
  1998. public boolean supports(Class clazz);</programlisting></para>
  1999. <para>The first method returns the <literal>Authentication</literal>
  2000. object that should replace the existing
  2001. <literal>Authentication</literal> object for the duration of the
  2002. method invocation. If the method returns <literal>null</literal>, it
  2003. indicates no replacement should be made. The second method is used by
  2004. the <literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal> as part of its
  2005. startup validation of configuration attributes. The
  2006. <literal>supports(Class)</literal> method is called by a security
  2007. interceptor implementation to ensure the configured
  2008. <literal>RunAsManager</literal> supports the type of secure object
  2009. that the security interceptor will present.</para>
  2010. <para>One concrete implementation of a <literal>RunAsManager</literal>
  2011. is provided with the Acegi Security System for Spring. The
  2012. <literal>RunAsManagerImpl</literal> class returns a replacement
  2013. <literal>RunAsUserToken</literal> if any
  2014. <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal> starts with
  2015. <literal>RUN_AS_</literal>. If any such
  2016. <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal> is found, the replacement
  2017. <literal>RunAsUserToken</literal> will contain the same principal,
  2018. credentials and granted authorities as the original
  2019. <literal>Authentication</literal> object, along with a new
  2020. <literal>GrantedAuthorityImpl</literal> for each
  2021. <literal>RUN_AS_</literal> <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal>. Each
  2022. new <literal>GrantedAuthorityImpl</literal> will be prefixed with
  2023. <literal>ROLE_</literal>, followed by the <literal>RUN_AS</literal>
  2024. <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal>. For example, a
  2025. <literal>RUN_AS_SERVER</literal> will result in the replacement
  2026. <literal>RunAsUserToken</literal> containing a
  2027. <literal>ROLE_RUN_AS_SERVER</literal> granted authority.</para>
  2028. <para>The replacement <literal>RunAsUserToken</literal> is just like
  2029. any other <literal>Authentication</literal> object. It needs to be
  2030. authenticated by the <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>,
  2031. probably via delegation to a suitable
  2032. <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal>. The
  2033. <literal>RunAsImplAuthenticationProvider</literal> performs such
  2034. authentication. It simply accepts as valid any
  2035. <literal>RunAsUserToken</literal> presented.</para>
  2036. <para>To ensure malicious code does not create a
  2037. <literal>RunAsUserToken</literal> and present it for guaranteed
  2038. acceptance by the <literal>RunAsImplAuthenticationProvider</literal>,
  2039. the hash of a key is stored in all generated tokens. The
  2040. <literal>RunAsManagerImpl</literal> and
  2041. <literal>RunAsImplAuthenticationProvider</literal> is created in the
  2042. bean context with the same key:</para>
  2043. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="runAsManager" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.runas.RunAsManagerImpl"&gt;
  2044. &lt;property name="key"&gt;&lt;value&gt;my_run_as_password&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2045. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting><programlisting>&lt;bean id="runAsAuthenticationProvider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.runas.RunAsImplAuthenticationProvider"&gt;
  2046. &lt;property name="key"&gt;&lt;value&gt;my_run_as_password&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2047. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  2048. <para>By using the same key, each <literal>RunAsUserToken</literal>
  2049. can be validated it was created by an approved
  2050. <literal>RunAsManagerImpl</literal>. The
  2051. <literal>RunAsUserToken</literal> is immutable after creation for
  2052. security reasons.</para>
  2053. </sect2>
  2054. </sect1>
  2055. <sect1 id="security-ui">
  2056. <title>User Interfacing with the ContextHolder</title>
  2057. <sect2 id="security-ui-purpose">
  2058. <title>Purpose</title>
  2059. <para>Everything presented so far assumes one thing: the
  2060. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> is populated with a valid
  2061. <literal>SecureContext</literal>, which in turn contains a valid
  2062. <literal>Authentication</literal> object. Developers are free to do
  2063. this in whichever way they like, such as directly calling the relevant
  2064. objects at runtime. However, several classes have been provided to
  2065. make this process transparent in many situations. We call these
  2066. classes "authentication mechanisms".</para>
  2067. <para>The <literal>net.sf.acegisecurity.ui</literal> package provides
  2068. what we call "authentication processing mechanisms". An authentication
  2069. processing mechanism is solely concerned with received an
  2070. authentication request from the principal, testing if it seems valid,
  2071. and if so, placing the authentication request token onto the
  2072. ContextHolder. Of course, if the authentication request is invalid,
  2073. the authentication processing mechanism is responsible for informing
  2074. the principal in whatever way is appropriate to the protocol.</para>
  2075. <para>Recall the HttpSessionContextIntegrationFilter (discussed in the
  2076. context section) is responsible for storing the ContextHolder contents
  2077. between invocations. This means no authentication processing mechanism
  2078. need ever interact directly with HttpSession. Indeed
  2079. HttpSessionContextIntegrationFilter has been designed to minimise the
  2080. unnecessary creation of HttpSessions, as might occur when using Basic
  2081. authentication for example.</para>
  2082. <para>There are several authentication processing mechanisms included
  2083. with Acegi Security, which will be briefly discussed in this chapter.
  2084. The most popular (and almost always recommended) approach is HTTP Form
  2085. Authentication, which uses a login form to authenticate the user.
  2086. Another approach (commonly use with web services) is HTTP Basic
  2087. Authentication, which allows clients to use HTTP headers to present
  2088. authentication information to the Acegi Security System for Spring.
  2089. Alternatively, you can also use Yale Central Authentication Service
  2090. (CAS) for enterprise-wide single sign on. The final (and generally
  2091. unrecommended) approach is via Container Adapters, which allow
  2092. supported web containers to perform the authentication themselves.
  2093. HTTP Form Authentication and Basic Authentication is discussed below,
  2094. whilst CAS and Container Adapters are discussed in separate sections
  2095. of this document.</para>
  2096. </sect2>
  2097. <sect2 id="security-ui-http-form">
  2098. <title>HTTP Form Authentication</title>
  2099. <para>HTTP Form Authentication involves using the
  2100. <literal>AuthenticationProcessingFilter</literal> to process a login
  2101. form. The login form simply contains <literal>j_username</literal> and
  2102. <literal>j_password</literal> input fields, and posts to a URL that is
  2103. monitored by the filter (by default
  2104. <literal>j_acegi_security_check</literal>). The filter is defined in
  2105. <literal>web.xml</literal> behind a
  2106. <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal> as follows:</para>
  2107. <para><programlisting>&lt;filter&gt;
  2108. &lt;filter-name&gt;Acegi Authentication Processing Filter&lt;/filter-name&gt;
  2109. &lt;filter-class&gt;net.sf.acegisecurity.util.FilterToBeanProxy&lt;/filter-class&gt;
  2110. &lt;init-param&gt;
  2111. &lt;param-name&gt;targetClass&lt;/param-name&gt;
  2112. &lt;param-value&gt;net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.webapp.AuthenticationProcessingFilter&lt;/param-value&gt;
  2113. &lt;/init-param&gt;
  2114. &lt;/filter&gt;
  2115. &lt;filter-mapping&gt;
  2116. &lt;filter-name&gt;Acegi Authentication Processing Filter&lt;/filter-name&gt;
  2117. &lt;url-pattern&gt;/*&lt;/url-pattern&gt;
  2118. &lt;/filter-mapping&gt;</programlisting></para>
  2119. <para>For a discussion of <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal>, please
  2120. refer to the Filters section. The application context will need to
  2121. define the <literal>AuthenticationProcessingFilter</literal>:</para>
  2122. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="authenticationProcessingFilter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.webapp.AuthenticationProcessingFilter"&gt;
  2123. &lt;property name="authenticationManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="authenticationManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2124. &lt;property name="authenticationFailureUrl"&gt;&lt;value&gt;/acegilogin.jsp?login_error=1&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2125. &lt;property name="defaultTargetUrl"&gt;&lt;value&gt;/&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2126. &lt;property name="filterProcessesUrl"&gt;&lt;value&gt;/j_acegi_security_check&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2127. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  2128. <para>The configured <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>
  2129. processes each authentication request. If authentication fails, the
  2130. browser will be redirected to the
  2131. <literal>authenticationFailureUrl</literal>. The
  2132. <literal>AuthenticationException</literal> will be placed into the
  2133. <literal>HttpSession</literal> attribute indicated by
  2134. <literal>AbstractProcessingFilter.ACEGI_SECURITY_LAST_EXCEPTION_KEY</literal>,
  2135. enabling a reason to be provided to the user on the error page.</para>
  2136. <para>If authentication is successful, the resulting
  2137. <literal>Authentication</literal> object will be placed into the
  2138. <literal>ContextHolder</literal>.</para>
  2139. <para>Once the <literal>ContextHolder</literal> has been updated, the
  2140. browser will need to be redirected to the target URL. The target URL
  2141. is usually indicated by the <literal>HttpSession</literal> attribute
  2142. specified by
  2143. <literal>AbstractProcessingFilter.ACEGI_SECURITY_TARGET_URL_KEY</literal>.
  2144. This attribute is automatically set by the
  2145. <literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal> when an
  2146. <literal>AuthenticationException</literal> occurs, so that after login
  2147. is completed the user can return to what they were trying to access.
  2148. If for some reason the <literal>HttpSession</literal> does not
  2149. indicate the target URL, the browser will be redirected to the
  2150. <literal>defaultTargetUrl</literal> property.</para>
  2151. <para>Because this authentication approach is fully contained within a
  2152. single web application, HTTP Form Authentication is recommended to be
  2153. used instead of Container Adapters.</para>
  2154. </sect2>
  2155. <sect2 id="security-ui-http-basic">
  2156. <title>HTTP Basic Authentication</title>
  2157. <para>The Acegi Security System for Spring provides a
  2158. <literal>BasicProcessingFilter</literal> which is capable of
  2159. processing basic authentication credentials presented in HTTP headers.
  2160. This can be used for authenticating calls made by Spring remoting
  2161. protocols (such as Hessian and Burlap), as well as normal user agents
  2162. (such as Internet Explorer and Navigator). The standard governing HTTP
  2163. Basic Authentication is defined by RFC 1945, Section 11, and the
  2164. <literal>BasicProcessingFilter</literal> conforms with this RFC. Basic
  2165. Authentication is an attractive approach to authentication, because it
  2166. is very widely deployed in user agents and implementation is extremely
  2167. simple (it's just a Base64 encoding of the username:password,
  2168. specified in a HTTP header).</para>
  2169. <para>To implement HTTP Basic Authentication, it is necessary to
  2170. define <literal>BasicProcessingFilter</literal> in the fitler chain.
  2171. The application context will need to define the
  2172. <literal>BasicProcessingFilter</literal> and its required
  2173. collaborator:</para>
  2174. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="basicProcessingFilter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.basicauth.BasicProcessingFilter"&gt;
  2175. &lt;property name="authenticationManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="authenticationManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2176. &lt;property name="authenticationEntryPoint"&gt;&lt;ref bean="authenticationEntryPoint"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2177. &lt;/bean&gt;
  2178. &lt;bean id="authenticationEntryPoint" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.basicauth.BasicProcessingFilterEntryPoint"&gt;
  2179. &lt;property name="realmName"&gt;&lt;value&gt;Name Of Your Realm&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2180. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  2181. <para>The configured <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>
  2182. processes each authentication request. If authentication fails, the
  2183. configured <literal>AuthenticationEntryPoint</literal> will be used to
  2184. retry the authentication process. Usually you will use the
  2185. <literal>BasicProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal>, which returns a
  2186. 401 response with a suitable header to retry HTTP Basic
  2187. authentication. If authentication is successful, the resulting
  2188. <literal>Authentication</literal> object will be placed into the
  2189. <literal>ContextHolder</literal>.</para>
  2190. <para>If the authentication event was successful, or authentication
  2191. was not attempted because the HTTP header did not contain a supported
  2192. authentication request, the filter chain will continue as normal. The
  2193. only time the filter chain will be interrupted is if authentication
  2194. fails and the <literal>AuthenticationEntryPoint</literal> is called,
  2195. as discussed in the previous paragraph.</para>
  2196. </sect2>
  2197. <sect2 id="security-ui-http-digest">
  2198. <title>HTTP Digest Authentication</title>
  2199. <para>The Acegi Security System for Spring provides a
  2200. <literal>DigestProcessingFilter</literal> which is capable of
  2201. processing digest authentication credentials presented in HTTP
  2202. headers. Digest Authentication attempts to solve many of the
  2203. weakenesses of Basic authentication, specifically by ensuring
  2204. credentials are never sent in clear text across the wire. Many user
  2205. agents support Digest Authentication, including FireFox and Internet
  2206. Explorer. The standard governing HTTP Digest Authentication is defined
  2207. by RFC 2617, which updates an earlier version of the Digest
  2208. Authentication standard prescribed by RFC 2069. Most user agents
  2209. implement RFC 2617. The Acegi Security
  2210. <literal>DigestProcessingFilter</literal> is compatible with the
  2211. "<literal>auth</literal>" quality of protection
  2212. (<literal>qop</literal>) prescribed by RFC 2617, which also provides
  2213. backward compatibility with RFC 2069. Digest Authentication is a
  2214. highly attractive option if you need to use unencrypted HTTP (ie no
  2215. TLS/HTTPS) and wish to maximise security of the authentication
  2216. process. Indeed Digest Authentication is a mandatory requirement for
  2217. the WebDAV protocol, as noted by RFC 2518 Section 17.1, so we should
  2218. expect to see it increasingly deployed and replacing Basic
  2219. Authentication.</para>
  2220. <para>Digest Authentication is definitely the most secure choice
  2221. between Form Authentication, Basic Authentication and Digest
  2222. Authentication, although extra security also means more complex user
  2223. agent implementations. Central to Digest Authentication is a "nonce".
  2224. This is a value the server generates. Acegi Security's nonce adopts
  2225. the following format:</para>
  2226. <para><programlisting>base64(expirationTime + ":" + md5Hex(expirationTime + ":" + key))
  2227. expirationTime: The date and time when the nonce expires, expressed in milliseconds
  2228. key: A private key to prevent modification of the nonce token
  2229. </programlisting></para>
  2230. <para>The <literal>DigestProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> has a
  2231. property specifying the <literal>key</literal> used for generating the
  2232. nonce tokens, along with a <literal>nonceValiditySeconds</literal>
  2233. property for determining the expiration time (default 300, which
  2234. equals five minutes). Whilstever the nonce is valid, the digest is
  2235. computed by concatenating various strings including the username,
  2236. password, nonce, URI being requested, a client-generated nonce (merely
  2237. a random value which the user agent generates each request), the realm
  2238. name etc, then performing an MD5 hash. Both the server and user agent
  2239. perform this digest computation, resulting in different hash codes if
  2240. they disagree on an included value (eg password). In the Acegi
  2241. Security implementation, if the server-generated nonce has merely
  2242. expired (but the digest was otherwise valid), the
  2243. <literal>DigestProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> will send a
  2244. <literal>"stale=true"</literal> header. This tells the user agent
  2245. there is no need to disturb the user (as the password and username etc
  2246. is correct), but simply to try again using a new nonce.</para>
  2247. <para>An appropriate value for
  2248. <literal>DigestProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal>'s
  2249. <literal>nonceValiditySeconds</literal> parameter will depend on your
  2250. application. Extremely secure applications should note that an
  2251. intercepted authentication header can be used to impersonate the
  2252. principal until the <literal>expirationTime</literal> contained in the
  2253. nonce is reached. This is the key principle when selecting an
  2254. appropriate setting, but it would be unusual for immensly secure
  2255. applications to not be running over TLS/HTTPS in the first
  2256. instance.</para>
  2257. <para>Because of the more complex implementation of Digest
  2258. Authentication, there are often user agent issues. For example,
  2259. Internet Explorer fails to present an "<literal>opaque</literal>"
  2260. token on subsequent requests in the same session. The Acegi Security
  2261. filters therefore encapsulate all state information into the
  2262. "<literal>nonce</literal>" token instead. In our testing, the Acegi
  2263. Security implementation works reliably with FireFox and Internet
  2264. Explorer, correctly handling nonce timeouts etc.</para>
  2265. <para>Now that we've reviewed the theory, let's see how to use it. To
  2266. implement HTTP Digest Authentication, it is necessary to define
  2267. <literal>DigestProcessingFilter</literal> in the fitler chain. The
  2268. application context will need to define the
  2269. <literal>DigestProcessingFilter</literal> and its required
  2270. collaborators:</para>
  2271. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="digestProcessingFilter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.digestauth.DigestProcessingFilter"&gt;
  2272. &lt;property name="authenticationDao"&gt;&lt;ref local="jdbcDaoImpl"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2273. &lt;property name="authenticationEntryPoint"&gt;&lt;ref local="digestProcessingFilterEntryPoint"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2274. &lt;property name="userCache"&gt;&lt;ref local="userCache"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2275. &lt;/bean&gt;
  2276. &lt;bean id="digestProcessingFilterEntryPoint" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.digestauth.DigestProcessingFilterEntryPoint"&gt;
  2277. &lt;property name="realmName"&gt;&lt;value&gt;Contacts Realm via Digest Authentication&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2278. &lt;property name="key"&gt;&lt;value&gt;acegi&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2279. &lt;property name="nonceValiditySeconds"&gt;&lt;value&gt;10&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2280. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  2281. <para>The configured <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal> is needed
  2282. because <literal>DigestProcessingFilter</literal> must have direct
  2283. access to the clear text password of a user. Digest Authentication
  2284. will NOT work if you are using encoded passwords in your DAO. The DAO
  2285. collaborator, along with the <literal>UserCache</literal>, are
  2286. typically shared directly with a
  2287. <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal>. The
  2288. <literal>authenticationEntryPoint</literal> property must be
  2289. <literal>DigestProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal>, so that
  2290. <literal>DigestProcessingFilter</literal> can obtain the correct
  2291. <literal>realmName</literal> and <literal>key</literal> for digest
  2292. calculations.</para>
  2293. <para>Like <literal>BasicAuthenticationFilter</literal>, if
  2294. authentication is successful an <literal>Authentication</literal>
  2295. request token will be placed into the
  2296. <literal>ContextHolder</literal>. If the authentication event was
  2297. successful, or authentication was not attempted because the HTTP
  2298. header did not contain a Digest Authentication request, the filter
  2299. chain will continue as normal. The only time the filter chain will be
  2300. interrupted is if authentication fails and the
  2301. <literal>AuthenticationEntryPoint</literal> is called, as discussed in
  2302. the previous paragraph.</para>
  2303. <para>Digest Authentication's RFC offers a range of additional
  2304. features to further increase security. For example, the nonce can be
  2305. changed on every request. Despite this, the Acegi Security
  2306. implementation was designed to minimise the complexity of the
  2307. implementation (and the doubtless user agent incompatibilities that
  2308. would emerge), and avoid needing to store server-side state. You are
  2309. invited to review RFC 2617 if you wish to explore these features in
  2310. more detail. As far as we are aware, the Acegi Security implementation
  2311. does comply with the minimum standards of this RFC.</para>
  2312. </sect2>
  2313. <sect2 id="security-ui-anonymous">
  2314. <title>Anonymous Authentication</title>
  2315. <para>Particularly in the case of web request URI security, sometimes
  2316. it is more convenient to assign configuration attributes against every
  2317. possible secure object invocation. Put differently, sometimes it is
  2318. nice to say <literal>ROLE_SOMETHING</literal> is required by default
  2319. and only allow certain exceptions to this rule, such as for login,
  2320. logout and home pages of an application. There are also other
  2321. situations where anonymous authentication would be desired, such as
  2322. when an auditing interceptor queries the
  2323. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> to identify which principal was
  2324. responsible for a given operation. Such classes can be authored with
  2325. more robustness if they know the <literal>ContextHolder</literal>
  2326. always contains an <literal>Authentication</literal> object, and never
  2327. <literal>null</literal>.</para>
  2328. <para>Acegi Security provides three classes that together provide an
  2329. anoymous authentication feature.
