Spring Session provides transparent integration with HttpSession.
This means that developers can switch the HttpSession implementation out with an implementation that is backed by Spring Session.
We have already mentioned that Spring Session provides transparent integration with HttpSession, but what benefits do we get out of this?
Using Spring Session with HttpSession is enabled by adding a Servlet Filter before anything that uses the HttpSession.
You can choose from enabling this by using either:
This section describes how to use Redis to back HttpSession by using Java based configuration.
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The HttpSession Sample provides a working sample of how to integrate Spring Session and |
After adding the required dependencies, we can create our Spring configuration.
The Spring configuration is responsible for creating a servlet filter that replaces the HttpSession implementation with an implementation backed by Spring Session.
To do so, add the following Spring Configuration:
@EnableRedisHttpSessionpublic class Config { @Bean public LettuceConnectionFactory connectionFactory() { return new LettuceConnectionFactory();
} }
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The | |
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We create a |
Our Spring Configuration created a Spring Bean named springSessionRepositoryFilter that implements Filter.
The springSessionRepositoryFilter bean is responsible for replacing the HttpSession with a custom implementation that is backed by Spring Session.
In order for our Filter to do its magic, Spring needs to load our Config class.
Last, we need to ensure that our Servlet Container (that is, Tomcat) uses our springSessionRepositoryFilter for every request.
Fortunately, Spring Session provides a utility class named AbstractHttpSessionApplicationInitializer to make both of these steps easy.
The following shows an example:
src/main/java/sample/Initializer.java.
public class Initializer extends AbstractHttpSessionApplicationInitializer {public Initializer() { super(Config.class);
} }
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The name of our class ( |
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The first step is to extend | |
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This section describes how to use Redis to back HttpSession by using XML based configuration.
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The HttpSession XML Sample provides a working sample of how to integrate Spring Session and |
After adding the required dependencies, we can create our Spring configuration.
The Spring configuration is responsible for creating a servlet filter that replaces the HttpSession implementation with an implementation backed by Spring Session.
To do so, add the following Spring Configuration:
src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/spring/session.xml.
<context:annotation-config/> <bean class="org.springframework.session.data.redis.config.annotation.web.http.RedisHttpSessionConfiguration"/>
<bean class="org.springframework.data.redis.connection.lettuce.LettuceConnectionFactory"/>
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We use the combination of | |
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We create a |
Our Spring Configuration created a Spring Bean named springSessionRepositoryFilter that implements Filter.
The springSessionRepositoryFilter bean is responsible for replacing the HttpSession with a custom implementation that is backed by Spring Session.
In order for our Filter to do its magic, we need to instruct Spring to load our session.xml configuration.
We can do so with the following configuration:
src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/web.xml.
<context-param> <param-name>contextConfigLocation</param-name> <param-value> /WEB-INF/spring/session.xml </param-value> </context-param> <listener> <listener-class> org.springframework.web.context.ContextLoaderListener </listener-class> </listener>
The ContextLoaderListener reads the contextConfigLocation and picks up our session.xml configuration.
Last, we need to ensure that our Servlet Container (that is, Tomcat) uses our springSessionRepositoryFilter for every request.
The following snippet performs this last step for us:
src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/web.xml.
<filter> <filter-name>springSessionRepositoryFilter</filter-name> <filter-class>org.springframework.web.filter.DelegatingFilterProxy</filter-class> </filter> <filter-mapping> <filter-name>springSessionRepositoryFilter</filter-name> <url-pattern>/*</url-pattern> <dispatcher>REQUEST</dispatcher> <dispatcher>ERROR</dispatcher> </filter-mapping>
The DelegatingFilterProxy looks up a Bean by the name of springSessionRepositoryFilter and cast it to a Filter.
For every request that DelegatingFilterProxy is invoked, the springSessionRepositoryFilter is invoked.
You can use Spring Session with HttpSession by adding a servlet filter before anything that uses the HttpSession.
You can choose to do in any of the following ways:
This section describes how to use a relational database to back HttpSession when you use Java-based configuration.
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The HttpSession JDBC Sample provides a working sample of how to integrate Spring Session and |
After adding the required dependencies, we can create our Spring configuration.
The Spring configuration is responsible for creating a Servlet Filter that replaces the HttpSession implementation with an implementation backed by Spring Session.
