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3825 lines
194 KiB
3825 lines
194 KiB
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> |
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<!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN" |
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"../lib/docbook-dtd/docbookx.dtd"> |
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<book> |
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<bookinfo> |
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<title>Acegi Security System for Spring</title> |
|
|
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<subtitle>Reference Documentation</subtitle> |
|
|
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<releaseinfo>0.6</releaseinfo> |
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|
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<authorgroup> |
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<author> |
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<firstname>Ben</firstname> |
|
|
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<surname>Alex</surname> |
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</author> |
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</authorgroup> |
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</bookinfo> |
|
|
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<toc></toc> |
|
|
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<preface id="preface"> |
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<title>Preface</title> |
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|
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<para>This document provides a reference guide to the Acegi Security |
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System for Spring, which is a series of classes that deliver |
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authentication and authorization services within the Spring |
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Framework.</para> |
|
|
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<para>I would like to acknowledge this reference was prepared using the |
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DocBook configuration included with the Spring Framework. The Spring team |
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in turn acknowledge Chris Bauer (Hibernate) for his assistance with their |
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DocBook.</para> |
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</preface> |
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|
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<chapter id="security"> |
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<title>Security</title> |
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|
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<sect1 id="security-before-you-begin"> |
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<title>Before You Begin</title> |
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|
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<para>For your security, each official release JAR of Acegi Security has |
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been signed by the project leader. This does not in any way alter the |
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liability disclaimer contained in the License, but it does ensure you |
|
are using a properly reviewed, official build of Acegi Security. Please |
|
refer to the <literal>readme.txt</literal> file in the root of the |
|
release distribution for instructions on how to validate the JARs are |
|
correctly signed, and which certificate has been used to sign |
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them.</para> |
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</sect1> |
|
|
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<sect1 id="security-introduction"> |
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<title>Introduction</title> |
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|
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<para>The Acegi Security System for Spring provides authentication and |
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authorization capabilities for Spring-powered projects, with full |
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integration with popular web containers. The security architecture was |
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designed from the ground up using "The Spring Way" of development, which |
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includes using bean contexts, interceptors and interface-driven |
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programming. As a consequence, the Acegi Security System for Spring is |
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useful out-of-the-box for those seeking to secure their Spring-based |
|
applications, and can be easily adapted to complex customized |
|
requirements.</para> |
|
|
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<para>Security involves two distinct operations, authentication and |
|
authorization. The former relates to resolving whether or not a caller |
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is who they claim to be. Authorization on the other hand relates to |
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determining whether or not an authenticated caller is permitted to |
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perform a given operation.</para> |
|
|
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<para>Throughout the Acegi Security System for Spring, the user, system |
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or agent that needs to be authenticated is referred to as a "principal". |
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The security architecture does not have a notion of roles or groups, |
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which you may be familiar with from other security |
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implementations.</para> |
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</sect1> |
|
|
|
<sect1 id="security-high-level-design"> |
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<title>High Level Design</title> |
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|
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<sect2 id="security-high-level-design-key-components"> |
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<title>Key Components</title> |
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|
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<para>The Acegi Security System for Spring essentially comprises seven |
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key functional parts:</para> |
|
|
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<itemizedlist spacing="compact"> |
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<listitem> |
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<para>An <literal>Authentication</literal> object which holds the |
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principal, credentials and the authorities granted to the |
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principal. The object can also store additional information |
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associated with an authentication request, such as the source |
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TCP/IP address.</para> |
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</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
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<para>A <literal>ContextHolder</literal> which holds the |
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<literal>Authentication</literal> object in a |
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<literal>ThreadLocal</literal>-bound object.</para> |
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</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
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<para>An <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> to authenticate |
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the <literal>Authentication</literal> object presented via the |
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<literal>ContextHolder</literal>.</para> |
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</listitem> |
|
|
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<listitem> |
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<para>An <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> to authorize a |
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given operation.</para> |
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</listitem> |
|
|
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<listitem> |
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<para>A <literal>RunAsManager</literal> to optionally replace the |
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<literal>Authentication</literal> object whilst a given operation |
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is being executed.</para> |
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</listitem> |
|
|
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<listitem> |
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<para>A "secure object" interceptor, which coordinates the |
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authentication, authorization, run-as replacement and execution of |
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a given operation.</para> |
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</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
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<para>An acess control list (ACL) management package, which can be |
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used to obtain ACLs for domain object instances.</para> |
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</listitem> |
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</itemizedlist> |
|
|
|
<para>Secure objects refer to any type of object that can have |
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security applied to it. A secure object must provide some form of |
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callback, so that the security interceptor can transparently do its |
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work as required, and callback the object when it is time for it to |
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proceed with the requested operation. If secure objects cannot provide |
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a native callback approach, a wrapper needs to be written so this |
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becomes possible.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Each secure object has its own package under |
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<literal>net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept</literal>. Every other package |
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in the security system is secure object independent, in that it can |
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support any type of secure object presented.</para> |
|
|
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<para>Only developers contemplating an entirely new way of |
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intercepting and authorizing requests would need to use secure objects |
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directly. For example, it would be possible to build a new secure |
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object to secure calls to a messaging system that does not use |
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<literal>MethodInvocation</literal>s. Most Spring applications will |
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simply use the two currently supported secure object types |
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(<literal>MethodInvocation</literal> and |
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<literal>FilterInterceptor</literal>) with complete |
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transparency.</para> |
|
|
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<para>Each of the seven key parts is discussed in detail throughout |
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this document.</para> |
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</sect2> |
|
|
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<sect2 id="security-high-level-design-supported-secure-objects"> |
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<title>Supported Secure Objects</title> |
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|
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<para>The Acegi Security System for Spring currently supports two |
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secure objects.</para> |
|
|
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<para>The first handles an AOP Alliance |
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<literal>MethodInvocation</literal>. This is the secure object type |
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used to protect Spring beans. Developers will generally use this |
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secure object type to secure their business objects. To make a |
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standard Spring-hosted bean available as a |
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<literal>MethodInvocation</literal>, the bean is simply published |
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through a <literal>ProxyFactoryBean</literal> or |