  2330. <literal>AnonymousAuthenticationToken</literal> is an implementation
  2331. of <literal>Authentication</literal>, and stores the
  2332. <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>[]s which apply to the anonymous
  2333. principal. There is a corresponding
  2334. <literal>AnonymousAuthenticationProvider</literal>, which is chained
  2335. into the <literal>ProviderManager</literal> so that
  2336. <literal>AnonymousAuthenticationTokens</literal> are accepted.
  2337. Finally, there is an AnonymousProcessingFilter, which is chained after
  2338. the normal authentication mechanisms and automatically add an
  2339. <literal>AnonymousAuthenticationToken</literal> to the
  2340. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> if there is no existing
  2341. <literal>Authentication</literal> held there. The definition of the
  2342. filter and authentication provider appears as follows:</para>
  2343. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="anonymousProcessingFilter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.anonymous.AnonymousProcessingFilter"&gt;
  2344. &lt;property name="key"&gt;&lt;value&gt;foobar&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2345. &lt;property name="userAttribute"&gt;&lt;value&gt;anonymousUser,ROLE_ANONYMOUS&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2346. &lt;/bean&gt;
  2347. &lt;bean id="anonymousAuthenticationProvider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.anonymous.AnonymousAuthenticationProvider"&gt;
  2348. &lt;property name="key"&gt;&lt;value&gt;foobar&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2349. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  2350. <para>The <literal>key</literal> is shared between the filter and
  2351. authentication provider, so that tokens created by the former are
  2352. accepted by the latter. The <literal>userAttribute</literal> is
  2353. expressed in the form of
  2354. <literal>usernameInTheAuthenticationToken,grantedAuthority[,grantedAuthority]</literal>.
  2355. This is the same syntax as used after the equals sign for
  2356. <literal>InMemoryDaoImpl</literal>'s <literal>userMap</literal>
  2357. property.</para>
  2358. <para>As explained earlier, the benefit of anonymous authentication is
  2359. that all URI patterns can have security applied to them. For
  2360. example:</para>
  2361. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="filterInvocationInterceptor" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.web.FilterSecurityInterceptor"&gt;
  2362. &lt;property name="authenticationManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="authenticationManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2363. &lt;property name="accessDecisionManager"&gt;&lt;ref local="httpRequestAccessDecisionManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2364. &lt;property name="objectDefinitionSource"&gt;
  2365. &lt;value&gt;
  2366. CONVERT_URL_TO_LOWERCASE_BEFORE_COMPARISON
  2367. PATTERN_TYPE_APACHE_ANT
  2368. /index.jsp=ROLE_ANONYMOUS,ROLE_USER
  2369. /hello.htm=ROLE_ANONYMOUS,ROLE_USER
  2370. /logoff.jsp=ROLE_ANONYMOUS,ROLE_USER
  2371. /acegilogin.jsp*=ROLE_ANONYMOUS,ROLE_USER
  2372. /**=ROLE_USER
  2373. &lt;/value&gt;
  2374. &lt;/property&gt;
  2375. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting>Rounding out the anonymous authentication
  2376. discussion is the <literal>AuthenticationTrustResolver</literal>
  2377. interface, with its corresponding
  2378. <literal>AuthenticationTrustResolverImpl</literal> implementation.
  2379. This interface provides an
  2380. <literal>isAnonymous(Authentication)</literal> method, which allows
  2381. interested classes to take into account this special type of
  2382. authentication status. The
  2383. <literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal> uses this interface in
  2384. processing <literal>AccessDeniedException</literal>s. If an
  2385. <literal>AccessDeniedException</literal> is thrown, and the
  2386. authentication is of an anonymous type, instead of throwing a 403
  2387. (forbidden) response, the filter will instead commence the
  2388. <literal>AuthenticationEntryPoint</literal> so the principal can
  2389. authenticate properly. This is a necessary distinction, otherwise
  2390. principals would always be deemed "authenticated" and never be given
  2391. an opportunity to login via form, basic, digest or some other normal
  2392. authentication mechanism.</para>
  2393. </sect2>
  2394. <sect2 id="security-ui-remember-me">
  2395. <title>Remember-Me Authentication</title>
  2396. <para>Remember-me authentication refers to web sites being able to
  2397. remember the identity of a principal between sessions. This is
  2398. typically accomplished by sending a cookie to the browser, with the
  2399. cookie being detected during future sessions and causing automated
  2400. login to take place. Acegi Security provides the necessary hooks so
  2401. that such operations can take place, along with providing a concrete
  2402. implementation that uses hashing to preserve the security of
  2403. cookie-based tokens.</para>
  2404. <para>Remember-me authentication is not used with digest or basic
  2405. authentication, given they are often not used with
  2406. <literal>HttpSession</literal>s. Remember-me is used with
  2407. <literal>AuthenticationProcessingFilter</literal>, and is implemented
  2408. via hooks in the <literal>AbstractProcessingFilter</literal>
  2409. superclass. The hooks will invoke a concrete
  2410. <literal>RememberMeServices</literal> at the appropriate times. The
  2411. interface looks like this:</para>
  2412. <para><programlisting>public Authentication autoLogin(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response);
  2413. public void loginFail(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response);
  2414. public void loginSuccess(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response, Authentication successfulAuthentication);</programlisting></para>
  2415. <para>Please refer to JavaDocs for a fuller discussion on what the
  2416. methods do, although note at this stage
  2417. <literal>AbstractProcessingFilter</literal> only calls the
  2418. <literal>loginFail()</literal> and <literal>loginSuccess()</literal>
  2419. methods. The <literal>autoLogin()</literal> method is called by
  2420. <literal>RememberMeProcessingFilter</literal> whenever the
  2421. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> does not contain an
  2422. <literal>Authentication</literal>. This interface therefore provides
  2423. the underlaying remember-me implementation with sufficient
  2424. notification of authentication-related events, and delegates to the
  2425. implementation whenever a candidate web request might contain a cookie
  2426. and wish to be remembered.</para>
  2427. <para>This design allows any number of remember-me implementation
  2428. strategies. In the interests of simplicity and avoiding the need for
  2429. DAO implementations that specify write and create methods, Acegi
  2430. Security's only concrete implementation,
  2431. <literal>TokenBasedRememberMeServices</literal>, uses hashing to
  2432. achieve a useful remember-me strategy. In essence a cookie is sent to
  2433. the browser upon successful interactive authentication, with that
  2434. cookie being composed as follows:</para>
  2435. <para><programlisting>base64(username + ":" + expirationTime + ":" + md5Hex(username + ":" + expirationTime + ":" password + ":" + key))
  2436. username: As identifiable to TokenBasedRememberMeServices.getAuthenticationDao()
  2437. password: That matches the relevant UserDetails retrieved from TokenBasedRememberMeServices.getAuthenticationDao()
  2438. expirationTime: The date and time when the remember-me token expires, expressed in milliseconds
  2439. key: A private key to prevent modification of the remember-me token
  2440. </programlisting></para>
  2441. <para>As such the remember-me token is valid only for the period
  2442. specified, and provided that the username, password and key does not
  2443. change. Notably, this has a potential security issue issue in that a
  2444. captured remember-me token will be usable from any user agent until
  2445. such time as the token expires. This is the same issue as with digest
  2446. authentication. If a principal is aware a token has been captured,
  2447. they can easily change their password and immediately invalidate all
  2448. remember-me tokens on issue. However, if more significant security is
  2449. needed a rolling token approach should be used (this would require a
  2450. database) or remember-me services should simply not be used.</para>
  2451. <para><literal>TokenBasedRememberMeServices</literal> generates a
  2452. <literal>RememberMeAuthenticationToken</literal>, which is processed
  2453. by <literal>RememberMeAuthenticationProvider</literal>. A
  2454. <literal>key</literal> is shared between this authentication provider
  2455. and the <literal>TokenBasedRememberMeServices</literal>. In addition,
  2456. <literal>TokenBasedRememberMeServices</literal> requires an
  2457. <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal> from which it can retrieve the
  2458. username and password for signature comparison purposes, and generate
  2459. the <literal>RememberMeAuthenticationToken</literal> to contain the
  2460. correct <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>[]s. Some sort of logout
  2461. command should be provided by the application (typically via a JSP)
  2462. that invalidates the cookie upon user request. See the Contacts Sample
  2463. application's <literal>logout.jsp</literal> for an example.</para>
  2464. <para>The beans required in an application context to enable
  2465. remember-me services are as follows:</para>
  2466. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="rememberMeProcessingFilter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.rememberme.RememberMeProcessingFilter"&gt;
  2467. &lt;property name="rememberMeServices"&gt;&lt;ref local="rememberMeServices"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2468. &lt;/bean&gt;
  2469. &lt;bean id="rememberMeServices" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.rememberme.TokenBasedRememberMeServices"&gt;
  2470. &lt;property name="authenticationDao"&gt;&lt;ref local="jdbcDaoImpl"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2471. &lt;property name="key"&gt;&lt;value&gt;springRocks&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2472. &lt;/bean&gt;
  2473. &lt;bean id="rememberMeAuthenticationProvider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.rememberme.RememberMeAuthenticationProvider"&gt;
  2474. &lt;property name="key"&gt;&lt;value&gt;springRocks&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2475. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting>Don't forget to add your
  2476. <literal>RememberMeServices</literal> implementation to your
  2477. <literal>AuthenticationProcessingFilter.setRememberMeServices()</literal>
  2478. property, include the
  2479. <literal>RememberMeAuthenticationProvider</literal> in your
  2480. <literal>AuthenticationManager.setProviders()</literal> list, and add
  2481. a call to <literal>RememberMeProcessingFilter</literal> into your
  2482. <literal>FilterChainProxy</literal> (typically immediately after your
  2483. <literal>AuthenticationProcessingFilter</literal>).</para>
  2484. </sect2>
  2485. <sect2 id="security-ui-well-known">
  2486. <title>Well-Known Locations</title>
  2487. <para>Prior to release 0.8.0, Acegi Security referred to "well-known
  2488. locations" in discussions about storing the
  2489. <literal>Authentication</literal>. This approach did not explicitly
  2490. separate the function of <literal>HttpSession</literal> storage of
  2491. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> contents from the processing of
  2492. authentication requests received through various protocols. In
  2493. addition, the previous approach did not facilitate storage of
  2494. non-<literal>Authentication</literal> objects between requests, which
  2495. was limiting usefulness of the <literal>ContextHolder</literal> system
  2496. to member of the community. For these reasons, the notion of
  2497. well-known locations was abandoned, the
  2498. <literal>HttpSessionContextIntegrationFilter</literal> was
  2499. established, and the purpose of authentication processing mechanisms
  2500. was explicitly defined and limited to interaction with the
  2501. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> only. There is no need to refer to
  2502. well-known locations any more and we hope this clearer separation of
  2503. responsibilities enhances understanding of the project.</para>
  2504. </sect2>
  2505. </sect1>
  2506. <sect1 id="security-container-adapters">
  2507. <title>Container Adapters</title>
  2508. <sect2 id="security-container-adapters-overview">
  2509. <title>Overview</title>
  2510. <para>Very early versions of the Acegi Security System for Spring
  2511. exclusively used Container Adapters for interfacing authentication
  2512. with end users. Whilst this worked well, it required considerable time
  2513. to support multiple container versions and the configuration itself
  2514. was relatively time-consuming for developers. For this reason the HTTP
  2515. Form Authentication and HTTP Basic Authentication approaches were
  2516. developed, and are today recommended for almost all
  2517. applications.</para>
  2518. <para>Container Adapters enable the Acegi Security System for Spring
  2519. to integrate directly with the containers used to host end user
  2520. applications. This integration means that applications can continue to
  2521. leverage the authentication and authorization capabilities built into
  2522. containers (such as <literal>isUserInRole()</literal> and form-based
  2523. or basic authentication), whilst benefiting from the enhanced security
  2524. interception capabilities provided by the Acegi Security System for
  2525. Spring (it should be noted that Acegi Security also offers
  2526. <literal>ContextHolderAwareRequestWrapper</literal> to deliver
  2527. <literal>isUserInRole()</literal> and similar Servlet Specification
  2528. compatibility methods).</para>
  2529. <para>The integration between a container and the Acegi Security
  2530. System for Spring is achieved through an adapter. The adapter provides
  2531. a container-compatible user authentication provider, and needs to
  2532. return a container-compatible user object.</para>
  2533. <para>The adapter is instantiated by the container and is defined in a
  2534. container-specific configuration file. The adapter then loads a Spring
  2535. application context which defines the normal authentication manager
  2536. settings, such as the authentication providers that can be used to
  2537. authenticate the request. The application context is usually named
  2538. <literal>acegisecurity.xml</literal> and is placed in a
  2539. container-specific location.</para>
  2540. <para>The Acegi Security System for Spring currently supports Jetty,
  2541. Catalina (Tomcat), JBoss and Resin. Additional container adapters can
  2542. easily be written.</para>
  2543. </sect2>
  2544. <sect2 id="security-container-adapters-adapter-provider">
  2545. <title>Adapter Authentication Provider</title>
  2546. <para>As is always the case, the container adapter generated
  2547. <literal>Authentication</literal> object still needs to be
  2548. authenticated by an <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> when
  2549. requested to do so by the
  2550. <literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal>. The
  2551. <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> needs to be certain the
  2552. adapter-provided <literal>Authentication</literal> object is valid and
  2553. was actually authenticated by a trusted adapter.</para>
  2554. <para>Adapters create <literal>Authentication</literal> objects which
  2555. are immutable and implement the <literal>AuthByAdapter</literal>
  2556. interface. These objects store the hash of a key that is defined by
  2557. the adapter. This allows the <literal>Authentication</literal> object
  2558. to be validated by the <literal>AuthByAdapterProvider</literal>. This
  2559. authentication provider is defined as follows:</para>
  2560. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="authByAdapterProvider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.AuthByAdapterProvider"&gt;
  2561. &lt;property name="key"&gt;&lt;value&gt;my_password&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  2562. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  2563. <para>The key must match the key that is defined in the
  2564. container-specific configuration file that starts the adapter. The
  2565. <literal>AuthByAdapterProvider</literal> automatically accepts as
  2566. valid any <literal>AuthByAdapter</literal> implementation that returns
  2567. the expected hash of the key.</para>
  2568. <para>To reiterate, this means the adapter will perform the initial
  2569. authentication using providers such as
  2570. <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal>, returning an
  2571. <literal>AuthByAdapter</literal> instance that contains a hash code of
  2572. the key. Later, when an application calls a security interceptor
  2573. managed resource, the <literal>AuthByAdapter</literal> instance in the
  2574. <literal>SecureContext</literal> in the
  2575. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> will be tested by the application's
  2576. <literal>AuthByAdapterProvider</literal>. There is no requirement for
  2577. additional authentication providers such as
  2578. <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> within the
  2579. application-specific application context, as the only type of
  2580. <literal>Authentication</literal> instance that will be presented by
  2581. the application is from the container adapter.</para>
  2582. <para>Classloader issues are frequent with containers and the use of
  2583. container adapters illustrates this further. Each container requires a
  2584. very specific configuration. The installation instructions are
  2585. provided below. Once installed, please take the time to try the sample
  2586. application to ensure your container adapter is properly
  2587. configured.</para>
  2588. <para>When using container adapters with the
  2589. <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal>, ensure you set its
  2590. <literal>forcePrincipalAsString</literal> property to
  2591. <literal>true</literal>.</para>
  2592. </sect2>
  2593. <sect2 id="security-container-adapters-catalina">
  2594. <title>Catalina (Tomcat) Installation</title>
  2595. <para>The following was tested with Jakarta Tomcat 4.1.30 and
  2596. 5.0.19.</para>
  2597. <para><literal>$CATALINA_HOME</literal> refers to the root of your
  2598. Catalina (Tomcat) installation.</para>
  2599. <para>Edit your <literal>$CATALINA_HOME/conf/server.xml</literal> file
  2600. so the <literal>&lt;Engine&gt;</literal> section contains only one
  2601. active <literal>&lt;Realm&gt;</literal> entry. An example realm
  2602. entry:</para>
  2603. <para><programlisting> &lt;Realm className="net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.catalina.CatalinaAcegiUserRealm"
