This version is still in development and is not considered stable yet. For the latest stable version, please use Spring Security 6.4.1! |
Client Authentication Support
Client Credentials
Authenticate using client_secret_basic
Client Authentication with HTTP Basic is supported out of the box and no customization is necessary to enable it.
The default implementation is provided by DefaultOAuth2TokenRequestHeadersConverter
.
Given the following Spring Boot properties for an OAuth 2.0 client registration:
spring:
security:
oauth2:
client:
registration:
okta:
client-id: client-id
client-secret: client-secret
client-authentication-method: client_secret_basic
authorization-grant-type: authorization_code
...
The following example shows how to configure DefaultAuthorizationCodeTokenResponseClient
to disable URL encoding of the client credentials:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
DefaultOAuth2TokenRequestHeadersConverter<OAuth2AuthorizationCodeGrantRequest> headersConverter =
new DefaultOAuth2TokenRequestHeadersConverter<>();
headersConverter.setEncodeClientCredentials(false);
OAuth2AuthorizationCodeGrantRequestEntityConverter requestEntityConverter =
new OAuth2AuthorizationCodeGrantRequestEntityConverter();
requestEntityConverter.setHeadersConverter(headersConverter);
DefaultAuthorizationCodeTokenResponseClient tokenResponseClient =
new DefaultAuthorizationCodeTokenResponseClient();
tokenResponseClient.setRequestEntityConverter(requestEntityConverter);
val headersConverter = DefaultOAuth2TokenRequestHeadersConverter<OAuth2AuthorizationCodeGrantRequest>()
headersConverter.setEncodeClientCredentials(false)
val requestEntityConverter = OAuth2AuthorizationCodeGrantRequestEntityConverter()
requestEntityConverter.setHeadersConverter(headersConverter)
val tokenResponseClient = DefaultAuthorizationCodeTokenResponseClient()
tokenResponseClient.setRequestEntityConverter(requestEntityConverter)
Authenticate using client_secret_post
Client Authentication with client credentials included in the request-body is supported out of the box and no customization is necessary to enable it.
The following Spring Boot properties for an OAuth 2.0 client registration demonstrate the configuration:
spring:
security:
oauth2:
client:
registration:
okta:
client-id: client-id
client-secret: client-secret
client-authentication-method: client_secret_post
authorization-grant-type: authorization_code
...
JWT Bearer
Please refer to JSON Web Token (JWT) Profile for OAuth 2.0 Client Authentication and Authorization Grants for further details on JWT Bearer Client Authentication. |
The default implementation for JWT Bearer Client Authentication is NimbusJwtClientAuthenticationParametersConverter
,
which is a Converter
that customizes the Token Request parameters by adding
a signed JSON Web Token (JWS) in the client_assertion
parameter.
The java.security.PrivateKey
or javax.crypto.SecretKey
used for signing the JWS
is supplied by the com.nimbusds.jose.jwk.JWK
resolver associated with NimbusJwtClientAuthenticationParametersConverter
.
Authenticate using private_key_jwt
Given the following Spring Boot properties for an OAuth 2.0 Client registration:
spring:
security:
oauth2:
client:
registration:
okta:
client-id: okta-client-id
client-authentication-method: private_key_jwt
authorization-grant-type: authorization_code
...
The following example shows how to configure DefaultAuthorizationCodeTokenResponseClient
:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
Function<ClientRegistration, JWK> jwkResolver = (clientRegistration) -> {
if (clientRegistration.getClientAuthenticationMethod().equals(ClientAuthenticationMethod.PRIVATE_KEY_JWT)) {
// Assuming RSA key type
RSAPublicKey publicKey = ...
RSAPrivateKey privateKey = ...
return new RSAKey.Builder(publicKey)
.privateKey(privateKey)
.keyID(UUID.randomUUID().toString())
.build();
}
return null;
};
OAuth2AuthorizationCodeGrantRequestEntityConverter requestEntityConverter =
new OAuth2AuthorizationCodeGrantRequestEntityConverter();
requestEntityConverter.addParametersConverter(
new NimbusJwtClientAuthenticationParametersConverter<>(jwkResolver));
DefaultAuthorizationCodeTokenResponseClient tokenResponseClient =
new DefaultAuthorizationCodeTokenResponseClient();
tokenResponseClient.setRequestEntityConverter(requestEntityConverter);
val jwkResolver: Function<ClientRegistration, JWK> =
Function<ClientRegistration, JWK> { clientRegistration ->
if (clientRegistration.clientAuthenticationMethod.equals(ClientAuthenticationMethod.PRIVATE_KEY_JWT)) {
// Assuming RSA key type
var publicKey: RSAPublicKey
var privateKey: RSAPrivateKey
RSAKey.Builder(publicKey) = //...
