This version is still in development and is not considered stable yet. For the latest stable version, please use Spring Security 6.4.1!

Testing OAuth 2.0

When it comes to OAuth 2.0, the same principles covered earlier still apply: Ultimately, it depends on what your method under test is expecting to be in the SecurityContextHolder.

For example, for a controller that looks like this:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

@GetMapping("/endpoint")
public String foo(Principal user) {
    return user.getName();
}
@GetMapping("/endpoint")
fun foo(user: Principal): String {
    return user.name
}

There’s nothing OAuth2-specific about it, so you will likely be able to simply use @WithMockUser and be fine.

But, in cases where your controllers are bound to some aspect of Spring Security’s OAuth 2.0 support, like the following:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

@GetMapping("/endpoint")
public String foo(@AuthenticationPrincipal OidcUser user) {
    return user.getIdToken().getSubject();
}
@GetMapping("/endpoint")
fun foo(@AuthenticationPrincipal user: OidcUser): String {
    return user.idToken.subject
}

then Spring Security’s test support can come in handy.

Testing OIDC Login

Testing the method above with Spring MVC Test would require simulating some kind of grant flow with an authorization server. Certainly this would be a daunting task, which is why Spring Security ships with support for removing this boilerplate.

For example, we can tell Spring Security to include a default OidcUser using the oidcLogin RequestPostProcessor, like so:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint").with(oidcLogin()));
mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(oidcLogin())
}

What this will do is configure the associated MockHttpServletRequest with an OidcUser that includes a simple OidcIdToken, OidcUserInfo, and Collection of granted authorities.

Specifically, it will include an OidcIdToken with a sub claim set to user:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

assertThat(user.getIdToken().getClaim("sub")).isEqualTo("user");
assertThat(user.idToken.getClaim<String>("sub")).isEqualTo("user")

an OidcUserInfo with no claims set:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

assertThat(user.getUserInfo().getClaims()).isEmpty();
assertThat(user.userInfo.claims).isEmpty()

and a Collection of authorities with just one authority, SCOPE_read:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

assertThat(user.getAuthorities()).hasSize(1);
assertThat(user.getAuthorities()).containsExactly(new SimpleGrantedAuthority("SCOPE_read"));
assertThat(user.authorities).hasSize(1)
assertThat(user.authorities).containsExactly(SimpleGrantedAuthority("SCOPE_read"))

Spring Security does the necessary work to make sure that the OidcUser instance is available for the @AuthenticationPrincipal annotation.

Further, it also links that OidcUser to a simple instance of OAuth2AuthorizedClient that it deposits into an mock OAuth2AuthorizedClientRepository. This can be handy if your tests use the @RegisteredOAuth2AuthorizedClient annotation..

Configuring Authorities

In many circumstances, your method is protected by filter or method security and needs your Authentication to have certain granted authorities to allow the request.

In this case, you can supply what granted authorities you need using the authorities() method:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint")
        .with(oidcLogin()
            .authorities(new SimpleGrantedAuthority("SCOPE_message:read"))
        )
    );
mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(oidcLogin()
        .authorities(SimpleGrantedAuthority("SCOPE_message:read"))
    )
}

Configuring Claims

And while granted authorities are quite common across all of Spring Security, we also have claims in the case of OAuth 2.0.

Let’s say, for example, that you’ve got a user_id claim that indicates the user’s id in your system. You might access it like so in a controller:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

@GetMapping("/endpoint")
public String foo(@AuthenticationPrincipal OidcUser oidcUser) {
    String userId = oidcUser.getIdToken().getClaim("user_id");
    // ...
}
@GetMapping("/endpoint")
fun foo(@AuthenticationPrincipal oidcUser: OidcUser): String {
    val userId = oidcUser.idToken.getClaim<String>("user_id")
    // ...
}

In that case, you’d want to specify that claim with the idToken() method:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint")
        .with(oidcLogin()
                .idToken(token -> token.claim("user_id", "1234"))
        )
    );
mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(oidcLogin()
        .idToken {
            it.claim("user_id", "1234")
        }
    )
}

since OidcUser collects its claims from OidcIdToken.