  2604. appContextLocation="conf/acegisecurity.xml"
  2605. key="my_password" /&gt;</programlisting></para>
  2606. <para>Be sure to remove any other <literal>&lt;Realm&gt;</literal>
  2607. entry from your <literal>&lt;Engine&gt;</literal> section.</para>
  2608. <para>Copy <literal>acegisecurity.xml</literal> into
  2609. <literal>$CATALINA_HOME/conf</literal>.</para>
  2610. <para>Copy <literal>acegi-security-catalina-XX.jar</literal> into
  2611. <literal>$CATALINA_HOME/server/lib</literal>.</para>
  2612. <para>Copy the following files into
  2613. <literal>$CATALINA_HOME/common/lib</literal>:</para>
  2614. <itemizedlist>
  2615. <listitem>
  2616. <para><literal>aopalliance.jar</literal></para>
  2617. </listitem>
  2618. <listitem>
  2619. <para><literal>spring.jar</literal></para>
  2620. </listitem>
  2621. <listitem>
  2622. <para><literal>commons-codec.jar</literal></para>
  2623. </listitem>
  2624. <listitem>
  2625. <para><literal>burlap.jar</literal></para>
  2626. </listitem>
  2627. <listitem>
  2628. <para><literal>hessian.jar</literal></para>
  2629. </listitem>
  2630. </itemizedlist>
  2631. <para>None of the above JAR files (or
  2632. <literal>acegi-security-XX.jar</literal>) should be in your
  2633. application's <literal>WEB-INF/lib</literal>. The realm name indicated
  2634. in your <literal>web.xml</literal> does not matter with
  2635. Catalina.</para>
  2636. <para>We have received reports of problems using this Container
  2637. Adapter with Mac OS X. A work-around is to use a script such as
  2638. follows:</para>
  2639. <para><programlisting>#!/bin/sh
  2640. export CATALINA_HOME="/Library/Tomcat"
  2641. export JAVA_HOME="/Library/Java/Home"
  2642. cd /
  2643. $CATALINA_HOME/bin/startup.sh</programlisting></para>
  2644. </sect2>
  2645. <sect2 id="security-container-adapters-jetty">
  2646. <title>Jetty Installation</title>
  2647. <para>The following was tested with Jetty 4.2.18.</para>
  2648. <para><literal>$JETTY_HOME</literal> refers to the root of your Jetty
  2649. installation.</para>
  2650. <para>Edit your <literal>$JETTY_HOME/etc/jetty.xml</literal> file so
  2651. the <literal>&lt;Configure class&gt;</literal> section has a new
  2652. addRealm call:</para>
  2653. <para><programlisting> &lt;Call name="addRealm"&gt;
  2654. &lt;Arg&gt;
  2655. &lt;New class="net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.jetty.JettyAcegiUserRealm"&gt;
  2656. &lt;Arg&gt;Spring Powered Realm&lt;/Arg&gt;
  2657. &lt;Arg&gt;my_password&lt;/Arg&gt;
  2658. &lt;Arg&gt;etc/acegisecurity.xml&lt;/Arg&gt;
  2659. &lt;/New&gt;
  2660. &lt;/Arg&gt;
  2661. &lt;/Call&gt;</programlisting></para>
  2662. <para>Copy <literal>acegisecurity.xml</literal> into
  2663. <literal>$JETTY_HOME/etc</literal>.</para>
  2664. <para>Copy the following files into
  2665. <literal>$JETTY_HOME/ext</literal>:<itemizedlist>
  2666. <listitem>
  2667. <para><literal>aopalliance.jar</literal></para>
  2668. </listitem>
  2669. <listitem>
  2670. <para><literal>commons-logging.jar</literal></para>
  2671. </listitem>
  2672. <listitem>
  2673. <para><literal>spring.jar</literal></para>
  2674. </listitem>
  2675. <listitem>
  2676. <para><literal>acegi-security-jetty-XX.jar</literal></para>
  2677. </listitem>
  2678. <listitem>
  2679. <para><literal>commons-codec.jar</literal></para>
  2680. </listitem>
  2681. <listitem>
  2682. <para><literal>burlap.jar</literal></para>
  2683. </listitem>
  2684. <listitem>
  2685. <para><literal>hessian.jar</literal></para>
  2686. </listitem>
  2687. </itemizedlist></para>
  2688. <para>None of the above JAR files (or
  2689. <literal>acegi-security-XX.jar</literal>) should be in your
  2690. application's <literal>WEB-INF/lib</literal>. The realm name indicated
  2691. in your <literal>web.xml</literal> does matter with Jetty. The
  2692. <literal>web.xml</literal> must express the same
  2693. <literal>&lt;realm-name&gt;</literal> as your
  2694. <literal>jetty.xml</literal> (in the example above, "Spring Powered
  2695. Realm").</para>
  2696. </sect2>
  2697. <sect2 id="security-container-adapters-joss">
  2698. <title>JBoss Installation</title>
  2699. <para>The following was tested with JBoss 3.2.6.</para>
  2700. <para><literal>$JBOSS_HOME</literal> refers to the root of your JBoss
  2701. installation.</para>
  2702. <para>There are two different ways of making spring context available
  2703. to the Jboss integration classes.</para>
  2704. <para>The first approach is by editing your
  2705. <literal>$JBOSS_HOME/server/your_config/conf/login-config.xml</literal>
  2706. file so that it contains a new entry under the
  2707. <literal>&lt;Policy&gt;</literal> section:</para>
  2708. <para><programlisting> &lt;application-policy name = "SpringPoweredRealm"&gt;
  2709. &lt;authentication&gt;
  2710. &lt;login-module code = "net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.jboss.JbossSpringLoginModule"
  2711. flag = "required"&gt;
  2712. &lt;module-option name = "appContextLocation"&gt;acegisecurity.xml&lt;/module-option&gt;
  2713. &lt;module-option name = "key"&gt;my_password&lt;/module-option&gt;
  2714. &lt;/login-module&gt;
  2715. &lt;/authentication&gt;
  2716. &lt;/application-policy&gt;</programlisting></para>
  2717. <para>Copy <literal>acegisecurity.xml</literal> into
  2718. <literal>$JBOSS_HOME/server/your_config/conf</literal>.</para>
  2719. <para>In this configuration <literal>acegisecurity.xml</literal>
  2720. contains the spring context definition including all the
  2721. authentication manager beans. You have to bear in mind though, that
  2722. <literal>SecurityContext</literal> is created and destroyed on each
  2723. login request, so the login operation might become costly.
  2724. Alternatively, the second approach is to use Spring singleton
  2725. capabilities through
  2726. <literal>org.springframework.beans.factory.access.SingletonBeanFactoryLocator</literal>.
  2727. The required configuration for this approach is:</para>
  2728. <para><programlisting> &lt;application-policy name = "SpringPoweredRealm"&gt;
  2729. &lt;authentication&gt;
  2730. &lt;login-module code = "net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.jboss.JbossSpringLoginModule"
  2731. flag = "required"&gt;
  2732. &lt;module-option name = "singletonId"&gt;springRealm&lt;/module-option&gt;
  2733. &lt;module-option name = "key"&gt;my_password&lt;/module-option&gt;
  2734. &lt;module-option name = "authenticationManager"&gt;authenticationManager&lt;/module-option&gt;
  2735. &lt;/login-module&gt;
  2736. &lt;/authentication&gt;
  2737. &lt;/application-policy&gt;</programlisting></para>
  2738. <para>In the above code fragment,
  2739. <literal>authenticationManager</literal> is a helper property that
  2740. defines the expected name of the
  2741. <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> in case you have several
  2742. defined in the IoC container. The <literal>singletonId</literal>
  2743. property references a bean defined in a
  2744. <literal>beanRefFactory.xml</literal> file. This file needs to be
  2745. available from anywhere on the JBoss classpath, including
  2746. <literal>$JBOSS_HOME/server/your_config/conf</literal>. The
  2747. <literal>beanRefFactory.xml</literal> contains the following
  2748. declaration:</para>
  2749. <para><programlisting>&lt;beans&gt;
  2750. &lt;bean id="springRealm" singleton="true" lazy-init="true" class="org.springframework.context.support.ClassPathXmlApplicationContext"&gt;
  2751. &lt;constructor-arg&gt;
  2752. &lt;list&gt;
  2753. &lt;value&gt;acegisecurity.xml&lt;/value&gt;
  2754. &lt;/list&gt;
  2755. &lt;/constructor-arg&gt;
  2756. &lt;/bean&gt;
  2757. &lt;/beans&gt;</programlisting></para>
  2758. <para>Finally, irrespective of the configuration approach you need to
  2759. copy the following files into
  2760. <literal>$JBOSS_HOME/server/your_config/lib</literal>:<itemizedlist>
  2761. <listitem>
  2762. <para><literal>aopalliance.jar</literal></para>
  2763. </listitem>
  2764. <listitem>
  2765. <para><literal>spring.jar</literal></para>
  2766. </listitem>
  2767. <listitem>
  2768. <para><literal>acegi-security-jboss-XX.jar</literal></para>
  2769. </listitem>
  2770. <listitem>
  2771. <para><literal>commons-codec.jar</literal></para>
  2772. </listitem>
  2773. <listitem>
  2774. <para><literal>burlap.jar</literal></para>
  2775. </listitem>
  2776. <listitem>
  2777. <para><literal>hessian.jar</literal></para>
  2778. </listitem>
  2779. </itemizedlist></para>
  2780. <para>None of the above JAR files (or
  2781. <literal>acegi-security-XX.jar</literal>) should be in your
  2782. application's <literal>WEB-INF/lib</literal>. The realm name indicated
  2783. in your <literal>web.xml</literal> does not matter with JBoss.
  2784. However, your web application's
  2785. <literal>WEB-INF/jboss-web.xml</literal> must express the same
  2786. <literal>&lt;security-domain&gt;</literal> as your
  2787. <literal>login-config.xml</literal>. For example, to match the above
  2788. example, your <literal>jboss-web.xml</literal> would look like
  2789. this:</para>
  2790. <para><programlisting>&lt;jboss-web&gt;
  2791. &lt;security-domain&gt;java:/jaas/SpringPoweredRealm&lt;/security-domain&gt;
  2792. &lt;/jboss-web&gt;</programlisting></para>
  2793. </sect2>
  2794. <sect2 id="security-container-adapters-resin">
  2795. <title>Resin Installation</title>
  2796. <para>The following was tested with Resin 3.0.6.</para>
  2797. <para><literal>$RESIN_HOME</literal> refers to the root of your Resin
  2798. installation.</para>
  2799. <para>Resin provides several ways to support the container adapter. In
  2800. the instructions below we have elected to maximise consistency with
  2801. other container adapter configurations. This will allow Resin users to
  2802. simply deploy the sample application and confirm correct
  2803. configuration. Developers comfortable with Resin are naturally able to
  2804. use its capabilities to package the JARs with the web application
  2805. itself, and/or support single sign-on.</para>
  2806. <para>Copy the following files into
  2807. <literal>$RESIN_HOME/lib</literal>:<itemizedlist>
  2808. <listitem>
  2809. <para><literal>aopalliance.jar</literal></para>
  2810. </listitem>
  2811. <listitem>
  2812. <para><literal>commons-logging.jar</literal></para>
  2813. </listitem>
  2814. <listitem>
  2815. <para><literal>spring.jar</literal></para>
  2816. </listitem>
  2817. <listitem>
  2818. <para><literal>acegi-security-resin-XX.jar</literal></para>
  2819. </listitem>
  2820. <listitem>
  2821. <para><literal>commons-codec.jar</literal></para>
  2822. </listitem>
  2823. <listitem>
  2824. <para><literal>burlap.jar</literal></para>
  2825. </listitem>
  2826. <listitem>
  2827. <para><literal>hessian.jar</literal></para>
  2828. </listitem>
  2829. </itemizedlist></para>
  2830. <para>Unlike the container-wide <literal>acegisecurity.xml</literal>
  2831. files used by other container adapters, each Resin web application
  2832. will contain its own
  2833. <literal>WEB-INF/resin-acegisecurity.xml</literal> file. Each web
  2834. application will also contain a <literal>resin-web.xml</literal> file
  2835. which Resin uses to start the container adapter:</para>
  2836. <para><programlisting>&lt;web-app&gt;
  2837. &lt;authenticator&gt;
  2838. &lt;type&gt;net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.resin.ResinAcegiAuthenticator&lt;/type&gt;
  2839. &lt;init&gt;
  2840. &lt;app-context-location&gt;WEB-INF/resin-acegisecurity.xml&lt;/app-context-location&gt;
  2841. &lt;key&gt;my_password&lt;/key&gt;
  2842. &lt;/init&gt;
  2843. &lt;/authenticator&gt;
  2844. &lt;/web-app&gt;</programlisting></para>
  2845. <para>With the basic configuration provided above, none of the JAR
  2846. files listed (or <literal>acegi-security-XX.jar</literal>) should be
  2847. in your application's <literal>WEB-INF/lib</literal>. The realm name
  2848. indicated in your <literal>web.xml</literal> does not matter with
  2849. Resin, as the relevant authentication class is indicated by the
  2850. <literal>&lt;authenticator&gt;</literal> setting.</para>
  2851. </sect2>
  2852. </sect1>
  2853. <sect1 id="security-cas">
  2854. <title>Yale Central Authentication Service (CAS) Single Sign On</title>
  2855. <sect2 id="security-cas-overview">
  2856. <title>Overview</title>
  2857. <para>Yale University produces an enterprise-wide single sign on
  2858. system known as CAS. Unlike other initiatives, Yale's Central
  2859. Authentication Service is open source, widely used, simple to
  2860. understand, platform independent, and supports proxy capabilities. The
  2861. Acegi Security System for Spring fully supports CAS, and provides an
  2862. easy migration path from single-application deployments of Acegi
  2863. Security through to multiple-application deployments secured by an
  2864. enterprise-wide CAS server.</para>
  2865. <para>You can learn more about CAS at
  2866. <literal>http://www.yale.edu/tp/auth/</literal>. You will need to
  2867. visit this URL to download the CAS Server files. Whilst the Acegi
  2868. Security System for Spring includes two CAS libraries in the
  2869. "-with-dependencies" ZIP file, you will still need the CAS Java Server
  2870. Pages and <literal>web.xml</literal> to customise and deploy your CAS
  2871. server.</para>
  2872. </sect2>
  2873. <sect2 id="security-cas-how-cas-works">
  2874. <title>How CAS Works</title>
  2875. <para>Whilst the CAS web site above contains two documents that detail
  2876. the architecture of CAS, we present the general overview again here
  2877. within the context of the Acegi Security System for Spring. The
  2878. following refers to CAS 2.0, being the version of CAS that Acegi
  2879. Security System for Spring supports.</para>
  2880. <para>Somewhere in your enterprise you will need to setup a CAS
  2881. server. The CAS server is simply a standard WAR file, so there isn't
  2882. anything difficult about setting up your server. Inside the WAR file
  2883. you will customise the login and other single sign on pages displayed
  2884. to users. You will also need to specify in the web.xml a
  2885. <literal>PasswordHandler</literal>. The
  2886. <literal>PasswordHandler</literal> has a simple method that returns a
  2887. boolean as to whether a given username and password is valid. Your
  2888. <literal>PasswordHandler</literal> implementation will need to link
  2889. into some type of backend authentication repository, such as an LDAP
  2890. server or database.</para>
  2891. <para>If you are already running an existing CAS server instance, you
  2892. will have already established a <literal>PasswordHandler</literal>. If
  2893. you do not already have a <literal>PasswordHandler</literal>, you
  2894. might prefer to use the Acegi Security System for Spring
  2895. <literal>CasPasswordHandler</literal> class. This class delegates
  2896. through to the standard Acegi Security
  2897. <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>, enabling you to use a
  2898. security configuration you might already have in place. You do not
  2899. need to use the <literal>CasPasswordHandler</literal> class on your
  2900. CAS server if you do not wish. The Acegi Security System for Spring
  2901. will function as a CAS client successfully irrespective of the
  2902. <literal>PasswordHandler</literal> you've chosen for your CAS
  2903. server.</para>
  2904. <para>Apart from the CAS server itself, the other key player is of
  2905. course the secure web applications deployed throughout your
  2906. enterprise. These web applications are known as "services". There are
  2907. two types of services: standard services and proxy services. A proxy
  2908. service is able to request resources from other services on behalf of
  2909. the user. This will be explained more fully later.</para>
  2910. <para>Services can be developed in a large variety of languages, due
  2911. to CAS 2.0's very light XML-based protocol. The Yale CAS home page
  2912. contains a clients archive which demonstrates CAS clients in Java,
  2913. Active Server Pages, Perl, Python and others. Naturally, Java support
  2914. is very strong given the CAS server is written in Java. You do not
  2915. need to use any of CAS' client classes in applications secured by the
  2916. Acegi Security System for Spring. This is handled transparently for
  2917. you.</para>
  2918. <para>The basic interaction between a web browser, CAS server and an
  2919. Acegi Security for System Spring secured service is as follows:</para>
  2920. <orderedlist>
  2921. <listitem>
  2922. <para>The web user is browsing the service's public pages. CAS or
  2923. Acegi Security is not involved.</para>
  2924. </listitem>
  2925. <listitem>
  2926. <para>The user eventually requests a page that is either secure or
  2927. one of the beans it uses is secure. Acegi Security's
  2928. <literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal> will detect the
  2929. <literal>AuthenticationException</literal>.</para>
  2930. </listitem>
  2931. <listitem>
  2932. <para>Because the user's <literal>Authentication</literal> object
  2933. (or lack thereof) caused an
  2934. <literal>AuthenticationException</literal>, the
  2935. <literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal> will call the
  2936. configured <literal>AuthenticationEntryPoint</literal>. If using
  2937. CAS, this will be the
  2938. <literal>CasProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> class.</para>
  2939. </listitem>
  2940. <listitem>
  2941. <para>The <literal>CasProcessingFilterEntry</literal> point will
  2942. redirect the user's browser to the CAS server. It will also
  2943. indicate a <literal>service</literal> parameter, which is the
  2944. callback URL for the Acegi Security service. For example, the URL
  2945. to which the browser is redirected might be
  2946. <literal>https://my.company.com/cas/login?service=https%3A%2F%2Fserver3.company.com%2Fwebapp%2Fj_acegi_cas_security_check</literal>.</para>
  2947. </listitem>
  2948. <listitem>
  2949. <para>After the user's browser redirects to CAS, they will be
  2950. prompted for their username and password. If the user presents a
  2951. session cookie which indicates they've previously logged on, they
  2952. will not be prompted to login again (there is an exception to this
  2953. procedure, which we'll cover later). CAS will use the
  2954. <literal>PasswordHandler</literal> discussed above to decide
  2955. whether the username and password is valid.</para>
  2956. </listitem>
  2957. <listitem>
  2958. <para>Upon successful login, CAS will redirect the user's browser
  2959. back to the original service. It will also include a
  2960. <literal>ticket</literal> parameter, which is an opaque string
  2961. representing the "service ticket". Continuing our earlier example,
  2962. the URL the browser is redirected to might be
  2963. <literal>https://server3.company.com/webapp/j_acegi_cas_security_check?ticket=ST-0-ER94xMJmn6pha35CQRoZ</literal>.</para>
  2964. </listitem>
  2965. <listitem>
  2966. <para>Back in the service web application, the
  2967. <literal>CasProcessingFilter</literal> is always listening for
  2968. requests to <literal>/j_acegi_cas_security_check</literal> (this
  2969. is configurable, but we'll use the defaults in this introduction).
