This section describes the testing support provided by Spring Security.
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To use the Spring Security test support, you must include |
This section demonstrates how to use Spring Security’s Test support to test method based security.
We first introduce a MessageService
that requires the user to be authenticated in order to access it.
public class HelloMessageService implements MessageService { @PreAuthorize("authenticated") public String getMessage() { Authentication authentication = SecurityContextHolder.getContext() .getAuthentication(); return "Hello " + authentication; } }
The result of getMessage
is a String saying "Hello" to the current Spring Security Authentication
.
An example of the output is displayed below.
Hello org.springframework.security.authentication.UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken@ca25360: Principal: org.springframework.security.core.userdetails.User@36ebcb: Username: user; Password: [PROTECTED]; Enabled: true; AccountNonExpired: true; credentialsNonExpired: true; AccountNonLocked: true; Granted Authorities: ROLE_USER; Credentials: [PROTECTED]; Authenticated: true; Details: null; Granted Authorities: ROLE_USER
Before we can use Spring Security Test support, we must perform some setup. An example can be seen below:
@RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class) @ContextConfiguration public class WithMockUserTests {
This is a basic example of how to setup Spring Security Test. The highlights are:
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Spring Security hooks into Spring Test support using the |
Remember we added the @PreAuthorize
annotation to our HelloMessageService
and so it requires an authenticated user to invoke it.
If we ran the following test, we would expect the following test will pass:
@Test(expected = AuthenticationCredentialsNotFoundException.class) public void getMessageUnauthenticated() { messageService.getMessage(); }
The question is "How could we most easily run the test as a specific user?"
The answer is to use @WithMockUser
.
The following test will be run as a user with the username "user", the password "password", and the roles "ROLE_USER".
@Test @WithMockUser public void getMessageWithMockUser() { String message = messageService.getMessage(); ... }
Specifically the following is true:
Authentication
that is populated in the SecurityContext
is of type UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken
Authentication
is Spring Security’s User
object
User
will have the username of "user", the password "password", and a single GrantedAuthority
named "ROLE_USER" is used.
Our example is nice because we are able to leverage a lot of defaults. What if we wanted to run the test with a different username? The following test would run with the username "customUser". Again, the user does not need to actually exist.
@Test @WithMockUser("customUsername") public void getMessageWithMockUserCustomUsername() { String message = messageService.getMessage(); ... }
We can also easily customize the roles. For example, this test will be invoked with the username "admin" and the roles "ROLE_USER" and "ROLE_ADMIN".
@Test @WithMockUser(username="admin",roles={"USER","ADMIN"}) public void getMessageWithMockUserCustomUser() { String message = messageService.getMessage(); ... }
If we do not want the value to automatically be prefixed with ROLE_ we can leverage the authorities attribute. For example, this test will be invoked with the username "admin" and the authorities "USER" and "ADMIN".
@Test @WithMockUser(username = "admin", authorities = { "ADMIN", "USER" }) public void getMessageWithMockUserCustomAuthorities() { String message = messageService.getMessage(); ... }
Of course it can be a bit tedious placing the annotation on every test method. Instead, we can place the annotation at the class level and every test will use the specified user. For example, the following would run every test with a user with the username "admin", the password "password", and the roles "ROLE_USER" and "ROLE_ADMIN".
@RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class) @ContextConfiguration @WithMockUser(username="admin",roles={"USER","ADMIN"}) public class WithMockUserTests {
By default the SecurityContext
is set during the TestExecutionListener.beforeTestMethod
event.
This is the equivalent of happening before JUnit’s @Before
.
You can change this to happen during the TestExecutionListener.beforeTestExecution
event which is after JUnit’s @Before
but before the test method is invoked.
@WithMockUser(setupBefore = TestExecutionEvent.TEST_EXECUTION)
Using @WithAnonymousUser
allows running as an anonymous user.
This is especially convenient when you wish to run most of your tests with a specific user, but want to run a few tests as an anonymous user.