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<literal>BeanNameAutoProxyCreator</literal>. Most Spring developers |
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would already be familiar with these due to their use in transactions |
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and other areas of Spring.</para> |
|
|
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<para>The second type is a <literal>FilterInvocation</literal>. This |
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is an object included with the Acegi Security System for Spring. It is |
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created by an included filter and simply wraps the HTTP |
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<literal>ServletRequest</literal>, <literal>ServletResponse</literal> |
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and <literal>FilterChain</literal>. The |
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<literal>FilterInvocation</literal> enables HTTP resources to be |
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secured. Developers do not usually need to understand the mechanics of |
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how this works, because they just add the filters to their |
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<literal>web.xml</literal> and let the security system do its |
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work.</para> |
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</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-high-level-design-configuration-attributes"> |
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<title>Configuration Attributes</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Every secure object can represent an infinite number of |
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individual requests. For example, a |
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<literal>MethodInvocation</literal> can represent the invocation of |
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any method with any arguments, whilst a |
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<literal>FilterInvocation</literal> can represent any HTTP URL.</para> |
|
|
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<para>The Acegi Security System for Spring needs to record the |
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configuration that applies to each of these possible requests. The |
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security configuration of a request to |
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<literal>BankManager.getBalance(int accountNumber)</literal> needs to |
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be very different from the security configuration of a request to |
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<literal>BankManager.approveLoan(int applicationNumber)</literal>. |
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Similarly, the security configuration of a request to |
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<literal>http://some.bank.com/index.htm</literal> needs to be very |
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different from the security configuration of |
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<literal>http://some.bank.com/manage/timesheet.jsp</literal>.</para> |
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|
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<para>To store the various security configurations associated with |
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different requests, a configuration attribute is used. At an |
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implementation level a configuration attribute is represented by the |
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<literal>ConfigAttribute</literal> interface. One concrete |
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implementation of <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal> is provided, |
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<literal>SecurityConfig</literal>, which simply stores a configuration |
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attribute as a <literal>String</literal>.</para> |
|
|
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<para>The collection of <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal>s associated |
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with a particular request is held in a |
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<literal>ConfigAttributeDefinition</literal>. This concrete class is |
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simply a holder of <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal>s and does |
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nothing special.</para> |
|
|
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<para>When a request is received by the security interceptor, it needs |
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to determine which configuration attributes apply. In other words, it |
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needs to find the <literal>ConfigAttributeDefinition</literal> which |
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applies to the request. This decision is handled by the |
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<literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal> interface. The main method |
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provided by this interface is <literal>public |
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ConfigAttributeDefinition getAttributes(Object object)</literal>, with |
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the <literal>Object</literal> being the secure object. Recall the |
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secure object contains details of the request, so the |
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<literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal> implementation will be able |
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to extract the details it requires to lookup the relevant |
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<literal>ConfigAttributeDefinition</literal>.</para> |
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</sect2> |
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</sect1> |
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|
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<sect1 id="security-request-contexts"> |
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<title>Request Contexts</title> |
|
|
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<sect2 id="security-contexts"> |
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<title>Contexts</title> |
|
|
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<para>Many applications require a way of sharing objects between |
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classes, but without resorting to passing them in method signatures. |
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This is commonly achieved by using a <literal>ThreadLocal</literal>. |
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The Acegi Security System for Spring uses |
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<literal>ThreadLocal</literal> functionality and introduces the |
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concept of "request contexts".</para> |
|
|
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<para>By placing an object into a request context, that object becomes |
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available to any other object on the current thread of execution. The |
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request context is not passed around as a method parameter, but is |
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held in a <literal>ThreadLocal</literal>. The Acegi Security System |
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for Spring uses the request context to pass around the authentication |
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request and response.</para> |
|
|
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<para>A request context is a concrete implementation of the |
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<literal>Context</literal> interface, which exposes a single |
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method:</para> |
|
|
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<programlisting>public void validate() throws ContextInvalidException;</programlisting> |
|
|
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<para>This <literal>validate()</literal> method is called to confirm |
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the <literal>Context</literal> is properly setup. An implementation |
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will typically use this method to check that the objects it holds are |
|
properly setup.</para> |
|
|
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<para>The <literal>ContextHolder</literal> class makes the |
|
<literal>Context</literal> available to the current thread of |
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execution using a <literal>ThreadLocal</literal>. A |
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<literal>ContextInterceptor</literal> is also provided, which is |
|
intended to be chained into the bean context using |
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<literal>ProxyFactoryBean</literal>. The |
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<literal>ContextInterceptor</literal> simply calls |
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<literal>Context.validate()</literal>, which guarantees to business |
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methods that a valid <literal>Context</literal> is available from the |
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<literal>ContextHolder</literal>.</para> |
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</sect2> |
|
|
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<sect2 id="security-contexts-secure-contexts"> |
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<title>Secure Contexts</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The Acegi Security System for Spring requires the |
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<literal>ContextHolder</literal> to contain a request context that |
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implements the <literal>SecureContext</literal> interface. An |
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implementation is provided named <literal>SecureContextImpl</literal>. |
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The <literal>SecureContext</literal> simply extends the |
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<literal>Context</literal> discussed above and adds a holder and |
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validation for an <literal>Authentication</literal> object.</para> |
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</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-contexts-custom-contexts"> |
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<title>Custom Contexts</title> |
|
|
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<para>Developers can create their own request context classes to store |
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application-specific objects. Such request context classes will need |
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to implement the <literal>Context</literal> interface. If the Acegi |
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Security System for Spring is to be used, developers must ensure any |
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custom request contexts implement the <literal>SecureContext</literal> |
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interface.</para> |
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</sect2> |
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</sect1> |
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|
|
<sect1 id="security-interception"> |
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<title>Security Interception</title> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-interception-all-secure-objects"> |
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<title>All Secure Objects</title> |
|
|
|
<para>As described in the High Level Design section, each secure |
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object has its own security interceptor which is responsible for |
|
handling each request. Handling involves a number of |
|
operations:</para> |
|
|
|
<orderedlist> |
|
<listitem> |
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<para>Store the configuration attributes that are associated with |
|
each secure request.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Extract the <literal>ConfigAttributeDefinition</literal> |
|
that applies to the request from the relevant |
|
<literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal>.</para> |
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</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Obtain the <literal>Authentication</literal> object from the |
|
<literal>SecureContext</literal>, which is held in the |
|
<literal>ContextHolder</literal>.</para> |
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</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Pass the <literal>Authentication</literal> object to the |
|
<literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>, update the |
|
<literal>ContextHolder</literal> with the response.</para> |
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</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Pass the <literal>Authentication</literal> object, the |