  2970. The processing filter will construct a
  2971. <literal>UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken</literal>
  2972. representing the service ticket. The principal will be equal to
  2973. <literal>CasProcessingFilter.CAS_STATEFUL_IDENTIFIER</literal>,
  2974. whilst the credentials will be the service ticket opaque value.
  2975. This authentication request will then be handed to the configured
  2976. <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>.</para>
  2977. </listitem>
  2978. <listitem>
  2979. <para>The <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> implementation
  2980. will be the <literal>ProviderManager</literal>, which is in turn
  2981. configured with the <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal>.
  2982. The <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> only responds to
  2983. <literal>UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken</literal>s containing
  2984. the CAS-specific principal (such as
  2985. <literal>CasProcessingFilter.CAS_STATEFUL_IDENTIFIER</literal>)
  2986. and <literal>CasAuthenticationToken</literal>s (discussed
  2987. later).</para>
  2988. </listitem>
  2989. <listitem>
  2990. <para><literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> will validate
  2991. the service ticket using a <literal>TicketValidator</literal>
  2992. implementation. Acegi Security includes one implementation, the
  2993. <literal>CasProxyTicketValidator</literal>. This implementation a
  2994. ticket validation class included in the CAS client library. The
  2995. <literal>CasProxyTicketValidator</literal> makes a HTTPS request
  2996. to the CAS server in order to validate the service ticket. The
  2997. <literal>CasProxyTicketValidator</literal> may also include a
  2998. proxy callback URL, which is included in this example:
  2999. <literal>https://my.company.com/cas/proxyValidate?service=https%3A%2F%2Fserver3.company.com%2Fwebapp%2Fj_acegi_cas_security_check&amp;ticket=ST-0-ER94xMJmn6pha35CQRoZ&amp;pgtUrl=https://server3.company.com/webapp/casProxy/receptor</literal>.</para>
  3000. </listitem>
  3001. <listitem>
  3002. <para>Back on the CAS server, the proxy validation request will be
  3003. received. If the presented service ticket matches the service URL
  3004. the ticket was issued to, CAS will provide an affirmative response
  3005. in XML indicating the username. If any proxy was involved in the
  3006. authentication (discussed below), the list of proxies is also
  3007. included in the XML response.</para>
  3008. </listitem>
  3009. <listitem>
  3010. <para>[OPTIONAL] If the request to the CAS validation service
  3011. included the proxy callback URL (in the <literal>pgtUrl</literal>
  3012. parameter), CAS will include a <literal>pgtIou</literal> string in
  3013. the XML response. This <literal>pgtIou</literal> represents a
  3014. proxy-granting ticket IOU. The CAS server will then create its own
  3015. HTTPS connection back to the <literal>pgtUrl</literal>. This is to
  3016. mutually authenticate the CAS server and the claimed service URL.
  3017. The HTTPS connection will be used to send a proxy granting ticket
  3018. to the original web application. For example,
  3019. <literal>https://server3.company.com/webapp/casProxy/receptor?pgtIou=PGTIOU-0-R0zlgrl4pdAQwBvJWO3vnNpevwqStbSGcq3vKB2SqSFFRnjPHt&amp;pgtId=PGT-1-si9YkkHLrtACBo64rmsi3v2nf7cpCResXg5MpESZFArbaZiOKH</literal>.
  3020. We suggest you use CAS' <literal>ProxyTicketReceptor</literal>
  3021. servlet to receive these proxy-granting tickets, if they are
  3022. required.</para>
  3023. </listitem>
  3024. <listitem>
  3025. <para>The <literal>CasProxyTicketValidator</literal> will parse
  3026. the XML received from the CAS server. It will return to the
  3027. <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> a
  3028. <literal>TicketResponse</literal>, which includes the username
  3029. (mandatory), proxy list (if any were involved), and proxy-granting
  3030. ticket IOU (if the proxy callback was requested).</para>
  3031. </listitem>
  3032. <listitem>
  3033. <para>Next <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> will call
  3034. a configured <literal>CasProxyDecider</literal>. The
  3035. <literal>CasProxyDecider</literal> indicates whether the proxy
  3036. list in the <literal>TicketResponse</literal> is acceptable to the
  3037. service. Several implementations are provided with the Acegi
  3038. Security System: <literal>RejectProxyTickets</literal>,
  3039. <literal>AcceptAnyCasProxy</literal> and
  3040. <literal>NamedCasProxyDecider</literal>. These names are largely
  3041. self-explanatory, except <literal>NamedCasProxyDecider</literal>
  3042. which allows a <literal>List</literal> of trusted proxies to be
  3043. provided.</para>
  3044. </listitem>
  3045. <listitem>
  3046. <para><literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> will next
  3047. request a <literal>CasAuthoritiesPopulator</literal> to advise the
  3048. <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> objects that apply to the user
  3049. contained in the <literal>TicketResponse</literal>. Acegi Security
  3050. includes a <literal>DaoCasAuthoritiesPopulator</literal> which
  3051. simply uses the <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal>
  3052. infrastructure to find the <literal>UserDetails</literal> and
  3053. their associated <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>s. Note that
  3054. the password and enabled/disabled status of
  3055. <literal>UserDetails</literal> returned by the
  3056. <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal> are ignored, as the CAS
  3057. server is responsible for authentication decisions.
  3058. <literal>DaoCasAuthoritiesPopulator</literal> is only concerned
  3059. with retrieving the <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>s.</para>
  3060. </listitem>
  3061. <listitem>
  3062. <para>If there were no problems,
  3063. <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> constructs a
  3064. <literal>CasAuthenticationToken</literal> including the details
  3065. contained in the <literal>TicketResponse</literal> and the
  3066. <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>s. The
  3067. <literal>CasAuthenticationToken</literal> contains the hash of a
  3068. key, so that the <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal>
  3069. knows it created it.</para>
  3070. </listitem>
  3071. <listitem>
  3072. <para>Control then returns to
  3073. <literal>CasProcessingFilter</literal>, which places the created
  3074. <literal>CasAuthenticationToken</literal> into the
  3075. <literal>HttpSession</literal> attribute named
  3076. <literal>HttpSessionIntegrationFilter.ACEGI_SECURITY_AUTHENTICATION_KEY</literal>.</para>
  3077. </listitem>
  3078. <listitem>
  3079. <para>The user's browser is redirected to the original page that
  3080. caused the <literal>AuthenticationException</literal>.</para>
  3081. </listitem>
  3082. <listitem>
  3083. <para>As the <literal>Authentication</literal> object is now in
  3084. the well-known location, it is handled like any other
  3085. authentication approach. Usually the
  3086. <literal>HttpSessionIntegrationFilter</literal> will be used to
  3087. associate the <literal>Authentication</literal> object with the
  3088. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> for the duration of each
  3089. request.</para>
  3090. </listitem>
  3091. </orderedlist>
  3092. <para>It's good that you're still here! It might sound involved, but
  3093. you can relax as the Acegi Security System for Spring classes hide
  3094. much of the complexity. Let's now look at how this is
  3095. configured.</para>
  3096. </sect2>
  3097. <sect2 id="security-cas-install-server">
  3098. <title>CAS Server Installation (Optional)</title>
  3099. <para>As mentioned above, the Acegi Security System for Spring
  3100. includes a <literal>PasswordHandler</literal> that bridges your
  3101. existing <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> into CAS. You do not
  3102. need to use this <literal>PasswordHandler</literal> to use Acegi
  3103. Security on the client side (any CAS
  3104. <literal>PasswordHandler</literal> will do).</para>
  3105. <para>To install, you will need to download and extract the CAS server
  3106. archive. We used version 2.0.12. There will be a
  3107. <literal>/web</literal> directory in the root of the deployment. Copy
  3108. an <literal>applicationContext.xml</literal> containing your
  3109. <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> as well as the
  3110. <literal>CasPasswordHandler</literal> into the
  3111. <literal>/web/WEB-INF</literal> directory. A sample
  3112. <literal>applicationContext.xml</literal> is included below:</para>
  3113. <programlisting>&lt;bean id="inMemoryDaoImpl" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.dao.memory.InMemoryDaoImpl"&gt;
  3114. &lt;property name="userMap"&gt;
  3115. &lt;value&gt;
  3116. marissa=koala,ROLES_IGNORED_BY_CAS
  3117. dianne=emu,ROLES_IGNORED_BY_CAS
  3118. scott=wombat,ROLES_IGNORED_BY_CAS
  3119. peter=opal,disabled,ROLES_IGNORED_BY_CAS
  3120. &lt;/value&gt;
  3121. &lt;/property&gt;
  3122. &lt;/bean&gt;
  3123. &lt;bean id="daoAuthenticationProvider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.dao.DaoAuthenticationProvider"&gt;
  3124. &lt;property name="authenticationDao"&gt;&lt;ref bean="inMemoryDaoImpl"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3125. &lt;/bean&gt;
  3126. &lt;bean id="authenticationManager" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.ProviderManager"&gt;
  3127. &lt;property name="providers"&gt;
  3128. &lt;list&gt;
  3129. &lt;ref bean="daoAuthenticationProvider"/&gt;
  3130. &lt;/list&gt;
  3131. &lt;/property&gt;
  3132. &lt;/bean&gt;
  3133. &lt;bean id="casPasswordHandler" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.cas.CasPasswordHandler"&gt;
  3134. &lt;property name="authenticationManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="authenticationManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3135. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting>
  3136. <para>Note the granted authorities are ignored by CAS because it has
  3137. no way of communicating the granted authorities to calling
  3138. applications. CAS is only concerned with username and passwords (and
  3139. the enabled/disabled status).</para>
  3140. <para>Next you will need to edit the existing
  3141. <literal>/web/WEB-INF/web.xml</literal> file. Add (or edit in the case
  3142. of the <literal>authHandler</literal> property) the following
  3143. lines:</para>
  3144. <para><programlisting>&lt;context-param&gt;
  3145. &lt;param-name&gt;edu.yale.its.tp.cas.authHandler&lt;/param-name&gt;
  3146. &lt;param-value&gt;net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.cas.CasPasswordHandlerProxy&lt;/param-value&gt;
  3147. &lt;/context-param&gt;
  3148. &lt;context-param&gt;
  3149. &lt;param-name&gt;contextConfigLocation&lt;/param-name&gt;
  3150. &lt;param-value&gt;/WEB-INF/applicationContext.xml&lt;/param-value&gt;
  3151. &lt;/context-param&gt;
  3152. &lt;listener&gt;
  3153. &lt;listener-class&gt;org.springframework.web.context.ContextLoaderListener&lt;/listener-class&gt;
  3154. &lt;/listener&gt;</programlisting></para>
  3155. <para>Copy the <literal>spring.jar</literal> and
  3156. <literal>acegi-security.jar</literal> files into
  3157. <literal>/web/WEB-INF/lib</literal>. Now use the <literal>ant
  3158. dist</literal> task in the <literal>build.xml</literal> in the root of
  3159. the directory structure. This will create
  3160. <literal>/lib/cas.war</literal>, which is ready for deployment to your
  3161. servlet container.</para>
  3162. <para>Note CAS heavily relies on HTTPS. You can't even test the system
  3163. without a HTTPS certificate. Whilst you should refer to your web
  3164. container's documentation on setting up HTTPS, if you need some
  3165. additional help or a test certificate you might like to check the
  3166. <literal>samples/contacts/etc/ssl</literal> directory.</para>
  3167. </sect2>
  3168. <sect2 id="security-cas-install-client">
  3169. <title>CAS Acegi Security System Client Installation</title>
  3170. <para>The web application side of CAS is made easy due to the Acegi
  3171. Security System for Spring. It is assumed you already know the basics
  3172. of using the Acegi Security System for Spring, so these are not
  3173. covered again below. Only the CAS-specific beans are mentioned.</para>
  3174. <para>You will need to add a <literal>ServiceProperties</literal> bean
  3175. to your application context. This represents your service:</para>
  3176. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="serviceProperties" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.cas.ServiceProperties"&gt;
  3177. &lt;property name="service"&gt;&lt;value&gt;https://localhost:8443/contacts-cas/j_acegi_cas_security_check&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3178. &lt;property name="sendRenew"&gt;&lt;value&gt;false&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3179. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  3180. <para>The <literal>service</literal> must equal a URL that will be
  3181. monitored by the <literal>CasProcessingFilter</literal>. The
  3182. <literal>sendRenew</literal> defaults to false, but should be set to
  3183. true if your application is particularly sensitive. What this
  3184. parameter does is tell the CAS login service that a single sign on
  3185. login is unacceptable. Instead, the user will need to re-enter their
  3186. username and password in order to gain access to the service.</para>
  3187. <para>The following beans should be configured to commence the CAS
  3188. authentication process:</para>
  3189. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="casProcessingFilter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.cas.CasProcessingFilter"&gt;
  3190. &lt;property name="authenticationManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="authenticationManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3191. &lt;property name="authenticationFailureUrl"&gt;&lt;value&gt;/casfailed.jsp&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3192. &lt;property name="defaultTargetUrl"&gt;&lt;value&gt;/&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3193. &lt;property name="filterProcessesUrl"&gt;&lt;value&gt;/j_acegi_cas_security_check&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3194. &lt;/bean&gt;
  3195. &lt;bean id="securityEnforcementFilter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.web.SecurityEnforcementFilter"&gt;
  3196. &lt;property name="filterSecurityInterceptor"&gt;&lt;ref bean="filterInvocationInterceptor"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3197. &lt;property name="authenticationEntryPoint"&gt;&lt;ref bean="casProcessingFilterEntryPoint"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3198. &lt;/bean&gt;