To do so, add the following Spring Configuration:
@EnableJdbcHttpSessionpublic class Config { @Bean public EmbeddedDatabase dataSource() { return new EmbeddedDatabaseBuilder()
.setType(EmbeddedDatabaseType.H2).addScript("org/springframework/session/jdbc/schema-h2.sql").build(); } @Bean public PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager(DataSource dataSource) { return new DataSourceTransactionManager(dataSource);
} }
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The | |
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We create a | |
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We create a |
For additional information on how to configure data access related concerns, see the Spring Framework Reference Documentation.
Our Spring Configuration created a Spring bean named springSessionRepositoryFilter that implements Filter.
The springSessionRepositoryFilter bean is responsible for replacing the HttpSession with a custom implementation that is backed by Spring Session.
In order for our Filter to do its magic, Spring needs to load our Config class.
Last, we need to ensure that our Servlet Container (that is, Tomcat) uses our springSessionRepositoryFilter for every request.
Fortunately, Spring Session provides a utility class named AbstractHttpSessionApplicationInitializer to make both of these steps easy.
The following example shows how to do so:
src/main/java/sample/Initializer.java.
public class Initializer extends AbstractHttpSessionApplicationInitializer {public Initializer() { super(Config.class);
} }
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The name of our class (Initializer) does not matter.
What is important is that we extend |
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The first step is to extend | |
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This section describes how to use a relational database to back HttpSession when you use XML based configuration.
![]() | Note |
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The HttpSession JDBC XML Sample provides a working sample of how to integrate Spring Session and |
After adding the required dependencies, we can create our Spring configuration.
The Spring configuration is responsible for creating a servlet filter that replaces the HttpSession implementation with an implementation backed by Spring Session.
The following listing shows how to add the following Spring Configuration:
src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/spring/session.xml.
<context:annotation-config/> <bean class="org.springframework.session.jdbc.config.annotation.web.http.JdbcHttpSessionConfiguration"/>
<jdbc:embedded-database id="dataSource" database-name="testdb" type="H2"> <jdbc:script location="classpath:org/springframework/session/jdbc/schema-h2.sql"/> </jdbc:embedded-database>
<bean class="org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.DataSourceTransactionManager"> <constructor-arg ref="dataSource"/> </bean>
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We use the combination of | |
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We create a | |
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We create a |
For additional information on how to configure data access-related concerns, see the Spring Framework Reference Documentation.
Our Spring Configuration created a Spring bean named springSessionRepositoryFilter that implements Filter.
The springSessionRepositoryFilter bean is responsible for replacing the HttpSession with a custom implementation that is backed by Spring Session.
In order for our Filter to do its magic, we need to instruct Spring to load our session.xml configuration.
We do so with the following configuration:
src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/web.xml.
<context-param> <param-name>contextConfigLocation</param-name> <param-value> /WEB-INF/spring/session.xml </param-value> </context-param> <listener> <listener-class> org.springframework.web.context.ContextLoaderListener </listener-class> </listener>
The ContextLoaderListener reads the contextConfigLocation and picks up our session.xml configuration.
Last, we need to ensure that our Servlet Container (that is, Tomcat) uses our springSessionRepositoryFilter for every request.
The following snippet performs this last step for us:
src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/web.xml.
<filter> <filter-name>springSessionRepositoryFilter</filter-name> <filter-class>org.springframework.web.filter.DelegatingFilterProxy</filter-class> </filter> <filter-mapping> <filter-name>springSessionRepositoryFilter</filter-name> <url-pattern>/*</url-pattern> <dispatcher>REQUEST</dispatcher> <dispatcher>ERROR</dispatcher> </filter-mapping>
The DelegatingFilterProxy looks up a bean named springSessionRepositoryFilter and casts it to a Filter.
For every request on which DelegatingFilterProxy is invoked, the springSessionRepositoryFilter is invoked.
This section describes how to use a relational database to back HttpSession when you use Spring Boot.
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The HttpSession JDBC Spring Boot Sample provides a working sample of how to integrate Spring Session and |
After adding the required dependencies, we can create our Spring Boot configuration.
Thanks to first-class auto configuration support, setting up Spring Session backed by a relational database is as simple as adding a single configuration property to your application.properties.
The following listing shows how to do so:
src/main/resources/application.properties.
spring.session.store-type=jdbc # Session store type.
Under the hood, Spring Boot applies configuration that is equivalent to manually adding the @EnableJdbcHttpSession annotation.
This creates a Spring bean with the name of springSessionRepositoryFilter. That bean implements Filter.
The filter is in charge of replacing the HttpSession implementation to be backed by Spring Session.
