There are several sample web applications that are available with the project. To avoid an overly large download, only the "tutorial" and "contacts" samples are included in the distribution zip file. The others can be built directly from the source which you can obtain as described in the introduction. It's easy to build the project yourself and there's more information on the project web site at http://www.springsource.org/security/ . All paths referred to in this chapter are relative to the project source directory.
The tutorial sample is a nice basic example to get you started. It uses simple
namespace configuration throughout. The compiled application is included in the
distribution zip file, ready to be deployed into your web container
(spring-security-samples-tutorial-3.1.x.war
). The form-based authentication mechanism is used in
combination with the commonly-used remember-me
authentication provider to automatically remember the login using cookies.
We recommend you start with the tutorial sample, as the XML is minimal and easy to
follow. Most importantly, you can easily add this one XML file (and its corresponding
web.xml
entries) to your existing application. Only when this basic
integration is achieved do we suggest you attempt adding in method authorization or
domain object security.
The Contacts Sample is an advanced example in that it illustrates the more powerful features of domain object access control lists (ACLs) in addition to basic application security. The application provides an interface with which the users are able to administer a simple database of contacts (the domain objects).
To deploy, simply copy the WAR file from Spring Security distribution into your
container’s webapps
directory. The war should be called
spring-security-samples-contacts-3.1.x.war
(the appended version
number will vary depending on what release you are using).
After starting your container, check the application can load. Visit
http://localhost:8080/contacts
(or whichever URL is appropriate for
your web container and the WAR you deployed).
Next, click "Debug". You will be prompted to authenticate, and a series of usernames and passwords are suggested on that page. Simply authenticate with any of these and view the resulting page. It should contain a success message similar to the following:
Security Debug Information
Authentication object is of type:
org.springframework.security.authentication.UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken
Authentication object as a String:
org.springframework.security.authentication.UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken@1f127853:
Principal: org.springframework.security.core.userdetails.User@b07ed00: Username: rod; \
Password: [PROTECTED]; Enabled: true; AccountNonExpired: true;
credentialsNonExpired: true; AccountNonLocked: true; \
Granted Authorities: ROLE_SUPERVISOR, ROLE_USER; \
Password: [PROTECTED]; Authenticated: true; \
Details: org.springframework.security.web.authentication.WebAuthenticationDetails@0: \
RemoteIpAddress: 127.0.0.1; SessionId: 8fkp8t83ohar; \
Granted Authorities: ROLE_SUPERVISOR, ROLE_USER
Authentication object holds the following granted authorities:
ROLE_SUPERVISOR (getAuthority(): ROLE_SUPERVISOR)
ROLE_USER (getAuthority(): ROLE_USER)
Success! Your web filters appear to be properly configured!
Once you successfully receive the above message, return to the sample application's
home page and click "Manage". You can then try out the application. Notice that only the
contacts available to the currently logged on user are displayed, and only users with
ROLE_SUPERVISOR
are granted access to delete their contacts. Behind
the scenes, the MethodSecurityInterceptor
is securing the
business objects.
The application allows you to modify the access control lists associated with different contacts. Be sure to give this a try and understand how it works by reviewing the application context XML files.
The LDAP sample application provides a basic configuration and sets up both a namespace configuration and an equivalent configuration using traditional beans, both in the same application context file. This means there are actually two identical authentication providers configured in this application.
The OpenID sample demonstrates how to use the namespace to configure OpenID and how to set up attribute exchange configurations for Google, Yahoo and MyOpenID identity providers (you can experiment with adding others if you wish). It uses the JQuery-based openid-selector project to provide a user-friendly login page which allows the user to easily select a provider, rather than typing in the full OpenID identifier.
The application differs from normal authentication scenarios in that it allows any user to access the site (provided
their OpenID authentication is successful). The first time you login, you will get a “Welcome [your name]"”
message. If you logout and log back in (with the same OpenID identity) then this should change to “Welcome Back”.
This is achieved by using a custom UserDetailsService
which assigns a standard role
to any user and stores the identities internally in a map. Obviously a real application would use a database instead.
Have a look at the source form more information. This class also takes into account the fact that different attributes may be returned
from different providers and builds the name with which it addresses the user accordingly.
The CAS sample requires that you run both a CAS server and CAS client. It isn't
included in the distribution so you should check out the project code as described in
the introduction. You'll find the relevant files
under the sample/cas
directory. There's also a
Readme.txt
file in there which explains how to run both the server
and the client directly from the source tree, complete with SSL support.
The JAAS sample is very simple example of how to use a JAAS LoginModule with Spring Security. The provided LoginModule will successfully authenticate a user if the username equals the password otherwise a LoginException is thrown. The AuthorityGranter used in this example always grants the role ROLE_USER. The sample application also demonstrates how to run as the JAAS Subject returned by the LoginModule by setting jaas-api-provision equal to "true".
This sample application demonstrates how to wire up beans from the pre-authentication framework to make use of login information from a J2EE container. The user name and roles are those setup by the container.
The code is in samples/preauth
.