  3199. &lt;bean id="casProcessingFilterEntryPoint" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.cas.CasProcessingFilterEntryPoint"&gt;
  3200. &lt;property name="loginUrl"&gt;&lt;value&gt;https://localhost:8443/cas/login&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3201. &lt;property name="serviceProperties"&gt;&lt;ref bean="serviceProperties"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3202. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  3203. <para>You will also need to add the
  3204. <literal>CasProcessingFilter</literal> to web.xml:</para>
  3205. <para><programlisting>&lt;filter&gt;
  3206. &lt;filter-name&gt;Acegi CAS Processing Filter&lt;/filter-name&gt;
  3207. &lt;filter-class&gt;net.sf.acegisecurity.util.FilterToBeanProxy&lt;/filter-class&gt;
  3208. &lt;init-param&gt;
  3209. &lt;param-name&gt;targetClass&lt;/param-name&gt;
  3210. &lt;param-value&gt;net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.cas.CasProcessingFilter&lt;/param-value&gt;
  3211. &lt;/init-param&gt;
  3212. &lt;/filter&gt;
  3213. &lt;filter-mapping&gt;
  3214. &lt;filter-name&gt;Acegi CAS Processing Filter&lt;/filter-name&gt;
  3215. &lt;url-pattern&gt;/*&lt;/url-pattern&gt;
  3216. &lt;/filter-mapping&gt;</programlisting></para>
  3217. <para>The <literal>CasProcessingFilter</literal> has very similar
  3218. properties to the <literal>AuthenticationProcessingFilter</literal>
  3219. (used for form-based logins). Each property is
  3220. self-explanatory.</para>
  3221. <para>For CAS to operate, the
  3222. <literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal> must have its
  3223. <literal>authenticationEntryPoint</literal> property set to the
  3224. <literal>CasProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> bean.</para>
  3225. <para>The <literal>CasProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> must refer
  3226. to the <literal>ServiceProperties</literal> bean (discussed above),
  3227. which provides the URL to the enterprise's CAS login server. This is
  3228. where the user's browser will be redirected.</para>
  3229. <para>Next you need to add an <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>
  3230. that uses <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> and its
  3231. collaborators:</para>
  3232. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="authenticationManager" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.ProviderManager"&gt;
  3233. &lt;property name="providers"&gt;
  3234. &lt;list&gt;
  3235. &lt;ref bean="casAuthenticationProvider"/&gt;
  3236. &lt;/list&gt;
  3237. &lt;/property&gt;
  3238. &lt;/bean&gt;
  3239. &lt;bean id="casAuthenticationProvider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.cas.CasAuthenticationProvider"&gt;
  3240. &lt;property name="casAuthoritiesPopulator"&gt;&lt;ref bean="casAuthoritiesPopulator"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3241. &lt;property name="casProxyDecider"&gt;&lt;ref bean="casProxyDecider"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3242. &lt;property name="ticketValidator"&gt;&lt;ref bean="casProxyTicketValidator"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3243. &lt;property name="statelessTicketCache"&gt;&lt;ref bean="statelessTicketCache"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3244. &lt;property name="key"&gt;&lt;value&gt;my_password_for_this_auth_provider_only&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3245. &lt;/bean&gt;
  3246. &lt;bean id="casProxyTicketValidator" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.cas.ticketvalidator.CasProxyTicketValidator"&gt;
  3247. &lt;property name="casValidate"&gt;&lt;value&gt;https://localhost:8443/cas/proxyValidate&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3248. &lt;property name="proxyCallbackUrl"&gt;&lt;value&gt;https://localhost:8443/contacts-cas/casProxy/receptor&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3249. &lt;property name="serviceProperties"&gt;&lt;ref bean="serviceProperties"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3250. &lt;!-- &lt;property name="trustStore"&gt;&lt;value&gt;/some/path/to/your/lib/security/cacerts&lt;/value&gt;&lt;/property&gt; --&gt;
  3251. &lt;/bean&gt;
  3252. &lt;bean id="cacheManager" class="org.springframework.cache.ehcache.EhCacheManagerFactoryBean"&gt;
  3253. &lt;property name="configLocation"&gt;
  3254. &lt;value&gt;classpath:/ehcache-failsafe.xml&lt;/value&gt;
  3255. &lt;/property&gt;
  3256. &lt;/bean&gt;
  3257. &lt;bean id="ticketCacheBackend" class="org.springframework.cache.ehcache.EhCacheFactoryBean"&gt;
  3258. &lt;property name="cacheManager"&gt;
  3259. &lt;ref local="cacheManager"/&gt;
  3260. &lt;/property&gt;
  3261. &lt;property name="cacheName"&gt;
  3262. &lt;value&gt;ticketCache&lt;/value&gt;
  3263. &lt;/property&gt;
  3264. &lt;/bean&gt;
  3265. &lt;bean id="statelessTicketCache" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.cas.cache.EhCacheBasedTicketCache"&gt;
  3266. &lt;property name="cache"&gt;&lt;ref local="ticketCacheBackend"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3267. &lt;/bean&gt;
  3268. &lt;bean id="casAuthoritiesPopulator" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.cas.populator.DaoCasAuthoritiesPopulator"&gt;
  3269. &lt;property name="authenticationDao"&gt;&lt;ref bean="inMemoryDaoImpl"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3270. &lt;/bean&gt;
  3271. &lt;bean id="casProxyDecider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.cas.proxy.RejectProxyTickets"/&gt;</programlisting></para>
  3272. <para>The beans are all reasonable self-explanatory if you refer back
  3273. to the "How CAS Works" section. Careful readers might notice one
  3274. surprise: the <literal>statelessTicketCache</literal> property of the
  3275. <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal>. This is discussed in
  3276. detail in the "Advanced CAS Usage" section.</para>
  3277. <para>Note the <literal>CasProxyTicketValidator</literal> has a
  3278. remarked out <literal>trustStore</literal> property. This property
  3279. might be helpful if you experience HTTPS certificate issues. Also note
  3280. the <literal>proxyCallbackUrl</literal> is set so the service can
  3281. receive a proxy-granting ticket. As mentioned above, this is optional
  3282. and unnecessary if you do not require proxy-granting tickets. If you
  3283. do use this feature, you will need to configure a suitable servlet to
  3284. receive the proxy-granting tickets. We suggest you use CAS'
  3285. <literal>ProxyTicketReceptor</literal> by adding the following to your
  3286. web application's <literal>web.xml</literal>:</para>
  3287. <para><programlisting>&lt;servlet&gt;
  3288. &lt;servlet-name&gt;casproxy&lt;/servlet-name&gt;
  3289. &lt;servlet-class&gt;edu.yale.its.tp.cas.proxy.ProxyTicketReceptor&lt;/servlet-class&gt;
  3290. &lt;/servlet&gt;
  3291. &lt;servlet-mapping&gt;
  3292. &lt;servlet-name&gt;casproxy&lt;/servlet-name&gt;
  3293. &lt;url-pattern&gt;/casProxy/*&lt;/url-pattern&gt;
  3294. &lt;/servlet-mapping&gt;</programlisting></para>
  3295. <para>This completes the configuration of CAS. If you haven't made any
  3296. mistakes, your web application should happily work within the
  3297. framework of CAS single sign on. No other parts of the Acegi Security
  3298. System for Spring need to be concerned about the fact CAS handled
  3299. authentication.</para>
  3300. <para>There is also a <literal>contacts-cas.war</literal> file in the
  3301. sample applications directory. This sample application uses the above
  3302. settings and can be deployed to see CAS in operation.</para>
  3303. </sect2>
  3304. <sect2 id="security-cas-advanced-usage">
  3305. <title>Advanced CAS Usage</title>
  3306. <para>The <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> distinguishes
  3307. between stateful and stateless clients. A stateful client is
  3308. considered any that originates via the
  3309. <literal>CasProcessingFilter</literal>. A stateless client is any that
  3310. presents an authentication request via the
  3311. <literal>UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken</literal> with a
  3312. principal equal to
  3313. <literal>CasProcessingFilter.CAS_STATELESS_IDENTIFIER</literal>.</para>
  3314. <para>Stateless clients are likely to be via remoting protocols such
  3315. as Hessian and Burlap. The <literal>BasicProcessingFilter</literal> is
  3316. still used in this case, but the remoting protocol client is expected
  3317. to present a username equal to the static string above, and a password
  3318. equal to a CAS service ticket. Clients should acquire a CAS service
  3319. ticket directly from the CAS server.</para>
  3320. <para>Because remoting protocols have no way of presenting themselves
  3321. within the context of a <literal>HttpSession</literal>, it isn't
  3322. possible to rely on the <literal>HttpSession</literal>'s
  3323. <literal>HttpSessionIntegrationFilter.ACEGI_SECURITY_AUTHENTICATION_KEY</literal>
  3324. attribute to locate the <literal>CasAuthenticationToken</literal>.
  3325. Furthermore, because the CAS server invalidates a service ticket after
  3326. it has been validated by the <literal>TicketValidator</literal>,
  3327. presenting the same service ticket on subsequent requests will not
  3328. work. It is similarly very difficult to obtain a proxy-granting ticket
  3329. for a remoting protocol client, as they are often deployed on client
  3330. machines which rarely have HTTPS URLs that would be accessible to the
  3331. CAS server.</para>
  3332. <para>One obvious option is to not use CAS at all for remoting
  3333. protocol clients. However, this would eliminate many of the desirable
  3334. features of CAS.</para>
  3335. <para>As a middle-ground, the
  3336. <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> uses a
  3337. <literal>StatelessTicketCache</literal>. This is used solely for
  3338. requests with a principal equal to
  3339. <literal>CasProcessingFilter.CAS_STATELESS_IDENTIFIER</literal>. What
  3340. happens is the <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> will store
  3341. the resulting <literal>CasAuthenticationToken</literal> in the
  3342. <literal>StatelessTicketCache</literal>, keyed on the service ticket.
  3343. Accordingly, remoting protocol clients can present the same service
  3344. ticket and the <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> will not
  3345. need to contact the CAS server for validation (aside from the first
  3346. request).</para>
  3347. <para>The other aspect of advanced CAS usage involves creating proxy
  3348. tickets from the proxy-granting ticket. As indicated above, we
  3349. recommend you use CAS' <literal>ProxyTicketReceptor</literal> to
  3350. receive these tickets. The <literal>ProxyTicketReceptor</literal>
  3351. provides a static method that enables you to obtain a proxy ticket by
  3352. presenting the proxy-granting IOU ticket. You can obtain the
  3353. proxy-granting IOU ticket by calling
  3354. <literal>CasAuthenticationToken.getProxyGrantingTicketIou()</literal>.</para>
  3355. <para>It is hoped you find CAS integration easy and useful with the
  3356. Acegi Security System for Spring classes. Welcome to enterprise-wide
  3357. single sign on!</para>
  3358. </sect2>
  3359. </sect1>
  3360. <sect1 id="security-x509">
  3361. <title>X509 Authentication</title>
  3362. <sect2 id="security-x509-overview">
  3363. <title>Overview</title>
  3364. <para>The most common use of X509 certificate authentication is in
  3365. verifying the identity of a server when using SSL, most commonly when
  3366. using HTTPS from a browser. The browser will automatically check that
  3367. the certificate presented by a server has been issued (ie digitally
  3368. signed) by one of a list of trusted certificate authorities which it
  3369. maintains.</para>
  3370. <para>You can also use SSL with <quote>mutual authentication</quote>;
  3371. the server will then request a valid certificate from the client as
  3372. part of the SSL handshake. The server will authenticate the client by
  3373. checking that it's certificate is signed by an acceptable authority.
  3374. If a valid certificate has been provided, it can be obtained through
  3375. the servlet API in an application. The Acegi Security X509 module
  3376. extracts the certificate using a filter and passes it to the
  3377. configured X509 authentication provider to allow any additional
  3378. application-specific checks to be applied. It also maps the
  3379. certificate to an application user and loads that user's set of
  3380. granted authorities for use with the standard Acegi Security
  3381. infrastructure.</para>
  3382. <para>You should be familiar with using certificates and setting up
  3383. client authentication for your servlet container before attempting to
  3384. use it with Acegi Security. Most of the work is in creating and
  3385. installing suitable certificates and keys. For example, if you're
  3386. using Tomcat then read the instructions here <ulink
  3387. url="http://jakarta.apache.org/tomcat/tomcat-5.0-doc/ssl-howto.html"></ulink>.
  3388. It's important that you get this working before trying it out with
  3389. Acegi Security.</para>
  3390. </sect2>
  3391. <sect2 id="security-x509-details">
  3392. <title>X509 with Acegi Security</title>
  3393. <para>With X509 authentication, there is no explicit login procedure
  3394. so the implementation is relatively simple; there is no need to
  3395. redirect requests in order to interact with the user. As a result,
  3396. some of the classes behave slightly differently from their equivalents
  3397. in other packages. For example, the default <quote>entry point</quote>
  3398. class, which is normally responsible for starting the authentication
  3399. process, is only invoked if the certificate is rejected and it always
  3400. returns an error to the user. With a suitable bean configuration, the
  3401. normal sequence of events is as follows <orderedlist>
  3402. <listitem>
  3403. <para>The <classname>X509ProcessingFilter</classname> extracts
  3404. the certificate from the request and uses it as the credentials
  3405. for an authentication request. The generated authentication
  3406. request is an <classname>X509AuthenticationToken</classname>.
  3407. The request is passed to the authentication manager.</para>
  3408. </listitem>
  3409. <listitem>
  3410. <para>The <classname>X509AuthenticationProvider</classname>
  3411. receives the token. Its main concern is to obtain the user
  3412. information (in particular the user's granted authorities) that
  3413. matches the certificate. It delegates this responsibility to an
  3414. <interfacename>X509AuthoritiesPopulator</interfacename>.</para>
  3415. </listitem>
  3416. .