For example, the following will run withMockUser1 and withMockUser2 using @WithMockUser and anonymous as an anonymous user.
@RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class) @WithMockUser public class WithUserClassLevelAuthenticationTests { @Test public void withMockUser1() { } @Test public void withMockUser2() { } @Test @WithAnonymousUser public void anonymous() throws Exception { // override default to run as anonymous user } }
By default the SecurityContext
is set during the TestExecutionListener.beforeTestMethod
event.
This is the equivalent of happening before JUnit’s @Before
.
You can change this to happen during the TestExecutionListener.beforeTestExecution
event which is after JUnit’s @Before
but before the test method is invoked.
@WithAnonymousUser(setupBefore = TestExecutionEvent.TEST_EXECUTION)
While @WithMockUser
is a very convenient way to get started, it may not work in all instances.
For example, it is common for applications to expect that the Authentication
principal be of a specific type.
This is done so that the application can refer to the principal as the custom type and reduce coupling on Spring Security.
The custom principal is often times returned by a custom UserDetailsService
that returns an object that implements both UserDetails
and the custom type.
For situations like this, it is useful to create the test user using the custom UserDetailsService
.
That is exactly what @WithUserDetails
does.
Assuming we have a UserDetailsService
exposed as a bean, the following test will be invoked with an Authentication
of type UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken
and a principal that is returned from the UserDetailsService
with the username of "user".
@Test @WithUserDetails public void getMessageWithUserDetails() { String message = messageService.getMessage(); ... }
We can also customize the username used to lookup the user from our UserDetailsService
.
For example, this test would be executed with a principal that is returned from the UserDetailsService
with the username of "customUsername".
@Test @WithUserDetails("customUsername") public void getMessageWithUserDetailsCustomUsername() { String message = messageService.getMessage(); ... }
We can also provide an explicit bean name to look up the UserDetailsService
.
For example, this test would look up the username of "customUsername" using the UserDetailsService
with the bean name "myUserDetailsService".
@Test @WithUserDetails(value="customUsername", userDetailsServiceBeanName="myUserDetailsService") public void getMessageWithUserDetailsServiceBeanName() { String message = messageService.getMessage(); ... }
Like @WithMockUser
we can also place our annotation at the class level so that every test uses the same user.
However unlike @WithMockUser
, @WithUserDetails
requires the user to exist.
By default the SecurityContext
is set during the TestExecutionListener.beforeTestMethod
event.
This is the equivalent of happening before JUnit’s @Before
.
You can change this to happen during the TestExecutionListener.beforeTestExecution
event which is after JUnit’s @Before
but before the test method is invoked.
@WithUserDetails(setupBefore = TestExecutionEvent.TEST_EXECUTION)
We have seen that @WithMockUser
is an excellent choice if we are not using a custom Authentication
principal.
Next we discovered that @WithUserDetails
would allow us to use a custom UserDetailsService
to create our Authentication
principal but required the user to exist.
We will now see an option that allows the most flexibility.
We can create our own annotation that uses the @WithSecurityContext
to create any SecurityContext
we want.
For example, we might create an annotation named @WithMockCustomUser
as shown below:
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME) @WithSecurityContext(factory = WithMockCustomUserSecurityContextFactory.class) public @interface WithMockCustomUser { String username() default "rob"; String name() default "Rob Winch"; }
You can see that @WithMockCustomUser
is annotated with the @WithSecurityContext
annotation.
This is what signals to Spring Security Test support that we intend to create a SecurityContext
for the test.
The @WithSecurityContext
annotation requires we specify a SecurityContextFactory
that will create a new SecurityContext
given our @WithMockCustomUser
annotation.