You can further customize by using application.properties.
The following listing shows how to do so:
src/main/resources/application.properties.
server.servlet.session.timeout= # Session timeout. If a duration suffix is not specified, seconds are used. spring.session.jdbc.initialize-schema=embedded # Database schema initialization mode. spring.session.jdbc.schema=classpath:org/springframework/session/jdbc/schema-@@platform@@.sql # Path to the SQL file to use to initialize the database schema. spring.session.jdbc.table-name=SPRING_SESSION # Name of the database table used to store sessions.
For more information, see the Spring Session portion of the Spring Boot documentation.
Spring Boot automatically creates a DataSource that connects Spring Session to an embedded instance of an H2 database.
In a production environment, you need to update your configuration to point to your relational database.
For example, you can include the following in your application.properties:
src/main/resources/application.properties.
spring.datasource.url= # JDBC URL of the database. spring.datasource.username= # Login username of the database. spring.datasource.password= # Login password of the database.
For more information, see the Configure a DataSource portion of the Spring Boot documentation.
Our Spring Boot Configuration created a Spring bean named springSessionRepositoryFilter that implements Filter.
The springSessionRepositoryFilter bean is responsible for replacing the HttpSession with a custom implementation that is backed by Spring Session.
In order for our Filter to do its magic, Spring needs to load our Config class.
Last, we need to ensure that our Servlet Container (that is, Tomcat) uses our springSessionRepositoryFilter for every request.
Fortunately, Spring Boot takes care of both of these steps for us.
Using Spring Session with HttpSession is enabled by adding a Servlet Filter before anything that uses the HttpSession.
This section describes how to use Hazelcast to back HttpSession by using Java-based configuration.
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The Hazelcast Spring Sample provides a working sample of how to integrate Spring Session and |
After adding the required dependencies, we can create our Spring configuration.
The Spring configuration is responsible for creating a servlet filter that replaces the HttpSession implementation with an implementation backed by Spring Session.
To do so, add the following Spring Configuration:
@EnableHazelcastHttpSession@Configuration public class HazelcastHttpSessionConfig { @Bean public HazelcastInstance hazelcastInstance() { Config config = new Config(); MapAttributeConfig attributeConfig = new MapAttributeConfig() .setName(HazelcastIndexedSessionRepository.PRINCIPAL_NAME_ATTRIBUTE) .setExtractor(PrincipalNameExtractor.class.getName()); config.getMapConfig(HazelcastIndexedSessionRepository.DEFAULT_SESSION_MAP_NAME)
.addMapAttributeConfig(attributeConfig).addMapIndexConfig( new MapIndexConfig(HazelcastIndexedSessionRepository.PRINCIPAL_NAME_ATTRIBUTE, false)); return Hazelcast.newHazelcastInstance(config);
} }
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The | |
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In order to support retrieval of sessions by principal name index, an appropriate | |
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We create a |
Our Spring Configuration created a Spring bean named springSessionRepositoryFilter that implements Filter.
The springSessionRepositoryFilter bean is responsible for replacing the HttpSession with a custom implementation that is backed by Spring Session.
In order for our Filter to do its magic, Spring needs to load our SessionConfig class.
Since our application is already loading Spring configuration by using our SecurityInitializer class, we can add our SessionConfig class to it.
The following listing shows how to do so:
src/main/java/sample/SecurityInitializer.java.
public class SecurityInitializer extends AbstractSecurityWebApplicationInitializer { public SecurityInitializer() { super(SecurityConfig.class, SessionConfig.class); } }
Last, we need to ensure that our Servlet Container (that is, Tomcat) uses our springSessionRepositoryFilter for every request.
It is extremely important that Spring Session’s springSessionRepositoryFilter is invoked before Spring Security’s springSecurityFilterChain.
Doing so ensures that the HttpSession that Spring Security uses is backed by Spring Session.
Fortunately, Spring Session provides a utility class named AbstractHttpSessionApplicationInitializer that makes this doing so easy.
The following example shows how to do so:
src/main/java/sample/Initializer.java.
public class Initializer extends AbstractHttpSessionApplicationInitializer { }
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The name of our class ( |
By extending AbstractHttpSessionApplicationInitializer, we ensure that the Spring Bean named springSessionRepositoryFilter is registered with our servlet container for every request before Spring Security’s springSecurityFilterChain.
Fortunately, both HttpSession and HttpServletRequest (the API for obtaining an HttpSession) are both interfaces.
This means that we can provide our own implementations for each of these APIs.