|
<literal>ConfigAttributeDefinition</literal>, and the secure |
|
object to the <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal>.</para> |
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</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Pass the <literal>Authentication</literal> object, the |
|
<literal>ConfigAttributeDefinition</literal>, and the secure |
|
object to the <literal>RunAsManager</literal>.</para> |
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</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>If the <literal>RunAsManager</literal> returns a new |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object, update the |
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<literal>ContextHolder</literal> with it.</para> |
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</listitem> |
|
|
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<listitem> |
|
<para>Call a secure object-specific |
|
<literal>SecurityInterceptorCallback</literal> so that the request |
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execution can proceed.</para> |
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</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
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<para>If the <literal>RunAsManager</literal> earlier returned a |
|
new <literal>Authentication</literal> object, update the |
|
<literal>ContextHolder</literal> with the |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object that was previously |
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returned by the <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>.</para> |
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</listitem> |
|
|
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<listitem> |
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<para>Return any result received from the |
|
<literal>SecurityInterceptorCallback</literal>.</para> |
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</listitem> |
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</orderedlist> |
|
|
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<para>Whilst this may seem quite involved, don't worry. Developers |
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interact with the security process by simply implementing basic |
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interfaces (such as <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal>), which |
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are fully documented below.</para> |
|
|
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<para>The <literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal> handles the |
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majority of the flow listed above. Each secure object has its own |
|
security interceptor which subclasses |
|
<literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal>. Each of these secure |
|
object-specific security interceptors are discussed below.</para> |
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</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-interception-methodinvocation"> |
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<title>MethodInvocation Security Interceptor</title> |
|
|
|
<para>To secure <literal>MethodInvocation</literal>s, developers |
|
simply add a properly configured |
|
<literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal> into the application |
|
context. Next the beans requiring security are chained into the |
|
interceptor. This chaining is accomplished using Spring’s |
|
<literal>ProxyFactoryBean</literal> or |
|
<literal>BeanNameAutoProxyCreator</literal>, as commonly used by many |
|
other parts of Spring (refer to the sample application for examples). |
|
The <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal> is configured as |
|
follows:</para> |
|
|
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<para><programlisting><bean id="bankManagerSecurity" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.method.MethodSecurityInterceptor"> |
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<property name="validateConfigAttributes"><value>true</value></property> |
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<property name="authenticationManager"><ref bean="authenticationManager"/></property> |
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<property name="accessDecisionManager"><ref bean="accessDecisionManager"/></property> |
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<property name="runAsManager"><ref bean="runAsManager"/></property> |
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<property name="objectDefinitionSource"> |
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<value> |
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net.sf.acegisecurity.context.BankManager.delete*=ROLE_SUPERVISOR,RUN_AS_SERVER |
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net.sf.acegisecurity.context.BankManager.getBalance=ROLE_TELLER,ROLE_SUPERVISOR,BANKSECURITY_CUSTOMER,RUN_AS_SERVER |
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</value> |
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</property> |
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</bean></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>As shown above, the <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal> |
|
is configured with a reference to an |
|
<literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>, |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> and |
|
<literal>RunAsManager</literal>, which are each discussed in separate |
|
sections below. The <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal> is |
|
also configured with configuration attributes that apply to different |
|
method signatures. A full discussion of configuration attributes is |
|
provided in the High Level Design section of this document.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal> can be |
|
configured with configuration attributes in three ways. The first is |
|
via a property editor and the application context, which is shown |
|
above. The second is via defining the configuration attributes in your |
|
source code using Jakarta Commons Attributes. The third is via writing |
|
your own <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal>, although this is |
|
beyond the scope of this document. Irrespective of the approach used, |
|
the <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal> is responsible for |
|
returning a <literal>ConfigAttributeDefinition</literal> object that |
|
contains all of the configuration attributes associated with a single |
|
secure method.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>It should be noted that the |
|
<literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor.setObjectDefinitionSource()</literal> |
|
method actually expects an instance of |
|
<literal>MethodDefinitionSource</literal>. This is a marker interface |
|
which subclasses <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal>. It simply |
|
denotes the <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal> understands |
|
<literal>MethodInvocation</literal>s. In the interests of simplicity |
|
we'll continue to refer to the |
|
<literal>MethodDefinitionSource</literal> as an |
|
<literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal>, as the distinction is of |
|
little relevance to most users of the |
|
<literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>If using the application context property editor approach (as |
|
shown above), commas are used to delimit the different configuration |
|
attributes that apply to a given method pattern. Each configuration |
|
attribute is assigned into its own <literal>SecurityConfig</literal> |
|
object. The <literal>SecurityConfig</literal> object is discussed in |
|
the High Level Design section.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>If using the Jakarta Commons Attributes approach, your bean |
|
context will be configured differently:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><bean id="attributes" class="org.springframework.metadata.commons.CommonsAttributes"/> |
|
<bean id="objectDefinitionSource" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.method.MethodDefinitionAttributes"> |
|
<property name="attributes"><ref local="attributes"/></property> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="bankManagerSecurity" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.method.MethodSecurityInterceptor"> |
|
<property name="validateConfigAttributes"><value>false</value></property> |
|
<property name="authenticationManager"><ref bean="authenticationManager"/></property> |
|
<property name="accessDecisionManager"><ref bean="accessDecisionManager"/></property> |
|
<property name="runAsManager"><ref bean="runAsManager"/></property> |
|
<property name="objectDefinitionSource"><ref bean="objectDefinitionSource"/></property> |
|
</bean></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>In addition, your source code will contain Jakarta Commons |
|
Attributes tags that refer to a concrete implementation of |
|
<literal>ConfigAttribute</literal>. The following example uses the |
|
<literal>SecurityConfig</literal> implementation to represent the |
|
configuration attributes, and results in the same security |
|
configuration as provided by the property editor approach |
|
above:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting>public interface BankManager { |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @@SecurityConfig("ROLE_SUPERVISOR") |
|
* @@SecurityConfig("RUN_AS_SERVER") |
|
*/ |
|
public void deleteSomething(int id); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @@SecurityConfig("ROLE_SUPERVISOR") |
|
* @@SecurityConfig("RUN_AS_SERVER") |
|
*/ |
|
public void deleteAnother(int id); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @@SecurityConfig("ROLE_TELLER") |
|
* @@SecurityConfig("ROLE_SUPERVISOR") |
|
* @@SecurityConfig("BANKSECURITY_CUSTOMER") |
|
* @@SecurityConfig("RUN_AS_SERVER") |
|
*/ |
|
public float getBalance(int id); |
|
}</programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>You might have noticed the |
|
<literal>validateConfigAttributes</literal> property in the above |
|
<literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal> examples. When set to |
|
<literal>true</literal> (the default), at startup time the |
|
<literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal> will evaluate if the |
|
provided configuration attributes are valid. It does this by checking |
|
each configuration attribute can be processed by either the |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> or the |
|
<literal>RunAsManager</literal>. If neither of these can process a |
|
given configuration attribute, an exception is thrown. If using the |
|
Jakarta Commons Attributes method of configuration, you should set |
|
<literal>validateConfigAttributes</literal> to |
|
<literal>false</literal>.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-interception-filterinvocation"> |
|
<title>FilterInvocation Security Interceptor</title> |
|
|
|
<para>To secure <literal>FilterInvocation</literal>s, developers need |
|
to add a filter to their <literal>web.xml</literal> that delegates to |
|
the <literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal>. A typical |
|
configuration example is provided below: <programlisting><filter> |
|
<filter-name>Acegi HTTP Request Security Filter</filter-name> |
|
<filter-class>net.sf.acegisecurity.util.FilterToBeanProxy</filter-class> |
|
<init-param> |
|
<param-name>targetClass</param-name> |
|
<param-value>net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.web.SecurityEnforcementFilter</param-value> |
|
</init-param> |
|
</filter> |
|
|
|
<filter-mapping> |
|
<filter-name>Acegi HTTP Request Security Filter</filter-name> |
|
<url-pattern>/*</url-pattern> |
|
</filter-mapping></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>Notice that the filter is actually a |
|
<literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal>. Most of the filters used by the |
|
Acegi Security System for Spring use this class. Refer to the Filters |
|
section to learn more about this bean.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>In the application context you will need to configure three |
|
beans:</para> |
|
|
|
<programlisting><bean id="securityEnforcementFilter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.web.SecurityEnforcementFilter"> |
|
<property name="filterSecurityInterceptor"><ref bean="filterInvocationInterceptor"/></property> |
|
<property name="authenticationEntryPoint"><ref bean="authenticationEntryPoint"/></property> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="authenticationEntryPoint" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.webapp.AuthenticationProcessingFilterEntryPoint"> |
|
<property name="loginFormUrl"><value>/acegilogin.jsp</value></property> |
|
<property name="forceHttps"><value>false</value></property> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="filterInvocationInterceptor" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.web.FilterSecurityInterceptor"> |
|
<property name="authenticationManager"><ref bean="authenticationManager"/></property> |
|
<property name="accessDecisionManager"><ref bean="accessDecisionManager"/></property> |
|
<property name="runAsManager"><ref bean="runAsManager"/></property> |
|
<property name="objectDefinitionSource"> |
|
<value> |
|
CONVERT_URL_TO_LOWERCASE_BEFORE_COMPARISON |
|
\A/secure/super/.*\Z=ROLE_WE_DONT_HAVE |
|
\A/secure/.*\Z=ROLE_SUPERVISOR,ROLE_TELLER |
|
</value> |
|
</property> |
|
</bean></programlisting> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>AuthenticationEntryPoint</literal> will be called |
|
if the user requests a secure HTTP resource but they are not |