Additional Configurations

There are additional methods, too, for further configuring the authentication; it simply depends on what data your controller expects:

  • userInfo(OidcUserInfo.Builder) - For configuring the OidcUserInfo instance

  • clientRegistration(ClientRegistration) - For configuring the associated OAuth2AuthorizedClient with a given ClientRegistration

  • oidcUser(OidcUser) - For configuring the complete OidcUser instance

That last one is handy if you: 1. Have your own implementation of OidcUser, or 2. Need to change the name attribute

For example, let’s say that your authorization server sends the principal name in the user_name claim instead of the sub claim. In that case, you can configure an OidcUser by hand:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

OidcUser oidcUser = new DefaultOidcUser(
        AuthorityUtils.createAuthorityList("SCOPE_message:read"),
        OidcIdToken.withTokenValue("id-token").claim("user_name", "foo_user").build(),
        "user_name");

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint")
        .with(oidcLogin().oidcUser(oidcUser))
    );
val oidcUser: OidcUser = DefaultOidcUser(
    AuthorityUtils.createAuthorityList("SCOPE_message:read"),
    OidcIdToken.withTokenValue("id-token").claim("user_name", "foo_user").build(),
    "user_name"
)

mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(oidcLogin().oidcUser(oidcUser))
}

Testing OAuth 2.0 Login

As with testing OIDC login, testing OAuth 2.0 Login presents a similar challenge of mocking a grant flow. And because of that, Spring Security also has test support for non-OIDC use cases.

Let’s say that we’ve got a controller that gets the logged-in user as an OAuth2User:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

@GetMapping("/endpoint")
public String foo(@AuthenticationPrincipal OAuth2User oauth2User) {
    return oauth2User.getAttribute("sub");
}
@GetMapping("/endpoint")
fun foo(@AuthenticationPrincipal oauth2User: OAuth2User): String? {
    return oauth2User.getAttribute("sub")
}

In that case, we can tell Spring Security to include a default OAuth2User using the oauth2Login RequestPostProcessor, like so:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint").with(oauth2Login()));
mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(oauth2Login())
}

What this will do is configure the associated MockHttpServletRequest with an OAuth2User that includes a simple Map of attributes and Collection of granted authorities.

Specifically, it will include a Map with a key/value pair of sub/user:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

assertThat((String) user.getAttribute("sub")).isEqualTo("user");
assertThat(user.getAttribute<String>("sub")).isEqualTo("user")

and a Collection of authorities with just one authority, SCOPE_read:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

assertThat(user.getAuthorities()).hasSize(1);
assertThat(user.getAuthorities()).containsExactly(new SimpleGrantedAuthority("SCOPE_read"));
assertThat(user.authorities).hasSize(1)
assertThat(user.authorities).containsExactly(SimpleGrantedAuthority("SCOPE_read"))

Spring Security does the necessary work to make sure that the OAuth2User instance is available for the @AuthenticationPrincipal annotation.

Further, it also links that OAuth2User to a simple instance of OAuth2AuthorizedClient that it deposits in a mock OAuth2AuthorizedClientRepository. This can be handy if your tests use the @RegisteredOAuth2AuthorizedClient annotation.

Configuring Authorities

In many circumstances, your method is protected by filter or method security and needs your Authentication to have certain granted authorities to allow the request.

In this case, you can supply what granted authorities you need using the authorities() method:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint")
        .with(oauth2Login()
            .authorities(new SimpleGrantedAuthority("SCOPE_message:read"))
        )
    );
mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(oauth2Login()
        .authorities(SimpleGrantedAuthority("SCOPE_message:read"))
    )
}

Configuring Claims

And while granted authorities are quite common across all of Spring Security, we also have claims in the case of OAuth 2.0.

Let’s say, for example, that you’ve got a user_id attribute that indicates the user’s id in your system. You might access it like so in a controller:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

@GetMapping("/endpoint")
public String foo(@AuthenticationPrincipal OAuth2User oauth2User) {
    String userId = oauth2User.getAttribute("user_id");
    // ...
}
@GetMapping("/endpoint")
fun foo(@AuthenticationPrincipal oauth2User: OAuth2User): String {
    val userId = oauth2User.getAttribute<String>("user_id")
    // ...
}

In that case, you’d want to specify that attribute with the attributes() method:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint")
        .with(oauth2Login()
                .attributes(attrs -> attrs.put("user_id", "1234"))
        )
    );
mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(oauth2Login()
        .attributes { attrs -> attrs["user_id"] = "1234" }
    )
}

Additional Configurations

There are additional methods, too, for further configuring the authentication; it simply depends on what data your controller expects:

  • clientRegistration(ClientRegistration) - For configuring the associated OAuth2AuthorizedClient with a given ClientRegistration

  • oauth2User(OAuth2User) - For configuring the complete OAuth2User instance

That last one is handy if you: 1. Have your own implementation of OAuth2User, or 2. Need to change the name attribute

For example, let’s say that your authorization server sends the principal name in the user_name claim instead of the sub claim. In that case, you can configure an OAuth2User by hand:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

