Spring Security's web infrastructure is based entirely on standard servlet filters. It
doesn't use servlets or any other servlet-based frameworks (such as Spring MVC) internally, so
it has no strong links to any particular web technology. It deals in
HttpServletRequest
s and HttpServletResponse
s and
doesn't care whether the requests come from a browser, a web service client, an
HttpInvoker
or an AJAX application.
Spring Security maintains a filter chain internally where each of the filters has a particular responsibility and filters are added or removed from the configuration depending on which services are required. The ordering of the filters is important as there are dependencies between them. If you have been using namespace configuration, then the filters are automatically configured for you and you don't have to define any Spring beans explicitly but here may be times when you want full control over the security filter chain, either because you are using features which aren't supported in the namespace, or you are using your own customized versions of classes.
When using servlet filters, you obviously need to declare them in your
web.xml
, or they will be ignored by the servlet container. In Spring
Security, the filter classes are also Spring beans defined in the application context and thus
able to take advantage of Spring's rich dependency-injection facilities and lifecycle
interfaces. Spring's DelegatingFilterProxy
provides the link between
web.xml
and the application context.
When using DelegatingFilterProxy
, you will see something like this
in the web.xml
file:
<filter> <filter-name>myFilter</filter-name> <filter-class>org.springframework.web.filter.DelegatingFilterProxy</filter-class> </filter> <filter-mapping> <filter-name>myFilter</filter-name> <url-pattern>/*</url-pattern> </filter-mapping>
Notice that the filter is actually a
DelegatingFilterProxy
, and not the class that will actually implement the
logic of the filter. What DelegatingFilterProxy
does is delegate the
Filter
's methods through to a bean which is obtained from the
Spring application context. This enables the bean to benefit from the Spring web application
context lifecycle support and configuration flexibility. The bean must implement
javax.servlet.Filter
and it must have the same name as that
in the filter-name
element. Read the Javadoc for
DelegatingFilterProxy
for more information
Spring Security's web infrastructure should only be used by delegating to an
instance of FilterChainProxy
. The security filters should not
be used by themselves In theory you could declare each Spring Security filter bean
that you require in your application context file and add a corresponding
DelegatingFilterProxy
entry to web.xml
for each filter, making sure that they are ordered correctly, but this would be
cumbersome and would clutter up the web.xml
file quickly if you
have a lot of filters. FilterChainProxy
lets us add a single
entry to web.xml
and deal entirely with the application context
file for managing our web security beans. It is wired using a
DelegatingFilterProxy
, just like in the example above, but with
the filter-name
set to the bean name
“filterChainProxy”. The filter chain is then declared in the
application context with the same bean name. Here's an example:
<bean id="filterChainProxy" class="org.springframework.security.web.FilterChainProxy"> <sec:filter-chain-map path-type="ant"> <sec:filter-chain pattern="/webServices/**" filters=" securityContextPersistenceFilterWithASCFalse, basicAuthenticationFilter, exceptionTranslationFilter, filterSecurityInterceptor" /> <sec:filter-chain pattern="/**" filters=" securityContextPersistenceFilterWithASCTrue, formLoginFilter, exceptionTranslationFilter, filterSecurityInterceptor" /> </sec:filter-chain-map> </bean>
The namespace element filter-chain-map
is used
to set up the security filter chain(s) which are required within the
application[7]. It maps a
particular URL pattern to a chain of filters built up from the bean names specified in the
filters
element. Both regular expressions and Ant Paths are supported,
and the most specific URIs appear first. At runtime the
FilterChainProxy
will locate the first URI pattern that matches the
current web request and the list of filter beans specified by the filters
attribute will be applied to that request. The filters will be invoked in the order they are
defined, so you have complete control over the filter chain which is applied to a particular
URL.
You may have noticed we have declared two
SecurityContextPersistenceFilter
s in the filter chain
(ASC
is short for allowSessionCreation
, a property of
SecurityContextPersistenceFilter
). As web services will never present
a jsessionid
on future requests, creating HttpSession
s
for such user agents would be wasteful. If you had a high-volume application which required
maximum scalability, we recommend you use the approach shown above. For smaller applications,
using a single SecurityContextPersistenceFilter
(with its default
allowSessionCreation
as true
) would likely be
sufficient.
In relation to lifecycle issues, the FilterChainProxy
will always
delegate init(FilterConfig)
and destroy()
methods through to the underlaying Filter
s if such methods are
called against FilterChainProxy
itself. In this case,
FilterChainProxy
guarantees to only initialize and destroy each
Filter
bean once, no matter how many times it is declared in the filter
chain(s). You control the overall choice as to whether these methods are called or not via the
targetFilterLifecycle
initialization parameter of
DelegatingFilterProxy
. By default this property is
false
and servlet container lifecycle invocations are not delegated
through DelegatingFilterProxy
.
When we looked at how to set up web security using namespace configuration, we used a DelegatingFilterProxy
with the
name “springSecurityFilterChain”. You should now be able to see that this is the
name of the FilterChainProxy
which is created by the namespace.
As with the namespace, you can use the attribute filters = "none"
as
an alternative to supplying a filter bean list. This will omit the request pattern from the
security filter chain entirely. Note that anything matching this path will then have no
authentication or authorization services applied and will be freely accessible. If you want
to make use of the contents of the SecurityContext
contents during a
request, then it must have passed through the security filter chain. Otherwise the
SecurityContextHolder
will not have been populated and the contents
will be null.
