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wrapperbot/spring-security/gradle-wrapper-8.9
Josh Cummings 1 year ago
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e51507e32d
  1. 2
      docs/modules/ROOT/pages/servlet/exploits/csrf.adoc

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docs/modules/ROOT/pages/servlet/exploits/csrf.adoc

@ -130,7 +130,7 @@ You can also specify <<csrf-token-repository-custom,your own implementation>> to @@ -130,7 +130,7 @@ You can also specify <<csrf-token-repository-custom,your own implementation>> to
By default, Spring Security stores the expected CSRF token in the `HttpSession` by using {security-api-url}org/springframework/security/web/csrf/HttpSessionCsrfTokenRepository.html[`HttpSessionCsrfTokenRepository`], so no additional code is necessary.
The `HttpSessionCsrfTokenRepository` reads the token from a session (whether in-memory, cache, or database). If you need to access the session attribute directly, please first configure the session attribute name using HttpSessionCsrfTokenRepository#setSessionAttributeName.
The `HttpSessionCsrfTokenRepository` reads the token from a session (whether in-memory, cache, or database). If you need to access the session attribute directly, please first configure the session attribute name using `HttpSessionCsrfTokenRepository#setSessionAttributeName`.
You can specify the default configuration explicitly using the following configuration:

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