OAuth2User oauth2User = new DefaultOAuth2User(
        AuthorityUtils.createAuthorityList("SCOPE_message:read"),
        Collections.singletonMap("user_name", "foo_user"),
        "user_name");

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint")
        .with(oauth2Login().oauth2User(oauth2User))
    );
val oauth2User: OAuth2User = DefaultOAuth2User(
    AuthorityUtils.createAuthorityList("SCOPE_message:read"),
    mapOf(Pair("user_name", "foo_user")),
    "user_name"
)

mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(oauth2Login().oauth2User(oauth2User))
}

Testing OAuth 2.0 Clients

Independent of how your user authenticates, you may have other tokens and client registrations that are in play for the request you are testing. For example, your controller may be relying on the client credentials grant to get a token that isn’t associated with the user at all:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

@GetMapping("/endpoint")
public String foo(@RegisteredOAuth2AuthorizedClient("my-app") OAuth2AuthorizedClient authorizedClient) {
    return this.webClient.get()
        .attributes(oauth2AuthorizedClient(authorizedClient))
        .retrieve()
        .bodyToMono(String.class)
        .block();
}
@GetMapping("/endpoint")
fun foo(@RegisteredOAuth2AuthorizedClient("my-app") authorizedClient: OAuth2AuthorizedClient?): String? {
    return this.webClient.get()
        .attributes(oauth2AuthorizedClient(authorizedClient))
        .retrieve()
        .bodyToMono(String::class.java)
        .block()
}

Simulating this handshake with the authorization server could be cumbersome. Instead, you can use the oauth2Client RequestPostProcessor to add a OAuth2AuthorizedClient into a mock OAuth2AuthorizedClientRepository:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint").with(oauth2Client("my-app")));
mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(
        oauth2Client("my-app")
    )
}

What this will do is create an OAuth2AuthorizedClient that has a simple ClientRegistration, OAuth2AccessToken, and resource owner name.

Specifically, it will include a ClientRegistration with a client id of "test-client" and client secret of "test-secret":

  • Java

  • Kotlin

assertThat(authorizedClient.getClientRegistration().getClientId()).isEqualTo("test-client");
assertThat(authorizedClient.getClientRegistration().getClientSecret()).isEqualTo("test-secret");
assertThat(authorizedClient.clientRegistration.clientId).isEqualTo("test-client")
assertThat(authorizedClient.clientRegistration.clientSecret).isEqualTo("test-secret")

a resource owner name of "user":

  • Java

  • Kotlin

assertThat(authorizedClient.getPrincipalName()).isEqualTo("user");
assertThat(authorizedClient.principalName).isEqualTo("user")

and an OAuth2AccessToken with just one scope, read:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

assertThat(authorizedClient.getAccessToken().getScopes()).hasSize(1);
assertThat(authorizedClient.getAccessToken().getScopes()).containsExactly("read");
assertThat(authorizedClient.accessToken.scopes).hasSize(1)
assertThat(authorizedClient.accessToken.scopes).containsExactly("read")

The client can then be retrieved as normal using @RegisteredOAuth2AuthorizedClient in a controller method.

Configuring Scopes

In many circumstances, the OAuth 2.0 access token comes with a set of scopes. If your controller inspects these, say like so:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

@GetMapping("/endpoint")
public String foo(@RegisteredOAuth2AuthorizedClient("my-app") OAuth2AuthorizedClient authorizedClient) {
    Set<String> scopes = authorizedClient.getAccessToken().getScopes();
    if (scopes.contains("message:read")) {
        return this.webClient.get()
            .attributes(oauth2AuthorizedClient(authorizedClient))
            .retrieve()
            .bodyToMono(String.class)
            .block();
    }
    // ...
}
@GetMapping("/endpoint")
fun foo(@RegisteredOAuth2AuthorizedClient("my-app") authorizedClient: OAuth2AuthorizedClient): String? {
    val scopes = authorizedClient.accessToken.scopes
    if (scopes.contains("message:read")) {
        return webClient.get()
            .attributes(oauth2AuthorizedClient(authorizedClient))
            .retrieve()
            .bodyToMono(String::class.java)
            .block()
    }
    // ...
}

then you can configure the scope using the accessToken() method:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint")
        .with(oauth2Client("my-app")
            .accessToken(new OAuth2AccessToken(BEARER, "token", null, null, Collections.singleton("message:read"))))
        )
    );
mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(oauth2Client("my-app")
            .accessToken(OAuth2AccessToken(BEARER, "token", null, null, Collections.singleton("message:read")))
    )
}

Additional Configurations

There are additional methods, too, for further configuring the authentication; it simply depends on what data your controller expects:

  • principalName(String) - For configuring the resource owner name

  • clientRegistration(Consumer<ClientRegistration.Builder>) - For configuring the associated ClientRegistration

  • clientRegistration(ClientRegistration) - For configuring the complete ClientRegistration

That last one is handy if you want to use a real ClientRegistration

For example, let’s say that you are wanting to use one of your app’s ClientRegistration definitions, as specified in your application.yml.

