@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ If you are using Spring Security, the `Principal` on the `HttpServletRequest` is
@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ If you are using Spring Security, the `Principal` on the `HttpServletRequest` is
More concretely, to ensure a user has authenticated to your WebSocket application, all that is necessary is to ensure that you setup Spring Security to authenticate your HTTP based web application.
[[websocket-configuration]]
[[websocket-authorization]]
== WebSocket Authorization
Spring Security 4.0 has introduced authorization support for WebSockets through the Spring Messaging abstraction.