.privateKey(privateKey) = //...
.keyID(UUID.randomUUID().toString())
.build()
}
null
}
val requestEntityConverter = OAuth2AuthorizationCodeGrantRequestEntityConverter()
requestEntityConverter.addParametersConverter(
NimbusJwtClientAuthenticationParametersConverter(jwkResolver)
)
val tokenResponseClient = DefaultAuthorizationCodeTokenResponseClient()
tokenResponseClient.setRequestEntityConverter(requestEntityConverter)
Authenticate using client_secret_jwt
Given the following Spring Boot properties for an OAuth 2.0 Client registration:
spring:
security:
oauth2:
client:
registration:
okta:
client-id: okta-client-id
client-secret: okta-client-secret
client-authentication-method: client_secret_jwt
authorization-grant-type: client_credentials
...
The following example shows how to configure DefaultClientCredentialsTokenResponseClient
:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
Function<ClientRegistration, JWK> jwkResolver = (clientRegistration) -> {
if (clientRegistration.getClientAuthenticationMethod().equals(ClientAuthenticationMethod.CLIENT_SECRET_JWT)) {
SecretKeySpec secretKey = new SecretKeySpec(
clientRegistration.getClientSecret().getBytes(StandardCharsets.UTF_8),
"HmacSHA256");
return new OctetSequenceKey.Builder(secretKey)
.keyID(UUID.randomUUID().toString())
.build();
}
return null;
};
OAuth2ClientCredentialsGrantRequestEntityConverter requestEntityConverter =
new OAuth2ClientCredentialsGrantRequestEntityConverter();
requestEntityConverter.addParametersConverter(
new NimbusJwtClientAuthenticationParametersConverter<>(jwkResolver));
DefaultClientCredentialsTokenResponseClient tokenResponseClient =
new DefaultClientCredentialsTokenResponseClient();
tokenResponseClient.setRequestEntityConverter(requestEntityConverter);
val jwkResolver = Function<ClientRegistration, JWK?> { clientRegistration: ClientRegistration ->
if (clientRegistration.clientAuthenticationMethod == ClientAuthenticationMethod.CLIENT_SECRET_JWT) {
val secretKey = SecretKeySpec(
clientRegistration.clientSecret.toByteArray(StandardCharsets.UTF_8),
"HmacSHA256"
)
OctetSequenceKey.Builder(secretKey)
.keyID(UUID.randomUUID().toString())
.build()
}
null
}
val requestEntityConverter = OAuth2ClientCredentialsGrantRequestEntityConverter()
requestEntityConverter.addParametersConverter(
NimbusJwtClientAuthenticationParametersConverter(jwkResolver)
)
val tokenResponseClient = DefaultClientCredentialsTokenResponseClient()
tokenResponseClient.setRequestEntityConverter(requestEntityConverter)
Customizing the JWT assertion
The JWT produced by NimbusJwtClientAuthenticationParametersConverter
contains the iss
, sub
, aud
, jti
, iat
and exp
claims by default. You can customize the headers and/or claims by providing a Consumer<NimbusJwtClientAuthenticationParametersConverter.JwtClientAuthenticationContext<T>>
to setJwtClientAssertionCustomizer()
. The following example shows how to customize claims of the JWT:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
Function<ClientRegistration, JWK> jwkResolver = ...
NimbusJwtClientAuthenticationParametersConverter<OAuth2ClientCredentialsGrantRequest> converter =
new NimbusJwtClientAuthenticationParametersConverter<>(jwkResolver);
converter.setJwtClientAssertionCustomizer((context) -> {
context.getHeaders().header("custom-header", "header-value");
context.getClaims().claim("custom-claim", "claim-value");
});
val jwkResolver = ...
val converter: NimbusJwtClientAuthenticationParametersConverter<OAuth2ClientCredentialsGrantRequest> =
NimbusJwtClientAuthenticationParametersConverter(jwkResolver)
converter.setJwtClientAssertionCustomizer { context ->
context.headers.header("custom-header", "header-value")
context.claims.claim("custom-claim", "claim-value")
}
Public Authentication
Public Client Authentication is supported out of the box and no customization is necessary to enable it.
The following Spring Boot properties for an OAuth 2.0 client registration demonstrate the configuration:
spring:
security:
oauth2:
client:
registration:
okta:
client-id: client-id
client-authentication-method: none
authorization-grant-type: authorization_code
...
Public Clients are supported using Proof Key for Code Exchange (PKCE).
PKCE will automatically be used when |