In that case, your test can autowire the ClientRegistrationRepository and look up the one your test needs:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

@Autowired
ClientRegistrationRepository clientRegistrationRepository;

// ...

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint")
        .with(oauth2Client()
            .clientRegistration(this.clientRegistrationRepository.findByRegistrationId("facebook"))));
@Autowired
lateinit var clientRegistrationRepository: ClientRegistrationRepository

// ...

mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(oauth2Client("my-app")
        .clientRegistration(clientRegistrationRepository.findByRegistrationId("facebook"))
    )
}

Testing JWT Authentication

In order to make an authorized request on a resource server, you need a bearer token.

If your resource server is configured for JWTs, then this would mean that the bearer token needs to be signed and then encoded according to the JWT specification. All of this can be quite daunting, especially when this isn’t the focus of your test.

Fortunately, there are a number of simple ways that you can overcome this difficulty and allow your tests to focus on authorization and not on representing bearer tokens. We’ll look at two of them now:

jwt() RequestPostProcessor

The first way is via the jwt RequestPostProcessor. The simplest of these would look something like this:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint").with(jwt()));
mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(jwt())
}

What this will do is create a mock Jwt, passing it correctly through any authentication APIs so that it’s available for your authorization mechanisms to verify.

By default, the JWT that it creates has the following characteristics:

{
  "headers" : { "alg" : "none" },
  "claims" : {
    "sub" : "user",
    "scope" : "read"
  }
}

And the resulting Jwt, were it tested, would pass in the following way:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

assertThat(jwt.getTokenValue()).isEqualTo("token");
assertThat(jwt.getHeaders().get("alg")).isEqualTo("none");
assertThat(jwt.getSubject()).isEqualTo("sub");
assertThat(jwt.tokenValue).isEqualTo("token")
assertThat(jwt.headers["alg"]).isEqualTo("none")
assertThat(jwt.subject).isEqualTo("sub")

These values can, of course be configured.

Any headers or claims can be configured with their corresponding methods:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint")
        .with(jwt().jwt(jwt -> jwt.header("kid", "one").claim("iss", "https://idp.example.org"))));
mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(
        jwt().jwt { jwt -> jwt.header("kid", "one").claim("iss", "https://idp.example.org") }
    )
}
  • Java

  • Kotlin

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint")
        .with(jwt().jwt(jwt -> jwt.claims(claims -> claims.remove("scope")))));
mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(
        jwt().jwt { jwt -> jwt.claims { claims -> claims.remove("scope") } }
    )
}

The scope and scp claims are processed the same way here as they are in a normal bearer token request. However, this can be overridden simply by providing the list of GrantedAuthority instances that you need for your test:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint")
        .with(jwt().authorities(new SimpleGrantedAuthority("SCOPE_messages"))));
mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(
        jwt().authorities(SimpleGrantedAuthority("SCOPE_messages"))
    )
}

Or, if you have a custom Jwt to Collection<GrantedAuthority> converter, you can also use that to derive the authorities:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint")
        .with(jwt().authorities(new MyConverter())));
mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(
        jwt().authorities(MyConverter())
    )
}

You can also specify a complete Jwt, for which Jwt.Builder comes quite handy:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

Jwt jwt = Jwt.withTokenValue("token")
    .header("alg", "none")
    .claim("sub", "user")
    .claim("scope", "read")
    .build();

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint")
        .with(jwt().jwt(jwt)));
val jwt: Jwt = Jwt.withTokenValue("token")
    .header("alg", "none")
    .claim("sub", "user")
    .claim("scope", "read")
    .build()

mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(
        jwt().jwt(jwt)
    )
}

authentication() RequestPostProcessor

The second way is by using the authentication() RequestPostProcessor. Essentially, you can instantiate your own JwtAuthenticationToken and provide it in your test, like so:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

Jwt jwt = Jwt.withTokenValue("token")
    .header("alg", "none")
    .claim("sub", "user")
    .build();
Collection<GrantedAuthority> authorities = AuthorityUtils.createAuthorityList("SCOPE_read");
JwtAuthenticationToken token = new JwtAuthenticationToken(jwt, authorities);

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint")
        .with(authentication(token)));
val jwt = Jwt.withTokenValue("token")
    .header("alg", "none")
    .claim("sub", "user")
    .build()
val authorities: Collection<GrantedAuthority> = AuthorityUtils.createAuthorityList("SCOPE_read")
val token = JwtAuthenticationToken(jwt, authorities)

mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(
        authentication(token)
    )
}

Note that as an alternative to these, you can also mock the JwtDecoder bean itself with a @MockBean annotation.