You can find our WithMockCustomUserSecurityContextFactory
implementation below:
public class WithMockCustomUserSecurityContextFactory implements WithSecurityContextFactory<WithMockCustomUser> { @Override public SecurityContext createSecurityContext(WithMockCustomUser customUser) { SecurityContext context = SecurityContextHolder.createEmptyContext(); CustomUserDetails principal = new CustomUserDetails(customUser.name(), customUser.username()); Authentication auth = new UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken(principal, "password", principal.getAuthorities()); context.setAuthentication(auth); return context; } }
We can now annotate a test class or a test method with our new annotation and Spring Security’s WithSecurityContextTestExecutionListener
will ensure that our SecurityContext
is populated appropriately.
When creating your own WithSecurityContextFactory
implementations, it is nice to know that they can be annotated with standard Spring annotations.
For example, the WithUserDetailsSecurityContextFactory
uses the @Autowired
annotation to acquire the UserDetailsService
:
final class WithUserDetailsSecurityContextFactory implements WithSecurityContextFactory<WithUserDetails> { private UserDetailsService userDetailsService; @Autowired public WithUserDetailsSecurityContextFactory(UserDetailsService userDetailsService) { this.userDetailsService = userDetailsService; } public SecurityContext createSecurityContext(WithUserDetails withUser) { String username = withUser.value(); Assert.hasLength(username, "value() must be non-empty String"); UserDetails principal = userDetailsService.loadUserByUsername(username); Authentication authentication = new UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken(principal, principal.getPassword(), principal.getAuthorities()); SecurityContext context = SecurityContextHolder.createEmptyContext(); context.setAuthentication(authentication); return context; } }
By default the SecurityContext
is set during the TestExecutionListener.beforeTestMethod
event.
This is the equivalent of happening before JUnit’s @Before
.
You can change this to happen during the TestExecutionListener.beforeTestExecution
event which is after JUnit’s @Before
but before the test method is invoked.
@WithSecurityContext(setupBefore = TestExecutionEvent.TEST_EXECUTION)
If you reuse the same user within your tests often, it is not ideal to have to repeatedly specify the attributes.
For example, if there are many tests related to an administrative user with the username "admin" and the roles ROLE_USER
and ROLE_ADMIN
you would have to write:
@WithMockUser(username="admin",roles={"USER","ADMIN"})
Rather than repeating this everywhere, we can use a meta annotation.
For example, we could create a meta annotation named WithMockAdmin
:
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME) @WithMockUser(value="rob",roles="ADMIN") public @interface WithMockAdmin { }
Now we can use @WithMockAdmin
in the same way as the more verbose @WithMockUser
.
Meta annotations work with any of the testing annotations described above.
For example, this means we could create a meta annotation for @WithUserDetails("admin")
as well.
Spring Security provides comprehensive integration with Spring MVC Test
In order to use Spring Security with Spring MVC Test it is necessary to add the Spring Security FilterChainProxy
as a Filter
.
It is also necessary to add Spring Security’s TestSecurityContextHolderPostProcessor
to support Running as a User in Spring MVC Test with Annotations.
This can be done using Spring Security’s SecurityMockMvcConfigurers.springSecurity()
.
For example:
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Spring Security’s testing support requires spring-test-4.1.3.RELEASE or greater. |
import static org.springframework.security.test.web.servlet.setup.SecurityMockMvcConfigurers.*; @RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class) @ContextConfiguration @WebAppConfiguration public class CsrfShowcaseTests { @Autowired private WebApplicationContext context; private MockMvc mvc; @Before public void setup() { mvc = MockMvcBuilders .webAppContextSetup(context) .apply(springSecurity()) .build(); } ...
Spring MVC Test provides a convenient interface called a RequestPostProcessor
that can be used to modify a request.
Spring Security provides a number of RequestPostProcessor
implementations that make testing easier.
In order to use Spring Security’s RequestPostProcessor
implementations ensure the following static import is used:
import static org.springframework.security.test.web.servlet.request.SecurityMockMvcRequestPostProcessors.*;
When testing any non-safe HTTP methods and using Spring Security’s CSRF protection, you must be sure to include a valid CSRF Token in the request. To specify a valid CSRF token as a request parameter using the following:
mvc
.perform(post("/").with(csrf()))
If you like you can include CSRF token in the header instead:
mvc
.perform(post("/").with(csrf().asHeader()))
You can also test providing an invalid CSRF token using the following:
mvc
.perform(post("/").with(csrf().useInvalidToken()))
It is often desirable to run tests as a specific user. There are two simple ways of populating the user:
There are a number of options available to associate a user to the current HttpServletRequest
.
