For the latest stable version, please use Spring Security 6.4.2! |
Authorization Events
For each authorization that is denied, an AuthorizationDeniedEvent
is fired.
Also, it’s possible to fire an AuthorizationGrantedEvent
for authorizations that are granted.
To listen for these events, you must first publish an AuthorizationEventPublisher
.
Spring Security’s SpringAuthorizationEventPublisher
will probably do fine.
It comes publishes authorization events using Spring’s ApplicationEventPublisher
:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
@Bean
public AuthorizationEventPublisher authorizationEventPublisher
(ApplicationEventPublisher applicationEventPublisher) {
return new SpringAuthorizationEventPublisher(applicationEventPublisher);
}
@Bean
fun authorizationEventPublisher
(applicationEventPublisher: ApplicationEventPublisher?): AuthorizationEventPublisher {
return SpringAuthorizationEventPublisher(applicationEventPublisher)
}
Then, you can use Spring’s @EventListener
support:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
@Component
public class AuthenticationEvents {
@EventListener
public void onFailure(AuthorizationDeniedEvent failure) {
// ...
}
}
@Component
class AuthenticationEvents {
@EventListener
fun onFailure(failure: AuthorizationDeniedEvent?) {
// ...
}
}
Authorization Granted Events
Because AuthorizationGrantedEvent
s have the potential to be quite noisy, they are not published by default.
In fact, publishing these events will likely require some business logic on your part to ensure that your application is not inundated with noisy authorization events.
You can create your own event publisher that filters success events.
For example, the following publisher only publishes authorization grants where ROLE_ADMIN
was required:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
@Component
public class MyAuthorizationEventPublisher implements AuthorizationEventPublisher {
private final ApplicationEventPublisher publisher;
private final AuthorizationEventPublisher delegate;
public MyAuthorizationEventPublisher(ApplicationEventPublisher publisher) {
this.publisher = publisher;
this.delegate = new SpringAuthorizationEventPublisher(publisher);
}
@Override
public <T> void publishAuthorizationEvent(Supplier<Authentication> authentication,
T object, AuthorizationDecision decision) {
if (decision == null) {
return;
}
if (!decision.isGranted()) {
this.delegate.publishAuthorizationEvent(authentication, object, decision);
return;
}
if (shouldThisEventBePublished(decision)) {
AuthorizationGrantedEvent granted = new AuthorizationGrantedEvent(
authentication, object, decision);
this.publisher.publishEvent(granted);
}
}
private boolean shouldThisEventBePublished(AuthorizationDecision decision) {
if (!(decision instanceof AuthorityAuthorizationDecision)) {
return false;
}
Collection<GrantedAuthority> authorities = ((AuthorityAuthorizationDecision) decision).getAuthorities();
for (GrantedAuthority authority : authorities) {
if ("ROLE_ADMIN".equals(authority.getAuthority())) {
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
}
@Component
class MyAuthorizationEventPublisher(val publisher: ApplicationEventPublisher,
val delegate: SpringAuthorizationEventPublisher = SpringAuthorizationEventPublisher(publisher)):
AuthorizationEventPublisher {
override fun <T : Any?> publishAuthorizationEvent(
authentication: Supplier<Authentication>?,
`object`: T,
decision: AuthorizationDecision?
) {
if (decision == null) {
return
}
if (!decision.isGranted) {
this.delegate.publishAuthorizationEvent(authentication, `object`, decision)
return
}
if (shouldThisEventBePublished(decision)) {
val granted = AuthorizationGrantedEvent(authentication, `object`, decision)
this.publisher.publishEvent(granted)
}
}
private fun shouldThisEventBePublished(decision: AuthorizationDecision): Boolean {
if (decision !is AuthorityAuthorizationDecision) {
return false
}
val authorities = decision.authorities
for (authority in authorities) {
if ("ROLE_ADMIN" == authority.authority) {
return true
}
}
return false
}
}