|
authenticated. The class handles presenting the appropriate response |
|
to the user so that authentication can begin. Three concrete |
|
implementations are provided with the Acegi Security System for |
|
Spring: <literal>AuthenticationProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> |
|
for commencing a form-based authentication, |
|
<literal>BasicProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> for commencing a |
|
Http Basic authentication process, and |
|
<literal>CasProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> for commencing a Yale |
|
Central Authentication Service (CAS) login. The |
|
<literal>AuthenticationProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> and |
|
<literal>CasProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> have optional |
|
properties related to forcing the use of HTTPS, so please refer to the |
|
JavaDocs if you require this.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>PortMapper</literal> provides information on which |
|
HTTPS ports correspond to which HTTP ports. This is used by the |
|
<literal>AuthenticationProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> and |
|
several other beans. The default implementation, |
|
<literal>PortMapperImpl</literal>, knows the common HTTP ports 80 and |
|
8080 map to HTTPS ports 443 and 8443 respectively. You can customise |
|
this mapping if desired.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal> primarily |
|
provides session management support and initiates authentication when |
|
required. It delegates actual <literal>FilterInvocation</literal> |
|
security decisions to the configured |
|
<literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Like any other security interceptor, the |
|
<literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor</literal> requires a reference to |
|
an <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>, |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> and |
|
<literal>RunAsManager</literal>, which are each discussed in separate |
|
sections below. The <literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor</literal> is |
|
also configured with configuration attributes that apply to different |
|
HTTP URL requests. A full discussion of configuration attributes is |
|
provided in the High Level Design section of this document.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor</literal> can be |
|
configured with configuration attributes in two ways. The first is via |
|
a property editor and the application context, which is shown above. |
|
The second is via writing your own |
|
<literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal>, although this is beyond the |
|
scope of this document. Irrespective of the approach used, the |
|
<literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal> is responsible for returning |
|
a <literal>ConfigAttributeDefinition</literal> object that contains |
|
all of the configuration attributes associated with a single secure |
|
HTTP URL.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>It should be noted that the |
|
<literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor.setObjectDefinitionSource()</literal> |
|
method actually expects an instance of |
|
<literal>FilterInvocationDefinitionSource</literal>. This is a marker |
|
interface which subclasses <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal>. |
|
It simply denotes the <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal> |
|
understands <literal>FilterInvocation</literal>s. In the interests of |
|
simplicity we'll continue to refer to the |
|
<literal>FilterInvocationDefinitionSource</literal> as an |
|
<literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal>, as the distinction is of |
|
little relevance to most users of the |
|
<literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>If using the application context property editor approach (as |
|
shown above), commas are used to delimit the different configuration |
|
attributes that apply to each HTTP URL. Each configuration attribute |
|
is assigned into its own <literal>SecurityConfig</literal> object. The |
|
<literal>SecurityConfig</literal> object is discussed in the High |
|
Level Design section. The <literal>ObjectDefinitionSource</literal> |
|
created by the property editor, |
|
<literal>FilterInvocationDefinitionSource</literal>, matches |
|
configuration attributes against <literal>FilterInvocations</literal> |
|
based on expression evaluation of the request URL. Two standard |
|
expression syntaxes are supported. The default is to treat all |
|
expressions as regular expressions. Alternatively, the presence of a |
|
<literal>PATTERN_TYPE_APACHE_ANT</literal> directive will cause all |
|
expressions to be treated as Apache Ant paths. It is not possible to |
|
mix expression syntaxes within the same definition. For example, the |
|
earlier configuration could be generated using Apache Ant paths as |
|
follows:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><bean id="filterInvocationInterceptor" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.web.FilterSecurityInterceptor"> |
|
<property name="authenticationManager"><ref bean="authenticationManager"/></property> |
|
<property name="accessDecisionManager"><ref bean="accessDecisionManager"/></property> |
|
<property name="runAsManager"><ref bean="runAsManager"/></property> |
|
<property name="objectDefinitionSource"> |
|
<value> |
|
CONVERT_URL_TO_LOWERCASE_BEFORE_COMPARISON |
|
PATTERN_TYPE_APACHE_ANT |
|
/secure/super/**=ROLE_WE_DONT_HAVE |
|
/secure/**=ROLE_SUPERVISOR,ROLE_TELLER |
|
</value> |
|
</property> |
|
</bean></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>Irrespective of the type of expression syntax used, expressions |
|
are always evaluated in the order they are defined. Thus it is |
|
important that more specific expressions are defined higher in the |
|
list than less specific expressions. This is reflected in our example |
|
above, where the more specific <literal>/secure/super/</literal> |
|
pattern appears higher than the less specific |
|
<literal>/super/</literal> pattern. If they were reversed, the |
|
<literal>/super/</literal> pattern would always match and the |
|
<literal>/secure/super/</literal> pattern would never be |
|
evaluated.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The special keyword |
|
<literal>CONVERT_URL_TO_LOWERCASE_BEFORE_COMPARISON</literal> causes |
|
the <literal>FilterInvocationDefinitionSource</literal> to |
|
automatically convert a request URL to lowercase before comparison |
|
against the expressions. Whilst by default the case of the request URL |
|
is not converted, it is generally recommended to use |
|
<literal>CONVERT_URL_TO_LOWERCASE_BEFORE_COMPARISON</literal> and |
|
write each expression assuming lowercase.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>As with other security interceptors, the |
|
<literal>validateConfigAttributes</literal> property is observed. When |
|
set to <literal>true</literal> (the default), at startup time the |
|
<literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor</literal> will evaluate if the |
|
provided configuration attributes are valid. It does this by checking |
|
each configuration attribute can be processed by either the |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> or the |
|
<literal>RunAsManager</literal>. If neither of these can process a |
|
given configuration attribute, an exception is thrown.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
</sect1> |
|
|
|
<sect1 id="security-authentication"> |
|
<title>Authentication</title> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-authentication-requests"> |
|
<title>Authentication Requests</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Authentication requires a way for client code to present its |
|
security identification to the Acegi Security System for Spring. This |
|
is the role of the <literal>Authentication</literal> interface. The |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> interface holds three important |
|
objects: the principal (the identity of the caller), the credentials |
|
(the proof of the identity of the caller, such as a password), and the |
|
authorities that have been granted to the principal. The principal and |
|
its credentials are populated by the client code, whilst the granted |
|
authorities are populated by the |
|
<literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>. The Acegi Security System |
|
for Spring includes several concrete <literal>Authentication</literal> |
|
implementations:</para> |
|
|
|
<itemizedlist spacing="compact"> |
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken</literal> |
|
allows a username and password to be presented as the principal |
|
and credentials respectively. It is also what is created by the |
|
HTTP Session Authentication system.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>TestingAuthenticationToken</literal> facilitates |
|
unit testing by automatically being considered an authenticated |
|
object by its associated |
|
<literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>RunAsUserToken</literal> is used by the default |
|
run-as authentication replacement implementation. This is |
|
discussed further in the Run-As Authentication Replacement |
|
section.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>CasAuthenticationToken</literal> is used to |
|
represent a successful Yale Central Authentication Service (CAS) |
|
authentication. This is discussed further in the CAS |
|
section.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>PrincipalAcegiUserToken</literal> and |
|
<literal>JettyAcegiUserToken</literal> implement |
|
<literal>AuthByAdapter</literal> (a subclass of |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal>) and are used whenever |
|
authentication is completed by Acegi Security System for Spring |
|
container adapters. This is discussed further in the Container |
|
Adapters section.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
</itemizedlist> |
|
|
|
<para>The authorities granted to a principal are represented by the |
|
<literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> interface. The |
|
<literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> interface is discussed at length |
|
in the Authorization section.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-authentication-manager"> |
|
<title>Authentication Manager</title> |
|
|
|
<para>As discussed in the Security Interception section, the |
|
<literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal> extracts the |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object from the |
|
<literal>SecureContext</literal> in the |
|
<literal>ContextHolder</literal>. This is then passed to an |
|
<literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>. The |
|
<literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> interface is very |
|
simple:</para> |
|
|
|
<programlisting>public Authentication authenticate(Authentication authentication) throws AuthenticationException;</programlisting> |
|
|
|
<para>Implementations of <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> are |
|
required to throw an <literal>AuthenticationException</literal> should |
|
authentication fail, or return a fully populated |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object. In particular, the returned |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object should contain an array of |
|
<literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> objects. The |
|
<literal>SecurityInterceptor</literal> places the populated |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object back in the |
|
<literal>SecureContext</literal> in the |
|
<literal>ContextHolder</literal>, overwriting the original |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>AuthenticationException</literal> has a number of |
|
subclasses. The most important are |
|
<literal>BadCredentialsException</literal> (an incorrect principal or |
|
credentials), <literal>DisabledException</literal> and |
|
<literal>LockedException</literal>. The latter two exceptions indicate |
|
the principal was found, but the credentials were not checked and |
|
authentication is denied. An |
|
<literal>AuthenticationServiceException</literal> is also provided, |
|
which indicates the authentication system could not process the |
|
request (eg a database was unavailable).</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-authentication-provider"> |
|
<title>Provider-Based Authentication</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Whilst the basic <literal>Authentication</literal> and |
|
<literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> interfaces enable users to |
|
develop their own authentication systems, users should consider using |
|
the provider-based authentication packages provided by the Acegi |
|
Security System for Spring. The key class, |
|
<literal>ProviderManager</literal>, is configured via the bean context |
|
with a list of <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal>s:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><bean id="authenticationManager" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.ProviderManager"> |
|
<property name="providers"> |
|
<list> |
|
<ref bean="daoAuthenticationProvider"/> |
|
<ref bean="someOtherAuthenticationProvider"/> |
|
</list> |
|
</property> |
|
</bean></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para><literal>ProviderManager</literal> calls a series of registered |
|
<literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> implementations, until one |
|
is found that indicates it is able to authenticate a given |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> class. When the first compatible |
|
<literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> is located, it is passed the |