For example, the following will run as a user (which does not need to exist) with the username "user", the password "password", and the role "ROLE_USER":
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The support works by associating the user to the
|
mvc .perform(get("/").with(user("user")))
You can easily make customizations. For example, the following will run as a user (which does not need to exist) with the username "admin", the password "pass", and the roles "ROLE_USER" and "ROLE_ADMIN".
mvc .perform(get("/admin").with(user("admin").password("pass").roles("USER","ADMIN")))
If you have a custom UserDetails
that you would like to use, you can easily specify that as well.
For example, the following will use the specified UserDetails
(which does not need to exist) to run with a UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken
that has a principal of the specified UserDetails
:
mvc
.perform(get("/").with(user(userDetails)))
You can run as anonymous user using the following:
mvc
.perform(get("/").with(anonymous()))
This is especially useful if you are running with a default user and wish to execute a few requests as an anonymous user.
If you want a custom Authentication
(which does not need to exist) you can do so using the following:
mvc
.perform(get("/").with(authentication(authentication)))
You can even customize the SecurityContext
using the following:
mvc
.perform(get("/").with(securityContext(securityContext)))
We can also ensure to run as a specific user for every request by using MockMvcBuilders
's default request.
For example, the following will run as a user (which does not need to exist) with the username "admin", the password "password", and the role "ROLE_ADMIN":
mvc = MockMvcBuilders .webAppContextSetup(context) .defaultRequest(get("/").with(user("user").roles("ADMIN"))) .apply(springSecurity()) .build();
If you find you are using the same user in many of your tests, it is recommended to move the user to a method.
For example, you can specify the following in your own class named CustomSecurityMockMvcRequestPostProcessors
:
public static RequestPostProcessor rob() { return user("rob").roles("ADMIN"); }
Now you can perform a static import on SecurityMockMvcRequestPostProcessors
and use that within your tests:
import static sample.CustomSecurityMockMvcRequestPostProcessors.*; ... mvc .perform(get("/").with(rob()))
As an alternative to using a RequestPostProcessor
to create your user, you can use annotations described in Section 18.1, “Testing Method Security”.
For example, the following will run the test with the user with username "user", password "password", and role "ROLE_USER":
@Test @WithMockUser public void requestProtectedUrlWithUser() throws Exception { mvc .perform(get("/")) ... }
Alternatively, the following will run the test with the user with username "user", password "password", and role "ROLE_ADMIN":
@Test @WithMockUser(roles="ADMIN") public void requestProtectedUrlWithUser() throws Exception { mvc .perform(get("/")) ... }
While it has always been possible to authenticate with HTTP Basic, it was a bit tedious to remember the header name, format, and encode the values.
Now this can be done using Spring Security’s httpBasic
RequestPostProcessor
.
For example, the snippet below:
mvc .perform(get("/").with(httpBasic("user","password")))
will attempt to use HTTP Basic to authenticate a user with the username "user" and the password "password" by ensuring the following header is populated on the HTTP Request:
Authorization: Basic dXNlcjpwYXNzd29yZA==
Spring MVC Test also provides a RequestBuilder
interface that can be used to create the MockHttpServletRequest
used in your test.
Spring Security provides a few RequestBuilder
implementations that can be used to make testing easier.