The order that filters are defined in the chain is very important. Irrespective of which filters you are actually using, the order should be as follows:
ChannelProcessingFilter
, because
it might need to redirect to a different
protocol
SecurityContextPersistenceFilter
,
so a SecurityContext
can be set up in the
SecurityContextHolder
at the beginning of a web request, and
any changes to the SecurityContext
can be copied to the
HttpSession
when the web request ends (ready for use with the next
web request)
ConcurrentSessionFilter
, because it uses the
SecurityContextHolder
functionality but needs to update
the SessionRegistry
to reflect ongoing requests
from the principal
Authentication processing mechanisms -
UsernamePasswordAuthenticationFilter
,
CasAuthenticationFilter
,
BasicAuthenticationFilter
etc - so that the
SecurityContextHolder
can be modified to contain a valid
Authentication
request
token
The
SecurityContextHolderAwareRequestFilter
, if you are using it to
install a Spring Security aware HttpServletRequestWrapper
into your
servlet
container
RememberMeAuthenticationFilter
,
so that if no earlier authentication processing mechanism updated the
SecurityContextHolder
, and the request presents a cookie that
enables remember-me services to take place, a suitable remembered
Authentication
object will be put
there
AnonymousAuthenticationFilter
,
so that if no earlier authentication processing mechanism updated the
SecurityContextHolder
, an anonymous
Authentication
object will be put
there
ExceptionTranslationFilter
,
to catch any Spring Security exceptions so that either an HTTP error response can be
returned or an appropriate AuthenticationEntryPoint
can
be
launched
FilterSecurityInterceptor
,
to protect web URIs and raise exceptions when access is
denied
Spring Security has several areas where patterns you have defined are tested
against incoming requests in order to decide how the request should be handled. This
occurs when the FilterChainProxy
decides which filter chain a
request should be passed through and also when the
FilterSecurityInterceptor
decides which security constraints
apply to a request. It's important to understand what the mechanism is and what URL
value is used when testing against the patterns that you define.
The Servlet Specification defines several properties for the
HttpServletRequest
which are accessible via getter
methods, and which we might want to match against. These are the
contextPath
, servletPath
,
pathInfo
and queryString
. Spring Security is
only interested in securing paths within the application, so the
contextPath
is ignored. Unfortunately, the servlet spec does not
define exactly what the values of servletPath
and
pathInfo
will contain for a particular request URI. For example,
each path segment of a URL may contain parameters, as defined in RFC 2396[8]. The Specification does not clearly state whether these should be
included in the servletPath
and pathInfo
values and the behaviour varies between different servlet containers. There is a
danger that when an application is deployed in a container which does not strip path
parameters from these values, an attacker could add them to the requested URL in
order to cause a pattern match to succeed or fail unexpectedly.[9]. Other variations in the incoming URL are also possible. For example, it
could contain path-traversal sequences (like /../
) or multiple
forward slashes (//
) which could also cause pattern-matches to
fail. Some containers normalize these out before performing the servlet mapping, but
others don't. To protect against issues like these,
FilterChainProxy
uses an
HttpFirewall
strategy to check and wrap the request.
Un-normalized requests are automatically rejected by default, and path parameters
and duplicate slashes are removed for matching purposes.[10]. It is therefore essential that a
FilterChainProxy
is used to manage the security filter chain.
Note that the servletPath
and pathInfo
values
are decoded by the container, so your application should not have any valid paths
which contain semi-colons, as these parts will be removed for matching purposes.
As mentioned above, the default strategy is to use Ant-style paths for matching
and this is likely to be the best choice for most users. The strategy is implemented
in the class AntPathRequestMatcher
which uses Spring's
AntPathMatcher
to perform a case-insensitive match of the
pattern against the concatenated servletPath
and
pathInfo
, ignoring the queryString
.
If for some reason, you need a more powerful matching strategy, you can use
regular expressions. The strategy implementation is then
RegexRequestMatcher
. See the Javadoc for this class for more
information.
In practice we recommend that you use method security at your service layer, to
control access to your application, and do not rely entirely on the use of security
constraints defined at the web-application level. URLs change and it is difficult to
take account of all the possible URLs that an application might support and how
requests might be manipulated. You should try and restrict yourself to using a few
simple ant paths which are simple to understand. Always try to use a
“deny-by-default” approach where you have a catch-all wildcard
(**
) defined last and denying access.
Security defined at the service layer is much more robust and harder to bypass, so you should always take advantage of Spring Security's method security options.
If you're using some other framework that is also filter-based, then you need to make sure
that the Spring Security filters come first. This enables the
SecurityContextHolder
to be populated in time for use by the other
filters. Examples are the use of SiteMesh to decorate your web pages or a web framework like
Wicket which uses a filter to handle its requests.
[7] Note that you'll need to include the security namespace in your application context XML file in order to use this syntax.
[8] You have probably seen this when a browser doesn't support cookies and the
jsessionid
parameter is appended to the URL after a
semi-colon. However the RFC allows the presence of these parameters in any path
segment of the URL
[9] The original values will be returned once the request leaves the
FilterChainProxy
, so will still be available to the
application.
[10] So, for example, an original request path
/secure;hack=1/somefile.html;hack=2
will be returned as
/secure/somefile.html
.