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This section describes how Spring Session provides transparent integration with |
First, we create a custom HttpServletRequest that returns a custom implementation of HttpSession.
It looks something like the following:
public class SessionRepositoryRequestWrapper extends HttpServletRequestWrapper { public SessionRepositoryRequestWrapper(HttpServletRequest original) { super(original); } public HttpSession getSession() { return getSession(true); } public HttpSession getSession(boolean createNew) { // create an HttpSession implementation from Spring Session } // ... other methods delegate to the original HttpServletRequest ... }
Any method that returns an HttpSession is overridden.
All other methods are implemented by HttpServletRequestWrapper and delegate to the original HttpServletRequest implementation.
We replace the HttpServletRequest implementation by using a servlet Filter called SessionRepositoryFilter.
The pseudocode belows:
public class SessionRepositoryFilter implements Filter { public doFilter(ServletRequest request, ServletResponse response, FilterChain chain) { HttpServletRequest httpRequest = (HttpServletRequest) request; SessionRepositoryRequestWrapper customRequest = new SessionRepositoryRequestWrapper(httpRequest); chain.doFilter(customRequest, response, chain); } // ... }
By passing a custom HttpServletRequest implementation into the FilterChain, we ensure that anything invoked after our Filter uses the custom HttpSession implementation.
This highlights why it is important that Spring Session’s SessionRepositoryFilter be placed before anything that interacts with the HttpSession.
Spring Session can work with RESTful APIs by letting the session be provided in a header.
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The REST Sample provides a working sample of how to use Spring Session in a REST application to support authenticating with a header. You can follow the basic steps for integration described in the next few sections, but we encourage you to follow along with the detailed REST Guide when integrating with your own application. |
After adding the required dependencies, we can create our Spring configuration.
The Spring configuration is responsible for creating a servlet filter that replaces the HttpSession implementation with an implementation backed by Spring Session.
To do so, add the following Spring Configuration:
@Configuration @EnableRedisHttpSessionpublic class HttpSessionConfig { @Bean public LettuceConnectionFactory connectionFactory() { return new LettuceConnectionFactory();
} @Bean public HttpSessionIdResolver httpSessionIdResolver() { return HeaderHttpSessionIdResolver.xAuthToken();
} }
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The | |
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We create a | |
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We customize Spring Session’s HttpSession integration to use HTTP headers to convey the current session information instead of cookies. |
Our Spring Configuration created a Spring Bean named springSessionRepositoryFilter that implements Filter.
The springSessionRepositoryFilter bean is responsible for replacing the HttpSession with a custom implementation that is backed by Spring Session.
In order for our Filter to do its magic, Spring needs to load our Config class.
We provide the configuration in our Spring MvcInitializer, as the following example shows:
src/main/java/sample/mvc/MvcInitializer.java.
@Override protected Class<?>[] getRootConfigClasses() { return new Class[] { SecurityConfig.class, HttpSessionConfig.class }; }
Last, we need to ensure that our Servlet Container (that is, Tomcat) uses our springSessionRepositoryFilter for every request.
Fortunately, Spring Session provides a utility class named AbstractHttpSessionApplicationInitializer that makes doing so easy. To do so, extend the class with the default constructor, as the following example shows:
src/main/java/sample/Initializer.java.
public class Initializer extends AbstractHttpSessionApplicationInitializer { }
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The name of our class ( |
Spring Session supports HttpSessionListener by translating SessionDestroyedEvent and SessionCreatedEvent into HttpSessionEvent by declaring SessionEventHttpSessionListenerAdapter.
To use this support, you need to:
SessionRepository implementation supports and is configured to fire SessionDestroyedEvent and SessionCreatedEvent.
SessionEventHttpSessionListenerAdapter as a Spring bean.
HttpSessionListener into the SessionEventHttpSessionListenerAdapter
If you use the configuration support documented in HttpSession with Redis, all you need to do is register every HttpSessionListener as a bean.
For example, assume you want to support Spring Security’s concurrency control and need to use HttpSessionEventPublisher. In that case, you can add HttpSessionEventPublisher as a bean.
In Java configuration, this might look like the following:
@Configuration @EnableRedisHttpSession public class RedisHttpSessionConfig { @Bean public HttpSessionEventPublisher httpSessionEventPublisher() { return new HttpSessionEventPublisher(); } // ... }
In XML configuration, this might look like the following:
<bean class="org.springframework.security.web.session.HttpSessionEventPublisher"/>