Testing Opaque Token Authentication

Similar to JWTs, opaque tokens require an authorization server in order to verify their validity, which can make testing more difficult. To help with that, Spring Security has test support for opaque tokens.

Let’s say that we’ve got a controller that retrieves the authentication as a BearerTokenAuthentication:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

@GetMapping("/endpoint")
public String foo(BearerTokenAuthentication authentication) {
    return (String) authentication.getTokenAttributes().get("sub");
}
@GetMapping("/endpoint")
fun foo(authentication: BearerTokenAuthentication): String {
    return authentication.tokenAttributes["sub"] as String
}

In that case, we can tell Spring Security to include a default BearerTokenAuthentication using the opaqueToken RequestPostProcessor method, like so:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint").with(opaqueToken()));
mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(opaqueToken())
}

What this will do is configure the associated MockHttpServletRequest with a BearerTokenAuthentication that includes a simple OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal, Map of attributes, and Collection of granted authorities.

Specifically, it will include a Map with a key/value pair of sub/user:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

assertThat((String) token.getTokenAttributes().get("sub")).isEqualTo("user");
assertThat(token.tokenAttributes["sub"] as String).isEqualTo("user")

and a Collection of authorities with just one authority, SCOPE_read:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

assertThat(token.getAuthorities()).hasSize(1);
assertThat(token.getAuthorities()).containsExactly(new SimpleGrantedAuthority("SCOPE_read"));
assertThat(token.authorities).hasSize(1)
assertThat(token.authorities).containsExactly(SimpleGrantedAuthority("SCOPE_read"))

Spring Security does the necessary work to make sure that the BearerTokenAuthentication instance is available for your controller methods.

Configuring Authorities

In many circumstances, your method is protected by filter or method security and needs your Authentication to have certain granted authorities to allow the request.

In this case, you can supply what granted authorities you need using the authorities() method:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint")
        .with(opaqueToken()
            .authorities(new SimpleGrantedAuthority("SCOPE_message:read"))
        )
    );
mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(opaqueToken()
        .authorities(SimpleGrantedAuthority("SCOPE_message:read"))
    )
}

Configuring Claims

And while granted authorities are quite common across all of Spring Security, we also have attributes in the case of OAuth 2.0.

Let’s say, for example, that you’ve got a user_id attribute that indicates the user’s id in your system. You might access it like so in a controller:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

@GetMapping("/endpoint")
public String foo(BearerTokenAuthentication authentication) {
    String userId = (String) authentication.getTokenAttributes().get("user_id");
    // ...
}
@GetMapping("/endpoint")
fun foo(authentication: BearerTokenAuthentication): String {
    val userId = authentication.tokenAttributes["user_id"] as String
    // ...
}

In that case, you’d want to specify that attribute with the attributes() method:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint")
        .with(opaqueToken()
                .attributes(attrs -> attrs.put("user_id", "1234"))
        )
    );
mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(opaqueToken()
        .attributes { attrs -> attrs["user_id"] = "1234" }
    )
}

Additional Configurations

There are additional methods, too, for further configuring the authentication; it simply depends on what data your controller expects.

One such is principal(OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal), which you can use to configure the complete OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal instance that underlies the BearerTokenAuthentication

It’s handy if you: 1. Have your own implementation of OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal, or 2. Want to specify a different principal name

For example, let’s say that your authorization server sends the principal name in the user_name attribute instead of the sub attribute. In that case, you can configure an OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal by hand:

  • Java

  • Kotlin

Map<String, Object> attributes = Collections.singletonMap("user_name", "foo_user");
OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal principal = new DefaultOAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal(
        (String) attributes.get("user_name"),
        attributes,
        AuthorityUtils.createAuthorityList("SCOPE_message:read"));

mvc
    .perform(get("/endpoint")
        .with(opaqueToken().principal(principal))
    );
val attributes: Map<String, Any> = Collections.singletonMap("user_name", "foo_user")
val principal: OAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal = DefaultOAuth2AuthenticatedPrincipal(
    attributes["user_name"] as String?,
    attributes,
    AuthorityUtils.createAuthorityList("SCOPE_message:read")
)

mvc.get("/endpoint") {
    with(opaqueToken().principal(principal))
}

Note that as an alternative to using opaqueToken() test support, you can also mock the OpaqueTokenIntrospector bean itself with a @MockBean annotation.