|
authentication request. The <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> |
|
will then either throw an <literal>AuthenticationException</literal> |
|
or return a fully populated <literal>Authentication</literal> |
|
object.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Note the <literal>ProviderManager</literal> may throw a |
|
<literal>ProviderNotFoundException</literal> (a subclass of |
|
<literal>AuthenticationException</literal>) if it none of the |
|
registered <literal>AuthenticationProviders</literal> can validate the |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Several <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> |
|
implementations are provided with the Acegi Security System for |
|
Spring:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><itemizedlist spacing="compact"> |
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>TestingAuthenticationProvider</literal> is able |
|
to authenticate a <literal>TestingAuthenticationToken</literal>. |
|
The limit of its authentication is simply to treat whatever is |
|
contained in the <literal>TestingAuthenticationToken</literal> |
|
as valid. This makes it ideal for use during unit testing, as |
|
you can create an <literal>Authentication</literal> object with |
|
precisely the <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> objects |
|
required for calling a given method. You definitely would not |
|
register this <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> on a |
|
production system.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> is able to |
|
authenticate a |
|
<literal>UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken</literal> by |
|
accessing an authentication respository via a data access |
|
object. This is discussed further below, as it is the main way |
|
authentication is initially handled.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>RunAsImplAuthenticationToken</literal> is able to |
|
authenticate a <literal>RunAsUserToken</literal>. This is |
|
discussed further in the Run-As Authentication Replacement |
|
section. You would not register this |
|
<literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> if you were not using |
|
run-as replacement.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>AuthByAdapterProvider</literal> is able to |
|
authenticate any <literal>AuthByAdapter</literal> (a subclass of |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> used with container adapters). |
|
This is discussed further in the Container Adapters section. You |
|
would not register this |
|
<literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> if you were not using |
|
container adapters.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> is able to |
|
authenticate Yale Central Authentication Service (CAS) tickets. |
|
This is discussed further in the CAS Single Sign On |
|
section.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>JaasAuthenticationProvider</literal> is able to |
|
delegate authentication requests to a JAAS |
|
<literal>LoginModule</literal>. This is discussed further |
|
below.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
</itemizedlist></para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-authentication-provider-dao"> |
|
<title>Data Access Object Authentication Provider</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The Acegi Security System for Spring includes a |
|
production-quality <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> |
|
implementation called <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal>. |
|
This authentication provider is able to authenticate a |
|
<literal>UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken</literal> by obtaining |
|
authentication details from a data access object configured at bean |
|
creation time:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><bean id="daoAuthenticationProvider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.dao.DaoAuthenticationProvider"> |
|
<property name="authenticationDao"><ref bean="inMemoryDaoImpl"/></property> |
|
<property name="saltSource"><ref bean="saltSource"/></property> |
|
<property name="passwordEncoder"><ref bean="passwordEncoder"/></property> |
|
</bean></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>PasswordEncoder</literal> and |
|
<literal>SaltSource</literal> are optional. A |
|
<literal>PasswordEncoder</literal> provides encoding and decoding of |
|
passwords obtained from the authentication repository. A |
|
<literal>SaltSource</literal> enables the passwords to be populated |
|
with a "salt", which enhances the security of the passwords in the |
|
authentication repository. <literal>PasswordEncoder</literal> |
|
implementations are provided with the Acegi Security System for Spring |
|
covering MD5, SHA and cleartext encodings. Two |
|
<literal>SaltSource</literal> implementations are also provided: |
|
<literal>SystemWideSaltSource</literal> which encodes all passwords |
|
with the same salt, and <literal>ReflectionSaltSource</literal>, which |
|
inspects a given property of the returned |
|
<literal>UserDetails</literal> object to obtain the salt. Please refer |
|
to the JavaDocs for further details on these optional features.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>In addition to the properties above, the |
|
<literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> supports optional caching |
|
of <literal>UserDetails</literal> objects. The |
|
<literal>UserCache</literal> interface enables the |
|
<literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> to place a |
|
<literal>UserDetails</literal> object into the cache, and retrieve it |
|
from the cache upon subsequent authentication attempts for the same |
|
username. By default the <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> |
|
uses the <literal>NullUserCache</literal>, which performs no caching. |
|
A usable caching implementation is also provided, |
|
<literal>EhCacheBasedUserCache</literal>, which is configured as |
|
follows:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><bean id="daoAuthenticationProvider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.dao.DaoAuthenticationProvider"> |
|
<property name="authenticationDao"><ref bean="authenticationDao"/></property> |
|
<property name="userCache"><ref bean="userCache"/></property> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="userCache" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.dao.cache.EhCacheBasedUserCache"> |
|
<property name="minutesToIdle"><value>5</value></property> |
|
</bean></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>For a class to be able to provide the |
|
<literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> with access to an |
|
authentication repository, it must implement the |
|
<literal>AuthenticationDao</literal> interface:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting>public UserDetails loadUserByUsername(String username) throws UsernameNotFoundException, DataAccessException;</programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>UserDetails</literal> is an interface that provides |
|
getters that guarantee non-null provision of basic authentication |
|
information such as the username, password, granted authorities and |
|
whether the user is enabled or disabled. A concrete implementation, |
|
<literal>User</literal>, is also provided. Acegi Security users will |
|
need to decide when writing their <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal> |
|
what type of <literal>UserDetails</literal> to return. In most cases |
|
<literal>User</literal> will be used directly or subclassed, although |
|
special circumstances (such as object relational mappers) may require |
|
users to write their own <literal>UserDetails</literal> implementation |
|
from scratch.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Given <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal> is so simple to |
|
implement, it should be easy for users to retrieve authentication |
|
information using a persistence strategy of their choice.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>A design decision was made not to support account locking in the |
|
<literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal>, as doing so would have |
|
increased the complexity of the <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal> |
|
interface. For instance, a method would be required to increase the |
|
count of unsuccessful authentication attempts. Such functionality |
|
could be easily provided by leveraging the application event |
|
publishing features discussed below.</para> |
|
|
|
<para><literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> returns an |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object which in turn has its |
|
<literal>principal</literal> property set. The principal will be |
|
either a <literal>String</literal> (which is essentially the username) |
|
or a <literal>UserDetails</literal> object (which was looked up from |
|
the <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal>). By default the |
|
<literal>UserDetails</literal> is returned, as this enables |
|
applications to add extra properties potentially of use in |
|
applications, such as the user's full name, email address etc. If |
|
using container adapters, or if your applications were written to |
|
operate with <literal>String</literal>s (as was the case for releases |
|
prior to Acegi Security 0.6), you should set the |
|
<literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider.forcePrincipalAsString</literal> |
|
property to <literal>true</literal> in your application |
|
context.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-authentication-provider-events"> |
|
<title>Event Publishing</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> automatically |
|
obtains the <literal>ApplicationContext</literal> it is running in at |
|
startup time. This allows the provider to publish events through the |
|
standard Spring event framework. Three types of event messages are |
|
published:</para> |
|
|
|
<itemizedlist spacing="compact"> |
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>AuthenticationSuccessEvent</literal> is published |
|
when an authentication request is successful.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>AuthenticationFailureDisabledEvent</literal> is |
|
published when an authentication request is unsuccessful because |
|
the returned <literal>UserDetails</literal> is disabled. This is |
|
normally the case when an account is locked.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>AuthenticationFailureUsernameNotFoundEvent</literal> |
|
is published when an authentication request is unsuccessful |
|
because the <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal> could not locate |
|
the <literal>UserDetails</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>AuthenticationFailurePasswordEvent</literal> is |
|
published when an authentication request is unsuccessful because |
|
the presented password did not match that in the |
|
<literal>UserDetails</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
</itemizedlist> |
|
|
|
<para>Each event contains two objects: the |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object that represented the |
|
authentication request, and the <literal>UserDetails</literal> object |
|
that was found in response to the authentication request (clearly the |
|
latter will be a dummy object in the case of |
|
<literal>AuthenticationFailureUsernameNotFoundEvent</literal>). The |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> interface provides a |
|
<literal>getDetails()</literal> method which often includes |
|
information that event consumers may find useful (eg the TCP/IP |
|
address that the authentication request originated from).</para> |
|
|
|
<para>As per standard Spring event handling, you can receive these |
|
events by adding a bean to the application context which implements |
|
the <literal>ApplicationListener</literal> interface. Included with |
|
Acegi Security is a <literal>LoggerListener</literal> class which |
|
receives these events and publishes their details to Commons Logging. |
|
Refer to the JavaDocs for <literal>LoggerListener</literal> for |
|
details on the logging priorities used for different message |
|
types.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>This event publishing system enables you to implement account |
|
locking and record authentication event history. This might be of |
|
interest to application users, who can be advised of the times and |
|
source IP address of all unsuccessful password attempts (and account |
|
lockouts) since their last successful login. Such capabilities are |
|
simple to implement and greatly improve the security of your |
|
application.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-authentication-provider-in-memory"> |
|
<title>In-Memory Authentication</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Whilst it is easy to use the |
|
<literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> and create a custom |
|
<literal>AuthenticationDao</literal> implementation that extracts |
|
information from a persistence engine of choice, many applications do |
|
not require such complexity. One alternative is to configure an |
|
authentication repository in the application context itself using the |
|
<literal>InMemoryDaoImpl</literal>:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><bean id="inMemoryDaoImpl" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.dao.memory.InMemoryDaoImpl"> |
|
<property name="userMap"> |
|
<value> |
|
marissa=koala,ROLE_TELLER,ROLE_SUPERVISOR |
|
dianne=emu,ROLE_TELLER |
|
scott=wombat,ROLE_TELLER |
|
peter=opal,disabled,ROLE_TELLER |
|
</value> |
|
</property> |
|