  3417. <listitem>
  3418. <para>The populator's single method,
  3419. <methodname>getUserDetails(X509Certificate
  3420. userCertificate)</methodname> is invoked. Implementations should
  3421. return a <classname>UserDetails</classname> instance containing
  3422. the array of <classname>GrantedAuthority</classname> objects for
  3423. the user. This method can also choose to reject the certificate
  3424. (for example if it doesn't contain a matching user name). In
  3425. such cases it should throw a
  3426. <exceptionname>BadCredentialsException</exceptionname>. A
  3427. DAO-based implementation,
  3428. <classname>DaoX509AuthoritiesPopulator</classname>, is provided
  3429. which extracts the user's name from the subject <quote>common
  3430. name</quote> (CN) in the certificate. It also allows you to set
  3431. your own regular expression to match a different part of the
  3432. subject's distinguished name. An
  3433. <classname>AuthenticationDao</classname> is used to load the
  3434. user information.<!-- TODO: Give email matching as an example --></para>
  3435. </listitem>
  3436. <listitem>
  3437. <para>If everything has gone smoothly then there should be a
  3438. valid <classname>Authentication</classname> object in the secure
  3439. context and the invocation will procede as normal. If no
  3440. certificate was found, or the certificate was rejected, then the
  3441. <classname>SecurityEnforcementFilter</classname> will invoke the
  3442. <classname>X509ProcessingFilterEntryPoint</classname> which
  3443. returns a 403 error (forbidden) to the user.</para>
  3444. </listitem>
  3445. </orderedlist></para>
  3446. </sect2>
  3447. <sect2 id="security-x509-config">
  3448. <title>Configuring the X509 Provider</title>
  3449. <para>There is a version of the <link
  3450. linkend="security-sample">contacts sample application</link> which
  3451. uses X509. Copy the beans and filter setup from this as a starting
  3452. point for configuring your own application. A set of example
  3453. certificates is also included which you can use to configure your
  3454. server. These are <itemizedlist>
  3455. <listitem>
  3456. <para><filename>marissa.p12</filename>: A PKCS12 format file
  3457. containing the client key and certificate. These should be
  3458. installed in your browser. It maps to the user
  3459. <quote>marissa</quote> in the application.</para>
  3460. </listitem>
  3461. <listitem>
  3462. <para><filename>server.p12</filename>: The server certificate
  3463. and key for HTTPS connections.</para>
  3464. </listitem>
  3465. <listitem>
  3466. <para><filename>ca.jks</filename>: A Java keystore containing
  3467. the certificate for the authority which issued marissa's
  3468. certificate. This will be used by the container to validate
  3469. client certificates.</para>
  3470. </listitem>
  3471. </itemizedlist> For JBoss 3.2.7 (with Tomcat 5.0), the SSL
  3472. configuration in the <filename>server.xml</filename> file looks like
  3473. this <programlisting>&lt;!-- SSL/TLS Connector configuration --&gt;
  3474. &lt;Connector port="8443" address="${jboss.bind.address}"
  3475. maxThreads="100" minSpareThreads="5" maxSpareThreads="15"
  3476. scheme="https" secure="true"
  3477. sslProtocol = "TLS"
  3478. clientAuth="true" keystoreFile="${jboss.server.home.dir}/conf/server.p12"
  3479. keystoreType="PKCS12" keystorePass="password"
  3480. truststoreFile="${jboss.server.home.dir}/conf/ca.jks"
  3481. truststoreType="JKS" truststorePass="password"
  3482. /&gt;</programlisting><parameter>clientAuth</parameter> can also be set to
  3483. <parameter>want</parameter> if you still want SSL connections to
  3484. succeed even if the client doesn't provide a certificate. Obviously
  3485. these clients won't be able to access any objects secured by Acegi
  3486. Security (unless you use a non-X509 authentication mechanism, such as
  3487. BASIC authentication, to authenticate the user).</para>
  3488. </sect2>
  3489. </sect1>
  3490. <sect1 id="security-channels">
  3491. <title>Channel Security</title>
  3492. <sect2 id="security-channels-overview">
  3493. <title>Overview</title>
  3494. <para>In addition to coordinating the authentication and authorization
  3495. requirements of your application, the Acegi Security System for Spring
  3496. is also able to ensure unauthenticated web requests have certain
  3497. properties. These properties may include being of a particular
  3498. transport type, having a particular <literal>HttpSession</literal>
  3499. attribute set and so on. The most common requirement is for your web
  3500. requests to be received using a particular transport protocol, such as
  3501. HTTPS.</para>
  3502. <para>An important issue in considering transport security is that of
  3503. session hijacking. Your web container manages a
  3504. <literal>HttpSession</literal> by reference to a
  3505. <literal>jsessionid</literal> that is sent to user agents either via a
  3506. cookie or URL rewriting. If the <literal>jsessionid</literal> is ever
  3507. sent over HTTP, there is a possibility that session identifier can be
  3508. intercepted and used to impersonate the user after they complete the
  3509. authentication process. This is because most web containers maintain
  3510. the same session identifier for a given user, even after they switch
  3511. from HTTP to HTTPS pages.</para>
  3512. <para>If session hijacking is considered too significant a risk for
  3513. your particular application, the only option is to use HTTPS for every
  3514. request. This means the <literal>jsessionid</literal> is never sent
  3515. across an insecure channel. You will need to ensure your
  3516. <literal>web.xml</literal>-defined
  3517. <literal>&lt;welcome-file&gt;</literal> points to a HTTPS location,
  3518. and the application never directs the user to a HTTP location. The
  3519. Acegi Security System for Spring provides a solution to assist with
  3520. the latter.</para>
  3521. </sect2>
  3522. <sect2 id="security-channels-installation">
  3523. <title>Configuration</title>
  3524. <para>To utilise Acegi Security's channel security services, add the
  3525. following lines to <literal>web.xml</literal>:</para>
  3526. <para><programlisting>&lt;filter&gt;
  3527. &lt;filter-name&gt;Acegi Channel Processing Filter&lt;/filter-name&gt;
  3528. &lt;filter-class&gt;net.sf.acegisecurity.util.FilterToBeanProxy&lt;/filter-class&gt;
  3529. &lt;init-param&gt;
  3530. &lt;param-name&gt;targetClass&lt;/param-name&gt;
  3531. &lt;param-value&gt;net.sf.acegisecurity.securechannel.ChannelProcessingFilter&lt;/param-value&gt;
  3532. &lt;/init-param&gt;
  3533. &lt;/filter&gt;
  3534. &lt;filter-mapping&gt;
  3535. &lt;filter-name&gt;Acegi Channel Processing Filter&lt;/filter-name&gt;
  3536. &lt;url-pattern&gt;/*&lt;/url-pattern&gt;
  3537. &lt;/filter-mapping&gt;</programlisting></para>
  3538. <para>As usual when running <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal>, you
  3539. will also need to configure the filter in your application
  3540. context:</para>
  3541. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="channelProcessingFilter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.securechannel.ChannelProcessingFilter"&gt;
  3542. &lt;property name="channelDecisionManager"&gt;&lt;ref bean="channelDecisionManager"/&gt;&lt;/property&gt;
  3543. &lt;property name="filterInvocationDefinitionSource"&gt;
  3544. &lt;value&gt;
  3545. CONVERT_URL_TO_LOWERCASE_BEFORE_COMPARISON
  3546. \A/secure/.*\Z=REQUIRES_SECURE_CHANNEL
  3547. \A/acegilogin.jsp.*\Z=REQUIRES_SECURE_CHANNEL
  3548. \A/j_acegi_security_check.*\Z=REQUIRES_SECURE_CHANNEL
  3549. \A.*\Z=REQUIRES_INSECURE_CHANNEL
  3550. &lt;/value&gt;
  3551. &lt;/property&gt;
  3552. &lt;/bean&gt;
  3553. &lt;bean id="channelDecisionManager" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.securechannel.ChannelDecisionManagerImpl"&gt;
  3554. &lt;property name="channelProcessors"&gt;
  3555. &lt;list&gt;
  3556. &lt;ref bean="secureChannelProcessor"/&gt;
  3557. &lt;ref bean="insecureChannelProcessor"/&gt;
  3558. &lt;/list&gt;
  3559. &lt;/property&gt;
  3560. &lt;/bean&gt;
  3561. &lt;bean id="secureChannelProcessor" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.securechannel.SecureChannelProcessor"/&gt;
  3562. &lt;bean id="insecureChannelProcessor" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.securechannel.InsecureChannelProcessor"/&gt;</programlisting></para>
  3563. <para>Like <literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor</literal>, Apache Ant
  3564. style paths are also supported by the
  3565. <literal>ChannelProcessingFilter</literal>.</para>
  3566. <para>The <literal>ChannelProcessingFilter</literal> operates by
  3567. filtering all web requests and determining the configuration
  3568. attributes that apply. It then delegates to the
  3569. <literal>ChannelDecisionManager</literal>. The default implementation,
  3570. <literal>ChannelDecisionManagerImpl</literal>, should suffice in most
  3571. cases. It simply delegates through the list of configured
  3572. <literal>ChannelProcessor</literal> instances. A
  3573. <literal>ChannelProcessor</literal> will review the request, and if it
  3574. is unhappy with the request (eg it was received across the incorrect
  3575. transport protocol), it will perform a redirect, throw an exception or
  3576. take whatever other action is appropriate.</para>
  3577. <para>Included with the Acegi Security System for Spring are two
  3578. concrete <literal>ChannelProcessor</literal> implementations:
  3579. <literal>SecureChannelProcessor</literal> ensures requests with a
  3580. configuration attribute of <literal>REQUIRES_SECURE_CHANNEL</literal>
  3581. are received over HTTPS, whilst
  3582. <literal>InsecureChannelProcessor</literal> ensures requests with a
  3583. configuration attribute of
  3584. <literal>REQUIRES_INSECURE_CHANNEL</literal> are received over HTTP.
  3585. Both implementations delegate to a
  3586. <literal>ChannelEntryPoint</literal> if the required transport
  3587. protocol is not used. The two <literal>ChannelEntryPoint</literal>
  3588. implementations included with Acegi Security simply redirect the
  3589. request to HTTP and HTTPS as appropriate. Appropriate defaults are
  3590. assigned to the <literal>ChannelProcessor</literal> implementations
  3591. for the configuration attribute keywords they respond to and the
  3592. <literal>ChannelEntryPoint</literal> they delegate to, although you
  3593. have the ability to override these using the application
  3594. context.</para>
  3595. <para>Note that the redirections are absolute (eg
  3596. http://www.company.com:8080/app/page), not relative (eg /app/page).
  3597. During testing it was discovered that Internet Explorer 6 Service Pack
  3598. 1 has a bug whereby it does not respond correctly to a redirection
  3599. instruction which also changes the port to use. Accordingly, absolute
  3600. URLs are used in conjunction with bug detection logic in the
  3601. <literal>PortResolverImpl</literal> that is wired up by default to
  3602. many Acegi Security beans. Please refer to the JavaDocs for
  3603. <literal>PortResolverImpl</literal> for further details.</para>
  3604. </sect2>
  3605. <sect2 id="security-channels-usage">
  3606. <title>Usage</title>
  3607. <para>Once configured, using the channel security filter is very easy.
  3608. Simply request pages without regard to the protocol (ie HTTP or HTTPS)
  3609. or port (eg 80, 8080, 443, 8443 etc). Obviously you'll still need a
  3610. way of making the initial request (probably via the
  3611. <literal>web.xml</literal> <literal>&lt;welcome-file&gt;</literal> or
  3612. a well-known home page URL), but once this is done the filter will
  3613. perform redirects as defined by your application context.</para>
  3614. <para>You can also add your own <literal>ChannelProcessor</literal>
  3615. implementations to the <literal>ChannelDecisionManagerImpl</literal>.
  3616. For example, you might set a <literal>HttpSession</literal> attribute
  3617. when a human user is detected via a "enter the contents of this
  3618. graphic" procedure. Your <literal>ChannelProcessor</literal> would
  3619. respond to say <literal>REQUIRES_HUMAN_USER</literal> configuration
  3620. attributes and redirect to an appropriate entry point to start the
  3621. human user validation process if the <literal>HttpSession</literal>
  3622. attribute is not currently set.</para>
  3623. <para>To decide whether a security check belongs in a
  3624. <literal>ChannelProcessor</literal> or an
  3625. <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal>, remember that the former is
  3626. designed to handle unauthenticated requests, whilst the latter is
  3627. designed to handle authenticated requests. The latter therefore has
  3628. access to the granted authorities of the authenticated principal. In
  3629. addition, problems detected by a <literal>ChannelProcessor</literal>
  3630. will generally cause a HTTP/HTTPS redirection so its requirements can
  3631. be met, whilst problems detected by an
  3632. <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> will ultimately result in an
  3633. <literal>AccessDeniedException</literal> (depending on the governing
  3634. <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal>).</para>
  3635. </sect2>
  3636. </sect1>
  3637. <sect1 id="acls">
  3638. <title>Instance-Based Access Control List (ACL) Security</title>
  3639. <sect2 id="acls-overview">
  3640. <title>Overview</title>
  3641. <para>Complex applications often will find the need to define access
  3642. permissions not simply at a web request or method invocation level.
  3643. Instead, security decisions need to comprise both who
  3644. (<literal>Authentication</literal>), where
  3645. (<literal>MethodInvocation</literal>) and what
  3646. (<literal>SomeDomainObject</literal>). In other words, authorization
  3647. decisions also need to consider the actual domain object instance
  3648. subject of a method invocation.</para>
  3649. <para>Imagine you're designing an application for a pet clinic. There
  3650. will be two main groups of users of your Spring-based application:
  3651. staff of the pet clinic, as well as the pet clinic's customers. The
  3652. staff will have access to all of the data, whilst your customers will
  3653. only be able to see their own customer records. To make it a little
  3654. more interesting, your customers can allow other users to see their
  3655. customer records, such as their "puppy preschool "mentor or president
  3656. of their local "Pony Club". Using Acegi Security System for Spring as
  3657. the foundation, you have several approaches that can be
  3658. used:<orderedlist>
  3659. <listitem>
  3660. <para>Write your business methods to enforce the security. You
  3661. could consult a collection within the
  3662. <literal>Customer</literal> domain object instance to determine
  3663. which users have access. By using the
  3664. <literal>ContextHolder.getContext()</literal> and casting it to
  3665. <literal>SecureContext</literal>, you'll be able to access the
  3666. <literal>Authentication</literal> object.</para>
  3667. </listitem>
  3668. <listitem>
  3669. <para>Write an <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> to enforce
  3670. the security from the <literal>GrantedAuthority[]</literal>s
  3671. stored in the <literal>Authentication</literal> object. This
  3672. would mean your <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> would
  3673. need to populate the <literal>Authentication</literal> with
  3674. custom <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>[]s representing each
  3675. of the <literal>Customer</literal> domain object instances the
  3676. principal has access to.</para>
  3677. </listitem>
  3678. <listitem>
  3679. <para>Write an <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> to enforce
  3680. the security and open the target <literal>Customer</literal>
  3681. domain object directly. This would mean your voter needs access
  3682. to a DAO that allows it to retrieve the
  3683. <literal>Customer</literal> object. It would then access the
  3684. <literal>Customer</literal> object's collection of approved
  3685. users and make the appropriate decision.</para>
  3686. </listitem>
  3687. </orderedlist></para>
  3688. <para>Each one of these approaches is perfectly legitimate. However,
  3689. the first couples your authorization checking to your business code.
  3690. The main problems with this include the enhanced difficulty of unit
  3691. testing and the fact it would be more difficult to reuse the
  3692. <literal>Customer</literal> authorization logic elsewhere. Obtaining
  3693. the <literal>GrantedAuthority[]</literal>s from the
  3694. <literal>Authentication</literal> object is also fine, but will not
  3695. scale to large numbers of <literal>Customer</literal>s. If a user
  3696. might be able to access 5,000 <literal>Customer</literal>s (unlikely
  3697. in this case, but imagine if it were a popular vet for a large Pony
  3698. Club!) the amount of memory consumed and time required to construct
  3699. the <literal>Authentication</literal> object would be undesirable. The
  3700. final method, opening the <literal>Customer</literal> directly from
  3701. external code, is probably the best of the three. It achieves
  3702. separation of concerns, and doesn't misuse memory or CPU cycles, but
  3703. it is still inefficient in that both the
  3704. <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> and the eventual business
  3705. method itself will perform a call to the DAO responsible for
  3706. retrieving the <literal>Customer</literal> object. Two accesses per
  3707. method invocation is clearly undesirable. In addition, with every
  3708. approach listed you'll need to write your own access control list
  3709. (ACL) persistence and business logic from scratch.</para>
  3710. <para>Fortunately, there is another alternative, which we'll talk
  3711. about below.</para>
  3712. </sect2>
  3713. <sect2 id="acls-acl-package">
  3714. <title>The net.sf.acegisecurity.acl Package</title>
  3715. <para>The <literal>net.sf.acegisecurity.acl</literal> package is very
  3716. simple, comprising only a handful of interfaces and a single class, as
  3717. shown in Figure 6. It provides the basic foundation for access control
  3718. list (ACL) lookups.</para>
  3719. <para><mediaobject>
  3720. <imageobject role="html">
  3721. <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/ACLSecurity.gif"
  3722. format="GIF" />
  3723. </imageobject>
  3724. <caption>
  3725. <para>Figure 6: Access Control List Manager</para>
  3726. </caption>
  3727. </mediaobject></para>
  3728. <para>The central interface is <literal>AclManager</literal>, which is
  3729. defined by two methods:</para>
  3730. <para><programlisting>public AclEntry[] getAcls(java.lang.Object domainInstance);
  3731. public AclEntry[] getAcls(java.lang.Object domainInstance, Authentication authentication);</programlisting></para>
  3732. <para><literal>AclManager</literal> is intended to be used as a
  3733. collaborator against your business objects, or, more desirably,
  3734. <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal>s. This means you use Spring's
  3735. normal <literal>ApplicationContext</literal> features to wire up your
  3736. <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> (or business method) with an
  3737. <literal>AclManager</literal>. Consideration was given to placing the
  3738. ACL information in the <literal>ContextHolder</literal>, but it was
  3739. felt this would be inefficient both in terms of memory usage as well
  3740. as the time spent loading potentially unused ACL information. The
  3741. trade-off of needing to wire up a collaborator for those objects
  3742. requiring ACL information is rather minor, particularly in a
  3743. Spring-managed application.</para>
  3744. <para>The first method of the <literal>AclManager</literal> will
  3745. return all ACLs applying to the domain object instance passed to it.
  3746. The second method does the same, but only returns those ACLs which
  3747. apply to the passed <literal>Authentication</literal> object.</para>
  3748. <para>The <literal>AclEntry</literal> interface returned by
  3749. <literal>AclManager</literal> is merely a marker interface. You will
  3750. need to provide an implementation that reflects that ACL permissions
  3751. for your application.</para>
  3752. <para>Rounding out the <literal>net.sf.acegisecurity.acl</literal>
  3753. package is an <literal>AclProviderManager</literal> class, with a
  3754. corresponding <literal>AclProvider</literal> interface.
