See: Description
Interface | Description |
---|---|
AfterInvocationManager |
Reviews the
Object returned from a secure object invocation, being able to
modify the Object or throw an AccessDeniedException . |
RunAsManager |
Creates a new temporary
Authentication object for the current secure object
invocation only. |
Class | Description |
---|---|
AbstractSecurityInterceptor |
Abstract class that implements security interception for secure objects.
|
AfterInvocationProviderManager |
Provider-based implementation of
AfterInvocationManager . |
InterceptorStatusToken |
A return object received by
AbstractSecurityInterceptor subclasses. |
MethodInvocationPrivilegeEvaluator |
Allows users to determine whether they have "before invocation" privileges for a given
method invocation.
|
RunAsImplAuthenticationProvider |
An
AuthenticationProvider implementation that can authenticate a
RunAsUserToken . |
RunAsManagerImpl |
Basic concrete implementation of a
RunAsManager . |
RunAsUserToken |
An immutable
Authentication implementation
that supports RunAsManagerImpl . |
A secure object is a term frequently used throughout the security system. It
does not refer to a business object that is being secured, but instead refers to
some infrastructure object that can have security facilities provided for it by Spring
Security. For example, one secure object would be MethodInvocation
, whilst
another would be HTTP org.springframework.security.web.FilterInvocation
. Note
these are infrastructure objects and their design allows them to represent a large
variety of actual resources that might need to be secured, such as business objects or
HTTP request URLs.
Each secure object typically has its own interceptor package. Each package usually
includes a concrete security interceptor (which subclasses
AbstractSecurityInterceptor
) and
an appropriate SecurityMetadataSource
for
the type of resources the secure object represents.