</bean></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>userMap</literal> property contains each of the |
|
usernames, passwords, a list of granted authorities and an optional |
|
enabled/disabled keyword. Commas delimit each token. The username must |
|
appear to the left of the equals sign, and the password must be the |
|
first token to the right of the equals sign. The |
|
<literal>enabled</literal> and <literal>disabled</literal> keywords |
|
(case insensitive) may appear in the second or any subsequent token. |
|
Any remaining tokens are treated as granted authorities, which are |
|
created as <literal>GrantedAuthorityImpl</literal> objects (refer to |
|
the Authorization section for further discussion on granted |
|
authorities). Note that if a user has no password and/or no granted |
|
authorities, the user will not be created in the in-memory |
|
authentication repository.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-authentication-provider-jdbc"> |
|
<title>JDBC Authentication</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The Acegi Security System for Spring also includes an |
|
authentication provider that can obtain authentication information |
|
from a JDBC data source. The typical configuration for the |
|
<literal>JdbcDaoImpl</literal> is shown below:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><bean id="dataSource" class="org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.DriverManagerDataSource"> |
|
<property name="driverClassName"><value>org.hsqldb.jdbcDriver</value></property> |
|
<property name="url"><value>jdbc:hsqldb:hsql://localhost:9001</value></property> |
|
<property name="username"><value>sa</value></property> |
|
<property name="password"><value></value></property> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="jdbcDaoImpl" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.dao.jdbc.JdbcDaoImpl"> |
|
<property name="dataSource"><ref bean="dataSource"/></property> |
|
</bean></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>You can use different relational database management systems by |
|
modifying the <literal>DriverManagerDataSource</literal> shown above. |
|
Irrespective of the database used, a standard schema must be used as |
|
indicated in <literal>dbinit.txt</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>If you default schema is unsuitable for your needs, |
|
<literal>JdbcDaoImpl</literal> provides two properties that allow |
|
customisation of the SQL statements. You may also subclass the |
|
<literal>JdbcDaoImpl</literal> if further customisation is necessary. |
|
Please refer to the JavaDocs for details.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The Acegi Security System for Spring ships with a Hypersonic SQL |
|
instance that has the required authentication information and sample |
|
data already populated. To use this server, simply execute the |
|
<literal>server.bat</literal> or <literal>server.sh</literal> script |
|
included in the distribution. This will load a new database server |
|
instance that will service requests made to the URL indicated in the |
|
bean context configuration shown above.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-authentication-provider-jaas"> |
|
<title>JAAS Authentication</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Acegi Security provides a package able to delegate |
|
authentication requests to the Java Authentication and Authorization |
|
Service (JAAS). This package is discussed in detail below.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Central to JAAS operation are login configuration files. To |
|
learn more about JAAS login configuration files, consult the JAAS |
|
reference documentation available from Sun Microsystems. We expect you |
|
to have a basic understanding of JAAS and its login configuration file |
|
syntax in order to understand this section.</para> |
|
|
|
<sect3> |
|
<title>JaasAuthenticationProvider</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>JaasAuthenticationProvider</literal> attempts to |
|
authenticate a user’s principal and credentials through JAAS.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Let’s assume we have a JAAS login configuration file, |
|
<literal>/WEB-INF/login.conf</literal>, with the following |
|
contents:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting>JAASTest { |
|
sample.SampleLoginModule required; |
|
};</programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>Like all Acegi Security beans, the |
|
<literal>JaasAuthenticationProvider</literal> is configured via the |
|
application context. The following definitions would correspond to |
|
the above JAAS login configuration file:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><bean id="jaasAuthenticationProvider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.jaas.JaasAuthenticationProvider"> |
|
<property name="loginConfig"> |
|
<value>/WEB-INF/login.conf</value> |
|
</property> |
|
<property name="loginContextName"> |
|
<value>JAASTest</value> |
|
</property> |
|
<property name="callbackHandlers"> |
|
<list> |
|
<bean class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.jaas.JaasNameCallbackHandler"/> |
|
<bean class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.jaas.JaasPasswordCallbackHandler"/> |
|
</list> |
|
</property> |
|
<property name="authorityGranters"> |
|
<list> |
|
<bean class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.jaas.TestAuthorityGranter"/> |
|
</list> |
|
</property> |
|
</bean></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>CallbackHandler</literal>s and |
|
<literal>AuthorityGranter</literal>s are discussed below.</para> |
|
</sect3> |
|
|
|
<sect3> |
|
<title>Callbacks</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Most JAAS <literal>LoginModule</literal>s require a callback |
|
of some sort. These callbacks are usually used to obtain the |
|
username and password from the user. In an Acegi Security |
|
deployment, Acegi Security is responsible for this user interaction |
|
(typically via a reference to a |
|
<literal>ContextHolder</literal>-managed |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object). The JAAS package for |
|
Acegi Security provides two default callback handlers, |
|
<literal>JaasNameCallbackHandler</literal> and |
|
<literal>JaasPasswordCallbackHandler</literal>. Each of these |
|
callback handlers implement |
|
<literal>JaasAuthenticationCallbackHandler</literal>. In most cases |
|
these callback handlers can simply be used without understanding the |
|
internal mechanics. For those needing full control over the callback |
|
behavior, internally <literal>JaasAutheticationProvider</literal> |
|
wraps these <literal>JaasAuthenticationCallbackHandler</literal>s |
|
with an <literal>InternalCallbackHandler</literal>. The |
|
<literal>InternalCallbackHandler</literal> is the class that |
|
actually implements JAAS’ normal <literal>CallbackHandler</literal> |
|
interface. Any time that the JAAS <literal>LoginModule</literal> is |
|
used, it is passed a list of application context configured |
|
<literal>InternalCallbackHandler</literal>s. If the |
|
<literal>LoginModule</literal> requests a callback against the |
|
<literal>InternalCallbackHandler</literal>s, the callback is in-turn |
|
passed to the <literal>JaasAuthenticationCallbackHandler</literal>s |
|
being wrapped.</para> |
|
</sect3> |
|
|
|
<sect3> |
|
<title>AuthorityGranters</title> |
|
|
|
<para>JAAS works with principals. Even “roles” are represented as |
|
principals in JAAS. Acegi Security, on the other hand, works with |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> objects. Each |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object contains a single |
|
principal, and multiple <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>[]s. To |
|
facilitate mapping between these different concepts, the Acegi |
|
Security JAAS package includes an |
|
<literal>AuthorityGranter</literal> interface. An |
|
<literal>AuthorityGranter</literal> is responsible for inspecting a |
|
JAAS principal and returning a <literal>String</literal>. The |
|
<literal>JaasAuthenticationProvider</literal> then creates a |
|
<literal>JaasGrantedAuthority</literal> (which implements Acegi |
|
Security’s <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> interface) containing |
|
both the <literal>AuthorityGranter</literal>-returned |
|
<literal>String</literal> and the JAAS principal that the |
|
<literal>AuthorityGranter</literal> was passed. The |
|
<literal>JaasAuthenticationProvider</literal> obtains the JAAS |
|
principals by firstly successfully authenticating the user’s |
|
credentials using the JAAS <literal>LoginModule</literal>, and then |
|
accessing the <literal>LoginContext</literal> it returns. A call to |
|
<literal>LoginContext.getSubject().getPrincipals()</literal> is |
|
made, with each resulting principal passed to each |
|
<literal>AuthorityGranter</literal> defined against the |
|
<literal>JaasAuthenticationProvider.setAuthorityGranters(List)</literal> |
|
property. Acegi Security does not include any production |
|
<literal>AuthorityGranter</literal>s given every JAAS principal has |
|
an implementation-specific meaning. However, there is a |
|
<literal>TestAuthorityGranter</literal> in the unit tests that |
|
demonstrates a simple <literal>AuthorityGranter</literal> |
|
implementation.</para> |
|
</sect3> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-authentication-recommendations"> |
|
<title>Authentication Recommendations</title> |
|
|
|
<para>With the heavy use of interfaces throughout the authentication |
|
system (<literal>Authentication</literal>, |
|
<literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>, |
|
<literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> and |
|
<literal>AuthenticationDao</literal>) it might be confusing to a new |
|
user to know which part of the authentication system to customize. In |
|
general, the following is recommended:</para> |
|
|
|
<itemizedlist> |
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Use the |
|
<literal>UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken</literal> |
|
implementation where possible.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>If you simply need to implement a new authentication |
|
repository (eg to obtain user details from your application’s |
|
existing database), use the |
|
<literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> along with the |
|
<literal>AuthenticationDao</literal>. It is the fastest and safest |
|
way to integrate an external database.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>If you're using Container Adapters or a |
|
<literal>RunAsManager</literal> that replaces the |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object, ensure you have |
|
registered the <literal>AuthByAdapterProvider</literal> and |
|
<literal>RunAsManagerImplProvider</literal> respectively with your |
|
<literal>ProviderManager</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Never enable the |
|
<literal>TestingAuthenticationProvider</literal> on a production |
|
system. Doing so will allow any client to simply present a |
|
<literal>TestingAuthenticationToken</literal> and obtain whatever |
|
access they request.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Adding a new <literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> is |
|
sufficient to support most custom authentication requirements. |
|
Only unusual requirements would require the |
|
<literal>ProviderManager</literal> to be replaced with a different |
|
<literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
</itemizedlist> |
|
</sect2> |
|
</sect1> |
|
|
|
<sect1 id="security-authorization"> |
|
<title>Authorization</title> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-authorization-granted-authorities"> |
|
<title>Granted Authorities</title> |
|
|
|
<para>As briefly mentioned in the Authentication section, all |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> implementations are required to |
|
store an array of <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> objects. These |
|
represent the authorities that have been granted to the principal. The |
|
<literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> objects are inserted into the |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object by the |
|
<literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> and are later read by |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal>s when making authorization |
|
decisions.</para> |
|
|
|
<para><literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> is an interface with only |
|
one method:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting>public String getAuthority();</programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>This method allows <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal>s to |
|
obtain a precise <literal>String</literal> representation of the |
|
<literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>. By returning a representation as |
|
a <literal>String</literal>, a <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> can |
|
be easily "read" by most <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal>s. If |
|
a <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> cannot be precisely represented |
|
as a <literal>String</literal>, the |
|
<literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> is considered "complex" and |
|
<literal>getAuthority()</literal> must return |
|
<literal>null</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>An example of a "complex" <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> |
|
would be an implementation that stores a list of operations and |
|
authority thresholds that apply to different customer account numbers. |
|
Representing this complex <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> as a |
|