  3755. <literal>AclProviderManager</literal> is a concrete implementation of
  3756. <literal>AclManager</literal>, which iterates through registered
  3757. <literal>AclProvider</literal>s. The first
  3758. <literal>AclProvider</literal> that indicates it can authoritatively
  3759. provide ACL information for the presented domain object instance will
  3760. be used. This is very similar to the
  3761. <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> interface used for
  3762. authentication.</para>
  3763. <para>With this background, let's now look at a usable ACL
  3764. implementation.</para>
  3765. </sect2>
  3766. <sect2 id="acls-masking">
  3767. <title>Integer Masked ACLs</title>
  3768. <para>Acegi Security System for Spring includes a production-quality
  3769. ACL provider implementation, which is shown in Figure 7.</para>
  3770. <para><mediaobject>
  3771. <imageobject role="html">
  3772. <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/BasicAclProvider.gif"
  3773. format="GIF" />
  3774. </imageobject>
  3775. <caption>
  3776. <para>Figure 7: Basic ACL Manager</para>
  3777. </caption>
  3778. </mediaobject></para>
  3779. <para>The implementation is based on integer masking, which is
  3780. commonly used for ACL permissions given its flexibility and speed.
  3781. Anyone who has used Unix's <literal>chmod</literal> command will know
  3782. all about this type of permission masking (eg <literal>chmod
  3783. 777</literal>). You'll find the classes and interfaces for the integer
  3784. masking ACL package under
  3785. <literal>net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic</literal>.</para>
  3786. <para>Extending the <literal>AclEntry</literal> interface is a
  3787. <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal> interface, with the main methods
  3788. shown below:</para>
  3789. <para><programlisting>public AclObjectIdentity getAclObjectIdentity();
  3790. public AclObjectIdentity getAclObjectParentIdentity();
  3791. public int getMask();
  3792. public java.lang.Object getRecipient();</programlisting></para>
  3793. <para>As shown, each <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal> has four main
  3794. properties. The <literal>mask</literal> is the integer that represents
  3795. the permissions granted to the <literal>recipient</literal>. The
  3796. <literal>aclObjectIdentity</literal> is able to identify the domain
  3797. object instance for which the ACL applies, and the
  3798. <literal>aclObjectParentIdentity</literal> optionally specifies the
  3799. parent of the domain object instance. Multiple
  3800. <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal>s usually exist against a single
  3801. domain object instance, and as suggested by the parent identity
  3802. property, permissions granted higher in the object hierarchy will
  3803. trickle down and be inherited (unless blocked by integer zero).</para>
  3804. <para><literal>BasicAclEntry</literal> implementations typically
  3805. provide convenience methods, such as
  3806. <literal>isReadAllowed()</literal>, to avoid application classes
  3807. needing to perform bit masking themselves. The
  3808. <literal>SimpleAclEntry</literal> and
  3809. <literal>AbstractBasicAclEntry</literal> demonstrate and provide much
  3810. of this bit masking logic.</para>
  3811. <para>The <literal>AclObjectIdentity</literal> itself is merely a
  3812. marker interface, so you need to provide implementations for your
  3813. domain objects. However, the package does include a
  3814. <literal>NamedEntityObjectIdentity</literal> implementation which will
  3815. suit many needs. The <literal>NamedEntityObjectIdentity</literal>
  3816. identifies a given domain object instance by the classname of the
  3817. instance and the identity of the instance. A
  3818. <literal>NamedEntityObjectIdentity</literal> can be constructed
  3819. manually (by calling the constructor and providing the classname and
  3820. identity <literal>String</literal>s), or by passing in any domain
  3821. object that contains a <literal>getId()</literal> method.</para>
  3822. <para>The actual <literal>AclProvider</literal> implementation is
  3823. named <literal>BasicAclProvider</literal>. It has adopted a similar
  3824. design to that used by the authentication-related
  3825. <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvder</literal>. Specifically, you define
  3826. a <literal>BasicAclDao</literal> against the provider, so different
  3827. ACL repository types can be accessed in a pluggable manner. The
  3828. <literal>BasicAclProvider</literal> also supports pluggable cache
  3829. providers (with Acegi Security System for Spring including an
  3830. implementation that fronts EH-CACHE).</para>
  3831. <para>The <literal>BasicAclDao</literal> interface is very simple to
  3832. implement:</para>
  3833. <para><programlisting>public BasicAclEntry[] getAcls(AclObjectIdentity aclObjectIdentity);</programlisting></para>
  3834. <para>A <literal>BasicAclDao</literal> implementation needs to
  3835. understand the presented <literal>AclObjectIdentity</literal> and how
  3836. it maps to a storage repository, find the relevant records, and create
  3837. appropriate <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal> objects and return
  3838. them.</para>
  3839. <para>Acegi Security includes a single <literal>BasicAclDao</literal>
  3840. implementation called <literal>JdbcDaoImpl</literal>. As implied by
  3841. the name, <literal>JdbcDaoImpl</literal> accesses ACL information from
  3842. a JDBC database. There is also an extended version of this DAO,
  3843. <literal>JdbcExtendedDaoImpl</literal>, which provides CRUD operations
  3844. on the JDBC database, although we won't discuss these features here.
  3845. The default database schema and some sample data will aid in
  3846. understanding its function:</para>
  3847. <para><programlisting>CREATE TABLE acl_object_identity (
  3848. id IDENTITY NOT NULL,
  3849. object_identity VARCHAR_IGNORECASE(250) NOT NULL,
  3850. parent_object INTEGER,
  3851. acl_class VARCHAR_IGNORECASE(250) NOT NULL,
  3852. CONSTRAINT unique_object_identity UNIQUE(object_identity),
  3853. FOREIGN KEY (parent_object) REFERENCES acl_object_identity(id)
  3854. );
  3855. CREATE TABLE acl_permission (
  3856. id IDENTITY NOT NULL,
  3857. acl_object_identity INTEGER NOT NULL,
  3858. recipient VARCHAR_IGNORECASE(100) NOT NULL,
  3859. mask INTEGER NOT NULL,
  3860. CONSTRAINT unique_recipient UNIQUE(acl_object_identity, recipient),
  3861. FOREIGN KEY (acl_object_identity) REFERENCES acl_object_identity(id)
  3862. );
  3863. INSERT INTO acl_object_identity VALUES (1, 'corp.DomainObject:1', null, 'net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry');
  3864. INSERT INTO acl_object_identity VALUES (2, 'corp.DomainObject:2', 1, 'net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry');
  3865. INSERT INTO acl_object_identity VALUES (3, 'corp.DomainObject:3', 1, 'net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry');
  3866. INSERT INTO acl_object_identity VALUES (4, 'corp.DomainObject:4', 1, 'net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry');
  3867. INSERT INTO acl_object_identity VALUES (5, 'corp.DomainObject:5', 3, 'net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry');
  3868. INSERT INTO acl_object_identity VALUES (6, 'corp.DomainObject:6', 3, 'net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry');
  3869. INSERT INTO acl_permission VALUES (null, 1, 'ROLE_SUPERVISOR', 1);
  3870. INSERT INTO acl_permission VALUES (null, 2, 'ROLE_SUPERVISOR', 0);
  3871. INSERT INTO acl_permission VALUES (null, 2, 'marissa', 2);
  3872. INSERT INTO acl_permission VALUES (null, 3, 'scott', 14);
  3873. INSERT INTO acl_permission VALUES (null, 6, 'scott', 1);</programlisting></para>
  3874. <para>As can be seen, database-specific constraints are used
  3875. extensively to ensure the integrity of the ACL information. If you
  3876. need to use a different database (Hypersonic SQL statements are shown
  3877. above), you should try to implement equivalent constraints.</para>
  3878. <para>The <literal>JdbcDaoImpl</literal> will only respond to requests
  3879. for <literal>NamedEntityObjectIdentity</literal>s. It converts such
  3880. identities into a single <literal>String</literal>, comprising
  3881. the<literal> NamedEntityObjectIdentity.getClassname()</literal> +
  3882. <literal>":"</literal> +
  3883. <literal>NamedEntityObjectIdentity.getId()</literal>. This yields the
  3884. type of <literal>object_identity</literal> values shown above. As
  3885. indicated by the sample data, each database row corresponds to a
  3886. single <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal>. As stated earlier and
  3887. demonstrated by <literal>corp.DomainObject:2</literal> in the above
  3888. sample data, each domain object instance will often have multiple
  3889. <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal>[]s.</para>
  3890. <para>As <literal>JdbcDaoImpl</literal> is required to return concrete
  3891. <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal> classes, it needs to know which
  3892. <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal> implementation it is to create and
  3893. populate. This is the role of the <literal>acl_class</literal> column.
  3894. <literal>JdbcDaoImpl</literal> will create the indicated class and set
  3895. its <literal>mask</literal>, <literal>recipient</literal>,
  3896. <literal>aclObjectIdentity</literal> and
  3897. <literal>aclObjectParentIdentity</literal> properties.</para>
  3898. <para>As you can probably tell from the sample data, the
  3899. <literal>parent_object_identity</literal> value can either be null or
  3900. in the same format as the <literal>object_identity</literal>. If
  3901. non-null, <literal>JdbcDaoImpl</literal> will create a
  3902. <literal>NamedEntityObjectIdentity</literal> to place inside the
  3903. returned <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal> class.</para>
  3904. <para>Returning to the <literal>BasicAclProvider</literal>, before it
  3905. can poll the <literal>BasicAclDao</literal> implementation it needs to
  3906. convert the domain object instance it was passed into an
  3907. <literal>AclObjectIdentity</literal>.
  3908. <literal>BasicAclProvider</literal> has a <literal>protected
  3909. AclObjectIdentity obtainIdentity(Object domainInstance)</literal>
  3910. method that is responsible for this. As a protected method, it enables
  3911. subclasses to easily override. The normal implementation checks
  3912. whether the passed domain object instance implements the
  3913. <literal>AclObjectIdentityAware</literal> interface, which is merely a
  3914. getter for an <literal>AclObjectIdentity</literal>. If the domain
  3915. object does implement this interface, that is the identity returned.
  3916. If the domain object does not implement this interface, the method
  3917. will attempt to create an <literal>AclObjectIdentity</literal> by
  3918. passing the domain object instance to the constructor of a class
  3919. defined by the
  3920. <literal>BasicAclProvider.getDefaultAclObjectIdentity()</literal>
  3921. method. By default the defined class is
  3922. <literal>NamedEntityObjectIdentity</literal>, which was described in
  3923. more detail above. Therefore, you will need to either (i) provide a
  3924. <literal>getId()</literal> method on your domain objects, (ii)
  3925. implement <literal>AclObjectIdentityAware</literal> on your domain
  3926. objects, (iii) provide an alternative
  3927. <literal>AclObjectIdentity</literal> implementation that will accept
  3928. your domain object in its constructor, or (iv) override the
  3929. <literal>obtainIdentity(Object)</literal> method.</para>
  3930. <para>Once the <literal>AclObjectIdentity</literal> of the domain
  3931. object instance is determined, the <literal>BasicAclProvider</literal>
  3932. will poll the DAO to obtain its <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal>[]s.
  3933. If any of the entries returned by the DAO indicate there is a parent,
  3934. that parent will be polled, and the process will repeat until there is
  3935. no further parent. The permissions assigned to a
  3936. <literal>recipient</literal> closest to the domain object instance
  3937. will always take priority and override any inherited permissions. From
  3938. the sample data above, the following inherited permissions would
  3939. apply:</para>
  3940. <para><programlisting>--- Mask integer 0 = no permissions
  3941. --- Mask integer 1 = administer
  3942. --- Mask integer 2 = read
  3943. --- Mask integer 6 = read and write permissions
  3944. --- Mask integer 14 = read and write and create permissions
  3945. ---------------------------------------------------------------------
  3946. --- *** INHERITED RIGHTS FOR DIFFERENT INSTANCES AND RECIPIENTS ***
  3947. --- INSTANCE RECIPIENT PERMISSION(S) (COMMENT #INSTANCE)
  3948. ---------------------------------------------------------------------
  3949. --- 1 ROLE_SUPERVISOR Administer
  3950. --- 2 ROLE_SUPERVISOR None (overrides parent #1)
  3951. --- marissa Read
  3952. --- 3 ROLE_SUPERVISOR Administer (from parent #1)
  3953. --- scott Read, Write, Create
  3954. --- 4 ROLE_SUPERVISOR Administer (from parent #1)
  3955. --- 5 ROLE_SUPERVISOR Administer (from parent #3)
  3956. --- scott Read, Write, Create (from parent #3)
  3957. --- 6 ROLE_SUPERVISOR Administer (from parent #3)
  3958. --- scott Administer (overrides parent #3)</programlisting></para>
  3959. <para>So the above explains how a domain object instance has its
  3960. <literal>AclObjectIdentity</literal> discovered, and the
  3961. <literal>BasicAclDao</literal> will be polled successively until an
  3962. array of inherited permissions is constructed for the domain object
  3963. instance. The final step is to determine the
  3964. <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal>[]s that are actually applicable to a
  3965. given <literal>Authentication</literal> object.</para>
  3966. <para>As you would recall, the <literal>AclManager</literal> (and all
  3967. delegates, up to and including <literal>BasicAclProvider</literal>)
  3968. provides a method which returns only those
  3969. <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal>[]s applying to a passed
  3970. <literal>Authentication</literal> object.
  3971. <literal>BasicAclProvider</literal> delivers this functionality by
  3972. delegating the filtering operation to an
  3973. <literal>EffectiveAclsResolver</literal> implementation. The default
  3974. implementation,
  3975. <literal>GrantedAuthorityEffectiveAclsResolver</literal>, will iterate
  3976. through the <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal>[]s and include only those
  3977. where the <literal>recipient</literal> is equal to either the
  3978. <literal>Authentication</literal>'s <literal>principal</literal> or
  3979. any of the <literal>Authentication</literal>'s
  3980. <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>[]s. Please refer to the JavaDocs
  3981. for more information.</para>
  3982. <mediaobject>
  3983. <imageobject role="html">
  3984. <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/Permissions.gif"
  3985. format="GIF" />
  3986. </imageobject>
  3987. <caption>
  3988. <para>Figure 8: ACL Instantiation Approach</para>
  3989. </caption>
  3990. </mediaobject>
  3991. </sect2>
  3992. <sect2 id="acls-conclusion">
  3993. <title>Conclusion</title>
  3994. <para>Acegi Security's instance-specific ACL packages shield you from
  3995. much of the complexity of developing your own ACL approach. The
  3996. interfaces and classes detailed above provide a scalable, customisable
  3997. ACL solution that is decoupled from your application code. Whilst the
  3998. reference documentation may suggest complexity, the basic
  3999. implementation is able to support most typical applications
  4000. out-of-the-box.</para>
  4001. </sect2>
  4002. </sect1>
  4003. <sect1 id="security-filters">
  4004. <title>Filters</title>
  4005. <sect2 id="security-filters-overview">
  4006. <title>Overview</title>
  4007. <para>The Acegi Security System for Spring uses filters extensively.