In order to use Spring Security’s RequestBuilder
implementations ensure the following static import is used:
import static org.springframework.security.test.web.servlet.request.SecurityMockMvcRequestBuilders.*;
You can easily create a request to test a form based authentication using Spring Security’s testing support. For example, the following will submit a POST to "/login" with the username "user", the password "password", and a valid CSRF token:
mvc .perform(formLogin())
It is easy to customize the request. For example, the following will submit a POST to "/auth" with the username "admin", the password "pass", and a valid CSRF token:
mvc .perform(formLogin("/auth").user("admin").password("pass"))
We can also customize the parameters names that the username and password are included on. For example, this is the above request modified to include the username on the HTTP parameter "u" and the password on the HTTP parameter "p".
mvc .perform(formLogin("/auth").user("u","admin").password("p","pass"))
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:
The first way is via a RequestPostProcessor
.
The simplest of these would look something like this:
mvc
.perform(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:
assertThat(jwt.getTokenValue()).isEqualTo("token"); assertThat(jwt.getHeaders().get("alg")).isEqualTo("none"); assertThat(jwt.getSubject()).isEqualTo("sub"); GrantedAuthority authority = jwt.getAuthorities().iterator().next(); assertThat(authority.getAuthority()).isEqualTo("read");
These values can, of course be configured.
Any headers or claims can be configured with their corresponding methods:
mvc .perform(get("/endpoint") .with(jwt().jwt(jwt -> jwt.header("kid", "one").claim("iss", "https://idp.example.org"))));
mvc .perform(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:
mvc .perform(get("/endpoint") .with(jwt().authorities(new SimpleGrantedAuthority("SCOPE_messages"))));
Or, if you have a custom Jwt
to Collection<GrantedAuthority>
converter, you can also use that to derive the authorities:
mvc .perform(get("/endpoint") .with(jwt().authorities(new MyConverter())));
You can also specify a complete Jwt
, for which Jwt.Builder
comes quite handy:
Jwt jwt = Jwt.withTokenValue("token") .header("alg", "none") .claim("sub", "user") .claim("scope", "read"); mvc .perform(get("/endpoint") .with(jwt().jwt(jwt)));
The second way is by using the authentication()
RequestPostProcessor
.
Essentially, you can instantiate your own JwtAuthenticationToken
and provide it in your test, like so:
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)));
Note that as an alternative to these, you can also mock the JwtDecoder
bean itself with a @MockBean
annotation.
While fairly trivial using standard Spring MVC Test, you can use Spring Security’s testing support to make testing log out easier. For example, the following will submit a POST to "/logout" with a valid CSRF token:
mvc .perform(logout())
You can also customize the URL to post to. For example, the snippet below will submit a POST to "/signout" with a valid CSRF token:
mvc
.perform(logout("/signout"))
At times it is desirable to make various security related assertions about a request.
To accommodate this need, Spring Security Test support implements Spring MVC Test’s ResultMatcher
interface.
In order to use Spring Security’s ResultMatcher
implementations ensure the following static import is used:
import static org.springframework.security.test.web.servlet.response.SecurityMockMvcResultMatchers.*;
At times it may be valuable to assert that there is no authenticated user associated with the result of a MockMvc
invocation.
For example, you might want to test submitting an invalid username and password and verify that no user is authenticated.
You can easily do this with Spring Security’s testing support using something like the following:
mvc
.perform(formLogin().password("invalid"))
.andExpect(unauthenticated());
It is often times that we must assert that an authenticated user exists. For example, we may want to verify that we authenticated successfully. We could verify that a form based login was successful with the following snippet of code:
mvc .perform(formLogin()) .andExpect(authenticated());
If we wanted to assert the roles of the user, we could refine our previous code as shown below:
mvc .perform(formLogin().user("admin")) .andExpect(authenticated().withRoles("USER","ADMIN"));
Alternatively, we could verify the username:
mvc .perform(formLogin().user("admin")) .andExpect(authenticated().withUsername("admin"));
We can also combine the assertions:
mvc .perform(formLogin().user("admin").roles("USER","ADMIN")) .andExpect(authenticated().withUsername("admin"));
We can also make arbitrary assertions on the authentication
mvc
.perform(formLogin())
.andExpect(authenticated().withAuthentication(auth ->
assertThat(auth).isInstanceOf(UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken.class)));