<literal>String</literal> would be quite complex, and as a result the |
|
<literal>getAuthority()</literal> method should return |
|
<literal>null</literal>. This will indicate to any |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> that it will need to |
|
specifically support the <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> |
|
implementation in order to understand its contents.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The Acegi Security System for Spring includes one concrete |
|
<literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> implementation, |
|
<literal>GrantedAuthorityImpl</literal>. This allows any |
|
user-specified <literal>String</literal> to be converted into a |
|
<literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>. All |
|
<literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal>s included with the security |
|
architecture use <literal>GrantedAuthorityImpl</literal> to populate |
|
the <literal>Authentication</literal> object.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-authorization-access-decision-managers"> |
|
<title>Access Decision Managers</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> is called by the |
|
<literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal> and is responsible for |
|
making final access control decisions. The |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> interface contains three |
|
methods:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting>public void decide(Authentication authentication, Object object, ConfigAttributeDefinition config) throws AccessDeniedException; |
|
public boolean supports(ConfigAttribute attribute); |
|
public boolean supports(Class clazz);</programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>As can be seen from the first method, the |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> is passed via method |
|
parameters all information that is likely to be of value in assessing |
|
an authorization decision. In particular, passing the secure |
|
<literal>Object</literal> enables those arguments contained in the |
|
actual secure object invocation to be inspected. For example, let's |
|
assume the secure object was a <literal>MethodInvocation</literal>. It |
|
would be easy to query the <literal>MethodInvocation</literal> for any |
|
<literal>Customer</literal> argument, and then implement some sort of |
|
security logic in the <literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> to |
|
ensure the principal is permitted to operate on that customer. |
|
Implementations are expected to throw an |
|
<literal>AccessDeniedException</literal> if access is denied.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>supports(ConfigAttribute)</literal> method is |
|
called by the <literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal> at |
|
startup time to determine if the |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> can process the passed |
|
<literal>ConfigAttribute</literal>. The |
|
<literal>supports(Class)</literal> method is called by a security |
|
interceptor implementation to ensure the configured |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> supports the type of secure |
|
object that the security interceptor will present.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-authorization-voting-decision-manager"> |
|
<title>Voting Decision Manager</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Whilst users can implement their own |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> to control all aspects of |
|
authorization, the Acegi Security System for Spring includes several |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> implementations that are |
|
based on voting. Using this approach, a series of |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> implementations are polled on |
|
an authorization decision. The |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> then decides whether or not |
|
to throw an <literal>AccessDeniedException</literal> based on its |
|
assessment of the votes.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> interface has three |
|
methods:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting>public int vote(Authentication authentication, Object object, ConfigAttributeDefinition config); |
|
public boolean supports(ConfigAttribute attribute); |
|
public boolean supports(Class clazz);</programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>Concrete implementations return an <literal>int</literal>, with |
|
possible values being reflected in the |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> static fields |
|
<literal>ACCESS_ABSTAIN</literal>, <literal>ACCESS_DENIED</literal> |
|
and <literal>ACCESS_GRANTED</literal>. A voting implementation will |
|
return <literal>ACCESS_ABSTAIN</literal> if it has no opinion on an |
|
authorization decision. If it does have an opinion, it must return |
|
either <literal>ACCESS_DENIED</literal> or |
|
<literal>ACCESS_GRANTED</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>There are three concrete |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal>s provided with the Acegi |
|
Security System for Spring that tally the votes. The |
|
<literal>ConsensusBased</literal> implementation will grant or deny |
|
access based on the consensus of non-abstain votes. Properties are |
|
provided to control behavior in the event of an equality of votes or |
|
if all votes are abstain. The <literal>AffirmativeBased</literal> |
|
implementation will grant access if one or more |
|
<literal>ACCESS_GRANTED</literal> votes were received (ie a deny vote |
|
will be ignored, provided there was at least one grant vote). Like the |
|
<literal>ConsensusBased</literal> implementation, there is a parameter |
|
that controls the behavior if all voters abstain. The |
|
<literal>UnanimousBased</literal> provider expects unanimous |
|
<literal>ACCESS_GRANTED</literal> votes in order to grant access, |
|
ignoring abstains. It will deny access if there is any |
|
<literal>ACCESS_DENIED</literal> vote. Like the other implementations, |
|
there is a parameter that controls the behaviour if all voters |
|
abstain.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>It is possible to implement a custom |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal> that tallies votes |
|
differently. For example, votes from a particular |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> might receive additional |
|
weighting, whilst a deny vote from a particular voter may have a veto |
|
effect.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>There is one concrete <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> |
|
implementation provided with the Acegi Security System for Spring. The |
|
<literal>RoleVoter</literal> class will vote if any ConfigAttribute |
|
begins with <literal>ROLE_</literal>. It will vote to grant access if |
|
there is a <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> which returns a |
|
<literal>String</literal> representation (via the |
|
<literal>getAuthority()</literal> method) exactly equal to one or more |
|
<literal>ConfigAttributes</literal> starting with |
|
<literal>ROLE_</literal>. If there is no exact match of any |
|
<literal>ConfigAttribute</literal> starting with |
|
<literal>ROLE_</literal>, the <literal>RoleVoter</literal> will vote |
|
to deny access. If no <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal> begins with |
|
<literal>ROLE_</literal>, the voter will abstain. |
|
<literal>RoleVoter</literal> is case sensitive on comparisons as well |
|
as the <literal>ROLE_</literal> prefix.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>It is possible to implement a custom |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal>. Several examples are provided |
|
in the Acegi Security System for Spring unit tests, including |
|
<literal>ContactSecurityVoter</literal> and |
|
<literal>DenyVoter</literal>. The |
|
<literal>ContactSecurityVoter</literal> abstains from voting decisions |
|
where a <literal>CONTACT_OWNED_BY_CURRENT_USER</literal> |
|
<literal>ConfigAttribute</literal> is not found. If voting, it queries |
|
the <literal>MethodInvocation</literal> to extract the owner of the |
|
<literal>Contact</literal> object that is subject of the method call. |
|
It votes to grant access if the <literal>Contact</literal> owner |
|
matches the principal presented in the |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object. It could have just as easily |
|
compared the <literal>Contact</literal> owner with some |
|
<literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> the |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object presented. All of this is |
|
achieved with relatively few lines of code and demonstrates the |
|
flexibility of the authorization model.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-authorization-taglib"> |
|
<title>Authorization Tag Library</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The Acegi Security System for Spring comes bundled with a JSP |
|
tag library that eases JSP writing. The tag library is known as |
|
<literal>authz</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>This library allows you to easy develop JSP pages which |
|
reference the security environment. For example, |
|
<literal>authz</literal> allows you to determine if a principal holds |
|
a particular granted authority, holds a group of granted authorities, |
|
or does not hold a given granted authority.</para> |
|
|
|
<sect3> |
|
<title>Usage</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The following JSP fragment illustrates how to use the |
|
<literal>authz</literal> taglib:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><authz:authorize ifAllGranted="ROLE_SUPERVISOR"> |
|
<td> |
|
<A HREF="del.htm?id=<c:out value="${contact.id}"/>">Del</A> |
|
</td> |
|
</authz:authorize></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>This code was copied from the Contacts sample |
|
application.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>What this code says is: if the principal has been granted |
|
ROLE_SUPERVISOR, allow the tag's body to be output.</para> |
|
</sect3> |
|
|
|
<sect3> |
|
<title>Installation</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Installation is a simple matter. Simply copy the |
|
<literal>acegi-security-taglib.jar</literal> file into your |
|
application's <literal>WEB-INF/lib</literal> folder. The tag library |
|
includes it's TLD, which makes it easier to work with JSP 1.2+ |
|
containers.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>If you are using a JSP 1.1 container, you will need to declare |
|
the JSP tag library in your application's <literal>web.xml</literal> |
|
file, with code such as this:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><taglib> |
|
<taglib-uri>http://acegisecurity.sf.net/authz</taglib-uri> |
|
<taglib-location>/WEB-INF/authz.tld</taglib-location> |
|
</taglib></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>For JSP 1.1 containers you will also need to extract the |
|
<literal>authz.tld</literal> file from the |
|
<literal>acegi-security-taglib.jar</literal> file and put it into |
|
your application's <literal>WEB-INF/lib</literal> folder. Use a |
|
regular Zip tool, or Java's JAR utility.</para> |
|
</sect3> |
|
|
|
<sect3> |
|
<title>Reference</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>authz:authorize</literal> tag declares the |
|
following attributes:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><itemizedlist spacing="compact"> |
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>ifAllGranted</literal>: All the listed roles |
|
must be granted for the tag to output its body.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>ifAnyGranted</literal>: Any of the listed roles |
|
must be granted for the tag to output its body.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>ifNotGranted</literal>: None of the listed |
|
roles must be granted for the tag to output its body.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
</itemizedlist></para> |
|
|
|
<para>You'll note that in each attribute you can list multiple |
|
roles. Simply separate the roles using a comma. The |
|
<literal>authorize</literal> tag ignores whitespace in |
|
attributes.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The tag library logically ANDs all of it's parameters |
|
together. This means that if you combine two or more attributes, all |
|
attributes must be true for the tag to output it's body. Don't add |
|
an <literal>ifAllGranted="ROLE_SUPERVISOR"</literal>, followed by an |
|
<literal>ifNotGranted="ROLE_SUPERVISOR"</literal>, or you'll be |
|
surprised to never see the tag's body.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>By requiring all attributes to return true, it allows you to |
|
create more complex authorization scenarios. For example, you could |
|
declare an <literal>ifAllGranted="ROLE_SUPERVISOR"</literal> and an |
|
<literal>ifNotGranted="ROLE_NEWBIE_SUPERVISOR"</literal> in the same |
|
tag, in order to prevent new supervisors from seeing the tag body. |
|
Although it would no doubt be simpler to use |
|
<literal>ifAllGranted="ROLE_EXPERIENCED_SUPERVISOR"</literal> rather |
|
than inserting NOT conditions into your design.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>One last item: the tag verifies the authorizations in a |
|
specific order: first <literal>ifNotGranted</literal>, then |
|
<literal>ifAllGranted</literal>, and finally, |
|
<literal>ifAnyGranted</literal>.</para> |
|
</sect3> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-authorization-recommendations"> |
|
<title>Authorization Recommendations</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Given there are several ways to achieve similar authorization |
|
outcomes in the Acegi Security System for Spring, the following |
|