  4008. Each filter is covered in detail in a respective section of this
  4009. document. This section includes information that applies to all
  4010. filters.</para>
  4011. </sect2>
  4012. <sect2 id="security-filters-filtertobeanproxy">
  4013. <title>FilterToBeanProxy</title>
  4014. <para>Most filters are configured using the
  4015. <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal>. An example configuration from
  4016. <literal>web.xml</literal> follows:</para>
  4017. <para><programlisting>&lt;filter&gt;
  4018. &lt;filter-name&gt;Acegi HTTP Request Security Filter&lt;/filter-name&gt;
  4019. &lt;filter-class&gt;net.sf.acegisecurity.util.FilterToBeanProxy&lt;/filter-class&gt;
  4020. &lt;init-param&gt;
  4021. &lt;param-name&gt;targetClass&lt;/param-name&gt;
  4022. &lt;param-value&gt;net.sf.acegisecurity.ClassThatImplementsFilter&lt;/param-value&gt;
  4023. &lt;/init-param&gt;
  4024. &lt;/filter&gt;</programlisting></para>
  4025. <para>Notice that the filter in <literal>web.xml</literal> is actually
  4026. a <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal>, and not the filter that will
  4027. actually implements the logic of the filter. What
  4028. <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal> does is delegate the
  4029. <literal>Filter</literal>'s methods through to a bean which is
  4030. obtained from the Spring application context. This enables the bean to
  4031. benefit from the Spring application context lifecycle support and
  4032. configuration flexibility. The bean must implement
  4033. <literal>javax.servlet.Filter</literal>.</para>
  4034. <para>The <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal> only requires a single
  4035. initialization parameter, <literal>targetClass</literal> or
  4036. <literal>targetBean</literal>. The <literal>targetClass</literal>
  4037. parameter locates the first object in the application context of the
  4038. specified class, whilst <literal>targetBean</literal> locates the
  4039. object by bean name. Like standard Spring web applications, the
  4040. <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal> accesses the application context
  4041. via<literal>
  4042. WebApplicationContextUtils.getWebApplicationContext(ServletContext)</literal>,
  4043. so you should configure a <literal>ContextLoaderListener</literal> in
  4044. <literal>web.xml</literal>.</para>
  4045. <para>There is a lifecycle issue to consider when hosting
  4046. <literal>Filter</literal>s in an IoC container instead of a servlet
  4047. container. Specifically, which container should be responsible for
  4048. calling the <literal>Filter</literal>'s "startup" and "shutdown"
  4049. methods? It is noted that the order of initialization and destruction
  4050. of a <literal>Filter</literal> can vary by servlet container, and this
  4051. can cause problems if one <literal>Filter</literal> depends on
  4052. configuration settings established by an earlier initialized
  4053. <literal>Filter</literal>. The Spring IoC container on the other hand
  4054. has more comprehensive lifecycle/IoC interfaces (such as
  4055. <literal>InitializingBean</literal>,
  4056. <literal>DisposableBean</literal>, <literal>BeanNameAware</literal>,
  4057. <literal>ApplicationContextAware</literal> and many others) as well as
  4058. a well-understood interface contract, predictable method invocation
  4059. ordering, autowiring support, and even options to avoid implementing
  4060. Spring interfaces (eg the <literal>destroy-method</literal> attribute
  4061. in Spring XML). For this reason we recommend the use of Spring
  4062. lifecycle services instead of servlet container lifecycle services
  4063. wherever possible. By default <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal>
  4064. will not delegate <literal>init(FilterConfig)</literal> and
  4065. <literal>destroy()</literal> methods through to the proxied bean. If
  4066. you do require such invocations to be delegated, set the
  4067. <literal>lifecycle</literal> initialization parameter to
  4068. <literal>servlet-container-managed</literal>.</para>
  4069. </sect2>
  4070. <sect2 id="security-filters-filterchainproxy">
  4071. <title>FilterChainProxy</title>
  4072. <para>Whilst <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal> is a very useful
  4073. class, the problem is that the lines of code required for
  4074. <literal>&lt;filter&gt;</literal> and
  4075. <literal>&lt;filter-mapping&gt;</literal> entries in
  4076. <literal>web.xml</literal> explodes when using more than a few
  4077. filters. To overcome this issue, Acegi Security provides a
  4078. <literal>FilterChainProxy</literal> class. It is wired using a
  4079. <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal> (just like in the example above),
  4080. but the target class is
  4081. <literal>net.sf.acegisecurity.util.FilterChainProxy</literal>. The
  4082. filter chain is then declared in the application context, using code
  4083. such as this:</para>
  4084. <para><programlisting>&lt;bean id="filterChainProxy" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.util.FilterChainProxy"&gt;
  4085. &lt;property name="filterInvocationDefinitionSource"&gt;
  4086. &lt;value&gt;
  4087. CONVERT_URL_TO_LOWERCASE_BEFORE_COMPARISON
  4088. PATTERN_TYPE_APACHE_ANT
  4089. /webServices/**=httpSessionContextIntegrationFilterWithASCFalse,basicProcessingFilter,securityEnforcementFilter
  4090. /**=httpSessionContextIntegrationFilterWithASCTrue,authenticationProcessingFilter,securityEnforcementFilter
  4091. &lt;/value&gt;
  4092. &lt;/property&gt;
  4093. &lt;/bean&gt;</programlisting></para>
  4094. <para>You may notice similarities with the way
  4095. <literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal> is declared. Both regular
  4096. expressions and Ant Paths are supported, and the most specific URIs
  4097. appear first. At runtime the <literal>FilterChainProxy</literal> will
  4098. locate the first URI pattern that matches the current web request.
  4099. Each of the corresponding configuration attributes represent the name
  4100. of a bean defined in the application context. The filters will then be
  4101. invoked in the order they are specified, with standard
  4102. <literal>FilterChain</literal> behaviour being respected (a
  4103. <literal>Filter</literal> can elect not to proceed with the chain if
  4104. it wishes to end processing).</para>
  4105. <para>As you can see, <literal>FitlerChainProxy</literal> requires the
  4106. duplication of filter names for different request patterns (in the
  4107. above example, <literal>httpSessionContextIntegrationFilter</literal>
  4108. and <literal>securityEnforcementFilter</literal> are duplicated). This
  4109. design decision was made to enable <literal>FilterChainProxy</literal>
  4110. to specify different <literal>Filter</literal> invocation orders for
  4111. different URI patterns, and also to improve both the expressiveness
  4112. (in terms of regular expressions, Ant Paths, and any custom
  4113. <literal>FilterInvocationDefinitionSource</literal> implementations)
  4114. and clarity of which <literal>Filter</literal>s should be
  4115. invoked.</para>
  4116. <para>You may have noticed we have declared two
  4117. <literal>HttpSessionContextIntegrationFilter</literal>s in the filter
  4118. chain (<literal>ASC</literal> is short for
  4119. <literal>allowSessionCreation</literal>, a property of
  4120. <literal>HttpSessionContextIntegrationFilter</literal>). As web
  4121. services will never present a <literal>jsessionid</literal> on future
  4122. requests, creating <literal>HttpSession</literal>s for such user
  4123. agents would be wasteful. If you had a high-volume application which
  4124. required maximum scalability, we recommend you use the approach shown
  4125. above. For smaller applications, using a single
  4126. <literal>HttpSessionContextIntegrationFilter</literal> (with its
  4127. default <literal>allowSessionCreation</literal> as
  4128. <literal>true</literal>) would likely be sufficient.</para>
  4129. <para>In relation to lifecycle issues, the
  4130. <literal>FilterChainProxy</literal> will always delegate
  4131. <literal>init(FilterConfig)</literal> and <literal>destroy()</literal>
  4132. methods through to the underlaying <literal>Filter</literal>s if such
  4133. methods are called against <literal>FilterChainProxy</literal> itself.
  4134. In this case, <literal>FilterChainProxy</literal> guarantees to only
  4135. initialize and destroy each <literal>Filter</literal> once,
  4136. irrespective of how many times it is declared by the
  4137. <literal>FilterInvocationDefinitionSource</literal>. You control the
  4138. overall choice as to whether these methods are called or not via the
  4139. <literal>lifecycle</literal> initialization parameter of the
  4140. <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal> that proxies
  4141. <literal>FilterChainProxy</literal>. As discussed above, by default
  4142. any servlet container lifecycle invocations are not delegated through
  4143. to <literal>FilterChainProxy</literal>.</para>
  4144. </sect2>
  4145. <sect2 id="security-filters-order">
  4146. <title>Filter Ordering</title>
  4147. <para>The order that filters are defined in <literal>web.xml</literal>
  4148. is important. NB: THE FILTER ORDER CHANGED FROM VERSION 0.8.0.</para>
  4149. <para>Irrespective of which filters you are actually using, the order
  4150. of the <literal>&lt;filter-mapping&gt;</literal>s should be as
  4151. follows:</para>
  4152. <orderedlist>
  4153. <listitem>
  4154. <para><literal>ChannelProcessingFilter</literal>, because it might
  4155. need to redirect to a different protocol</para>
  4156. </listitem>
  4157. <listitem>
  4158. <para><literal>HttpSessionContextIntegrationFilter</literal>, so a
  4159. <literal>Context</literal> can be setup in the
  4160. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> at the beginning of a web
  4161. request, and any changes to the Context can be copied to the
  4162. <literal>HttpSession</literal> when the web request ends (ready
  4163. for use with the next web request)</para>
  4164. </listitem>
  4165. <listitem>
  4166. <para>Authentication processing mechanisms -
  4167. <literal>AuthenticationProcessingFilter</literal>,
  4168. <literal>CasProcessingFilter</literal>,
  4169. <literal>BasicProcessingFilter, HttpRequestIntegrationFilter,
  4170. JbossIntegrationFilter</literal> etc - so that the
  4171. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> can be modified to contain a
  4172. valid <literal>Authentication</literal> request token</para>
  4173. </listitem>
  4174. <listitem>
  4175. <para>The <literal>ContextHolderAwareRequestFilter</literal>, if
  4176. you are using it to install an Acegi Security aware
  4177. <literal>HttpServletRequestWrapper</literal> into your servlet
  4178. container</para>
  4179. </listitem>
  4180. <listitem>
  4181. <para><literal>RememberMeProcessingFilter</literal>, so that if no
  4182. earlier authentication processing mechanism updated the
  4183. <literal>ContextHolder</literal>, and the request presents a
  4184. cookie that enables remember-me services to take place, a suitable
  4185. remembered <literal><literal>Authentication</literal></literal>
  4186. object will be put there</para>
  4187. </listitem>
  4188. <listitem>
  4189. <para><literal>AnonymousProcessingFilter</literal>, so that if no
  4190. earlier authentication processing mechanism updated the
  4191. <literal>ContextHolder</literal>, an anonymous
  4192. <literal>Authentication</literal> object will be put there</para>
  4193. </listitem>
  4194. <listitem>
  4195. <para><literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal>, to protect web
  4196. URIs and catch any Acegi Security exceptions so that an
  4197. appropriate <literal>AuthenticationEntryPoint</literal> can be
  4198. launched</para>
  4199. </listitem>
  4200. </orderedlist>
  4201. <para>All of the above filters use
  4202. <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal> or
  4203. <literal>FilterChainProxy</literal>, which is discussed in the
  4204. previous sections. It is recommended that a single
  4205. <literal>FilterToBeProxy</literal> proxy through to a single
  4206. <literal>FilterChainProxy</literal> for each application, with that
  4207. <literal>FilterChainProxy</literal> defining all of the Acegi Security
  4208. <literal>Filter</literal>s.</para>
  4209. <para>If you're using SiteMesh, ensure the Acegi Security filters
  4210. execute before the SiteMesh filters are called. This enables the
  4211. <literal>ContextHolder</literal> to be populated in time for use by
  4212. SiteMesh decorators.</para>
  4213. </sect2>
  4214. </sect1>
  4215. <sect1 id="security-sample">
  4216. <title>Contacts Sample Application</title>
  4217. <para>Included with the Acegi Security System for Spring is a very
  4218. simple application that can demonstrate the basic security facilities
  4219. provided by the system (and confirm your Container Adapter is properly
  4220. configured if you're using one).</para>
  4221. <para>If you build from CVS, the Contacts sample application includes
  4222. three deployable versions:
  4223. <literal>acegi-security-sample-contacts-filter.war</literal> is
  4224. configured with the HTTP Session Authentication approach. The
  4225. <literal><literal>acegi-security-sample-contacts-ca.war</literal></literal>
  4226. is configured to use a Container Adapter. Finally,
  4227. <literal>acegi-security-sample-contacts-cas.war</literal> is designed to
  4228. work with a Yale CAS server. If you're just wanting to see how the
  4229. sample application works, please use
  4230. <literal><literal>acegi-security-sample-contacts-filter.war</literal></literal>
  4231. as it does not require special configuration of your container. This is
  4232. also the artifact included in ofiical release ZIPs.</para>
  4233. <para>To deploy, simply copy the relevant WAR file from the Acegi
  4234. Security System for Spring distribution into your container’s
  4235. <literal>webapps</literal> directory.</para>
  4236. <para>After starting your container, check the application can load.
  4237. Visit
  4238. <literal>http://localhost:</literal><literal><literal>8080/</literal>acegi-security-sample-contacts-filter</literal>
  4239. (or whichever URL is appropriate for your web container and the WAR you
  4240. deployed). A random contact should be displayed. Click "Refresh" several
  4241. times and you will see different contacts. The business method that
  4242. provides this random contact is not secured.</para>
  4243. <para>Next, click "Debug". You will be prompted to authenticate, and a
  4244. series of usernames and passwords are suggested on that page. Simply
  4245. authenticate with any of these and view the resulting page. It should
  4246. contain a success message similar to the following:</para>
  4247. <blockquote>
  4248. <para>Context on ContextHolder is of type:
  4249. net.sf.acegisecurity.context.secure.SecureContextImpl</para>
  4250. <para>The Context implements SecureContext.</para>
  4251. <para>Authentication object is of type:
  4252. net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.PrincipalAcegiUserToken</para>
  4253. <para>Authentication object as a String:
  4254. net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.PrincipalAcegiUserToken@e9a7c2:
  4255. Username: marissa; Password: [PROTECTED]; Authenticated: true; Granted
  4256. Authorities: ROLE_TELLER, ROLE_SUPERVISOR</para>
  4257. <para>Authentication object holds the following granted
  4258. authorities:</para>
  4259. <para>ROLE_TELLER (getAuthority(): ROLE_TELLER)</para>
  4260. <para>ROLE_SUPERVISOR (getAuthority(): ROLE_SUPERVISOR)</para>
  4261. <para>SUCCESS! Your [container adapter|web filter] appears to be
  4262. properly configured!</para>
  4263. </blockquote>
  4264. <para>If you receive a different message, and deployed
  4265. <literal>acegi-security-sample-contacts-ca.war</literal>, check you have
  4266. properly configured your Container Adapter as described elsewhere in
  4267. this reference guide.</para>
  4268. <para>Once you successfully receive the above message, return to the
  4269. sample application's home page and click "Manage". You can then try out
  4270. the application. Notice that only the contacts available to the
  4271. currently logged on user are displayed, and only users with
  4272. <literal>ROLE_SUPERVISOR</literal> are granted access to delete their
  4273. contacts. Behind the scenes, the
  4274. <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal> is securing the business
  4275. objects. If you're using
  4276. <literal><literal>acegi-security-sample-contacts-filter.war</literal></literal>
  4277. or <literal>acegi-security-sample-contacts-cas.war</literal>, the
  4278. <literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor</literal> is also securing the HTTP
  4279. requests. If using either of these WARs, be sure to try visiting
  4280. <literal>http://localhost:8080/contacts/secure/super</literal>, which
  4281. will demonstrate access being denied by the
  4282. <literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal>. Note the sample
  4283. application enables you to modify the access control lists associated
  4284. with different contacts. Be sure to give this a try and understand how
  4285. it works by reviewing the sample application's application context XML
  4286. files.</para>
  4287. <para>The Contacts sample application also include a
  4288. <literal>client</literal> directory. Inside you will find a small
  4289. application that queries the backend business objects using several web
  4290. services protocols. This demonstrates how to use the Acegi Security
  4291. System for Spring for authentication with Spring remoting protocols. To
  4292. try this client, ensure your servlet container is still running the
  4293. Contacts sample application, and then execute <literal>client marissa
  4294. koala</literal>. The command-line parameters respectively represent the
  4295. username to use, and the password to use. Note that you may need to edit
  4296. <literal>client.properties</literal> to use a different target
  4297. URL.</para>
  4298. <para>Please note the sample application's <literal>client</literal>
  4299. does not currently support CAS. You can still give it a try, though, if
  4300. you're ambitious: try <literal>client _cas_stateless_
  4301. YOUR-SERVICE-TICKET-ID</literal>.</para>
  4302. </sect1>
  4303. <sect1 id="security-become-involved">
  4304. <title>Become Involved</title>
  4305. <para>We welcome you to become involved in the Acegi Security System for
  4306. Spring project. There are many ways of contributing, including reading
  4307. the mailing list and responding to questions from other people, writing
  4308. new code, improving existing code, assisting with documentation, or
  4309. simply making suggestions.</para>
  4310. <para>SourceForge provides CVS services for the project, allowing
  4311. anybody to access the latest code. If you wish to contribute new code,
  4312. please observe the following requirements. These exist to maintain the
  4313. quality and consistency of the project:</para>
  4314. <itemizedlist>
  4315. <listitem>
  4316. <para>Use a suitable IDE Jalopy plug-in to convert your code into
  4317. the project's consistent style</para>
  4318. </listitem>
  4319. <listitem>
  4320. <para>Ensure your code does not break any unit tests (run the Maven
  4321. <literal>test:test</literal> goal)</para>
  4322. </listitem>
  4323. <listitem>
  4324. <para>If you have added new code, please provide suitable unit tests
  4325. (use the Maven <literal>clover:html-report</literal> to view
  4326. coverage)</para>
  4327. </listitem>
  4328. <listitem>
  4329. <para>Join the acegisecurity-developer and acegisecurity-cvs mailing
  4330. lists so you're in the loop</para>
  4331. </listitem>
  4332. <listitem>
  4333. <para>Use CamelCase</para>
  4334. </listitem>
  4335. <listitem>
  4336. <para>Add a CVS <literal>$Id: index.xml,v 1.3 2004/04/02 21:12:25
  4337. fbos Exp $</literal> tag to the JavaDocs for any new class you
  4338. create</para>
  4339. </listitem>
  4340. </itemizedlist>
  4341. </sect1>
  4342. <sect1 id="security-further">
  4343. <title>Further Information</title>
  4344. <para>Questions and comments on the Acegi Security System for Spring are
  4345. welcome. Please use the Spring Community Forum web site at
  4346. <literal>http://forum.springframework.org</literal>. You're also welcome
  4347. to join the acegisecurity-developer mailing list. Our project home page
  4348. (where you can obtain the latest release of the project and access to
  4349. CVS, mailing lists, forums etc) is at
  4350. <literal>http://acegisecurity.sourceforge.net</literal>.</para>
  4351. </sect1>
  4352. </chapter>
  4353. </book>