general recommendations are made:</para> |
|
|
|
<itemizedlist> |
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Grant authorities using |
|
<literal>GrantedAuthorityImpl</literal> where possible. Because it |
|
is already supported by the Acegi Security System for Spring, you |
|
avoid the need to create custom |
|
<literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> or |
|
<literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> implementations simply |
|
to populate the <literal>Authentication</literal> object with a |
|
custom <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Most authorization decision rules can be easily satisfied by |
|
writing an <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> implementation |
|
and using either <literal>ConsensusBased</literal>, |
|
<literal>AffirmativeBased</literal> or |
|
<literal>UnanimousBased</literal> as the |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
</itemizedlist> |
|
</sect2> |
|
</sect1> |
|
|
|
<sect1 id="security-run-as"> |
|
<title>Run-As Authentication Replacement</title> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-run-as-purpose"> |
|
<title>Purpose</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal> is able to |
|
temporarily replace the <literal>Authentication</literal> object in |
|
the <literal>SecureContext</literal> and |
|
<literal>ContextHolder</literal> during the |
|
<literal>SecurityInterceptorCallback</literal>. This only occurs if |
|
the original <literal>Authentication</literal> object was successfully |
|
processed by the <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> and |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal>. The |
|
<literal>RunAsManager</literal> will indicate the replacement |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object, if any, that should be used |
|
during the <literal>SecurityInterceptorCallback</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>By temporarily replacing the <literal>Authentication</literal> |
|
object during a <literal>SecurityInterceptorCallback</literal>, the |
|
secured invocation will be able to call other objects which require |
|
different authentication and authorization credentials. It will also |
|
be able to perform any internal security checks for specific |
|
<literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> objects.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-run-as-usage"> |
|
<title>Usage</title> |
|
|
|
<para>A <literal>RunAsManager</literal> interface is provided by the |
|
Acegi Security System for Spring:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting>public Authentication buildRunAs(Authentication authentication, Object object, ConfigAttributeDefinition config); |
|
public boolean supports(ConfigAttribute attribute); |
|
public boolean supports(Class clazz);</programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>The first method returns the <literal>Authentication</literal> |
|
object that should replace the existing |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object for the duration of the |
|
method invocation. If the method returns <literal>null</literal>, it |
|
indicates no replacement should be made. The second method is used by |
|
the <literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal> as part of its |
|
startup validation of configuration attributes. The |
|
<literal>supports(Class)</literal> method is called by a security |
|
interceptor implementation to ensure the configured |
|
<literal>RunAsManager</literal> supports the type of secure object |
|
that the security interceptor will present.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>One concrete implementation of a <literal>RunAsManager</literal> |
|
is provided with the Acegi Security System for Spring. The |
|
<literal>RunAsManagerImpl</literal> class returns a replacement |
|
<literal>RunAsUserToken</literal> if any |
|
<literal>ConfigAttribute</literal> starts with |
|
<literal>RUN_AS_</literal>. If any such |
|
<literal>ConfigAttribute</literal> is found, the replacement |
|
<literal>RunAsUserToken</literal> will contain the same principal, |
|
credentials and granted authorities as the original |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object, along with a new |
|
<literal>GrantedAuthorityImpl</literal> for each |
|
<literal>RUN_AS_</literal> <literal>ConfigAttribute</literal>. Each |
|
new <literal>GrantedAuthorityImpl</literal> will be prefixed with |
|
<literal>ROLE_</literal>, followed by the <literal>RUN_AS</literal> |
|
<literal>ConfigAttribute</literal>. For example, a |
|
<literal>RUN_AS_SERVER</literal> will result in the replacement |
|
<literal>RunAsUserToken</literal> containing a |
|
<literal>ROLE_RUN_AS_SERVER</literal> granted authority.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The replacement <literal>RunAsUserToken</literal> is just like |
|
any other <literal>Authentication</literal> object. It needs to be |
|
authenticated by the <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>, |
|
probably via delegation to a suitable |
|
<literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal>. The |
|
<literal>RunAsImplAuthenticationProvider</literal> performs such |
|
authentication. It simply accepts as valid any |
|
<literal>RunAsUserToken</literal> presented.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>To ensure malicious code does not create a |
|
<literal>RunAsUserToken</literal> and present it for guaranteed |
|
acceptance by the <literal>RunAsImplAuthenticationProvider</literal>, |
|
the hash of a key is stored in all generated tokens. The |
|
<literal>RunAsManagerImpl</literal> and |
|
<literal>RunAsImplAuthenticationProvider</literal> is created in the |
|
bean context with the same key:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><bean id="runAsManager" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.runas.RunAsManagerImpl"> |
|
<property name="key"><value>my_run_as_password</value></property> |
|
</bean></programlisting><programlisting><bean id="runAsAuthenticationProvider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.runas.RunAsImplAuthenticationProvider"> |
|
<property name="key"><value>my_run_as_password</value></property> |
|
</bean></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>By using the same key, each <literal>RunAsUserToken</literal> |
|
can be validated it was created by an approved |
|
<literal>RunAsManagerImpl</literal>. The |
|
<literal>RunAsUserToken</literal> is immutable after creation for |
|
security reasons.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
</sect1> |
|
|
|
<sect1 id="security-ui"> |
|
<title>User Interfacing with the ContextHolder</title> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-ui-purpose"> |
|
<title>Purpose</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Everything presented so far assumes one thing: the |
|
<literal>ContextHolder</literal> is populated with a valid |
|
<literal>SecureContext</literal>, which in turn contains a valid |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object. Develolpers are free to do |
|
this in whichever way they like, such as directly calling the relevant |
|
objects at runtime. However, several classes have been provided to |
|
make this process transparent in many situations.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>net.sf.acegisecurity.ui</literal> package is design |
|
to make interfacing web application user interfaces with the |
|
<literal>ContextHolder</literal> as simple as possible. There are two |
|
major steps in doing this:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><itemizedlist spacing="compact"> |
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Actually authenticate the user and place the resulting |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object in a "well-known |
|
location".</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Extract the <literal>Authentication</literal> object from |
|
the "well-known location" and place in into the |
|
<literal>ContextHolder</literal> for the duration of the secure |
|
object invocation.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
</itemizedlist></para> |
|
|
|
<para>There are several alternatives are available for the first step, |
|
which will be briefly discussed in this chapter. The most popular |
|
approach is HTTP Session Authentication, which uses the |
|
<literal>HttpSession</literal> object and filters to authenticate the |
|
user. Another approach is HTTP Basic Authentication, which allows |
|
clients to use HTTP headers to present authentication information to |
|
the Acegi Security System for Spring. Alternatively, you can also use |
|
Yale Central Authentication Service (CAS) for enterprise-wide single |
|
sign on. The final approach is via Container Adapters, which allow |
|
supported web containers to perform the authentication themselves. |
|
HTTP Session and Basic Authentication is discussed below, whilst CAS |
|
and Container Adapters are discussed in separate sections of this |
|
document.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-ui-http-session"> |
|
<title>HTTP Session Authentication</title> |
|
|
|
<para>HTTP Session Authentication involves using the |
|
<literal>AuthenticationProcessingFilter</literal> to process a login |
|
form. The login form simply contains <literal>j_username</literal> and |
|
<literal>j_password</literal> input fields, and posts to a URL that is |
|
monitored by the filter (by default |
|
<literal>j_acegi_security_check</literal>). The filter is defined in |
|
<literal>web.xml</literal> behind a |
|
<literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal> as follows:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><filter> |
|
<filter-name>Acegi Authentication Processing Filter</filter-name> |
|
<filter-class>net.sf.acegisecurity.util.FilterToBeanProxy</filter-class> |
|
<init-param> |
|
<param-name>targetClass</param-name> |
|
<param-value>net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.webapp.AuthenticationProcessingFilter</param-value> |
|
</init-param> |
|
</filter> |
|
|
|
<filter-mapping> |
|
<filter-name>Acegi Authentication Processing Filter</filter-name> |
|
<url-pattern>/*</url-pattern> |
|
</filter-mapping></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>For a discussion of <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal>, please |
|
refer to the Filters section. The application context will need to |
|
define the <literal>AuthenticationProcessingFilter</literal>:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><bean id="authenticationProcessingFilter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.webapp.AuthenticationProcessingFilter"> |
|
<property name="authenticationManager"><ref bean="authenticationManager"/></property> |
|
<property name="authenticationFailureUrl"><value>/acegilogin.jsp?login_error=1</value></property> |
|
<property name="defaultTargetUrl"><value>/</value></property> |
|
<property name="filterProcessesUrl"><value>/j_acegi_security_check</value></property> |
|
</bean></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>The configured <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> |
|
processes each authentication request. If authentication fails, the |
|
browser will be redirected to the |
|
<literal>authenticationFailureUrl</literal>. The |
|
<literal>AuthenticationException</literal> will be placed into the |
|
<literal>HttpSession</literal> attribute indicated by |
|
<literal>AbstractProcessingFilter.ACEGI_SECURITY_LAST_EXCEPTION_KEY</literal>, |
|
enabling a reason to be provided to the user on the error page.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>If authentication is successful, the resulting |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object will be placed into the |
|
<literal>HttpSession</literal> attribute indicated by |
|
<literal>HttpSessionIntegrationFilter.ACEGI_SECURITY_AUTHENTICATION_KEY</literal>. |
|
This becomes the "well-known location" from which the |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object is later extracted.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Once the <literal>HttpSession</literal> has been updated, the |
|
browser will need to be redirected to the target URL. The target URL |
|
is usually indicated by the <literal>HttpSession</literal> attribute |
|
specified by |
|
<literal>AbstractProcessingFilter.ACEGI_SECURITY_TARGET_URL_KEY</literal>. |
|
This attribute is automatically set by the |
|
<literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal> when an |
|
<literal>AuthenticationException</literal> occurs, so that after login |
|
is completed the user can return to what they were trying to access. |
|
If for some reason the <literal>HttpSession</literal> does not |
|
indicate the target URL, the browser will be redirected to the |
|
<literal>defaultTargetUrl</literal> property.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Because this authentication approach is fully contained within a |
|
single web application, HTTP Session Authentication is recommended to |
|
be used instead of Container Adapters.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-ui-http-basic"> |
|
<title>HTTP Basic Authentication</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The Acegi Security System for Spring provides a |
|
<literal>BasicProcessingFilter</literal> which is capable of |
|
processing authentication credentials presented in HTTP headers. This |
|
can be used for authenticating calls made by Spring remoting protocols |
|
(such as Hessian and Burlap), as well as normal user agents (such as |
|
Internet Explorer and Navigator). The standard governing HTTP Basic |
|
Authentication is defined by RFC 1945, Section 11, and the |
|
<literal>BasicProcessingFilter</literal> conforms with this |
|
RFC.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>To implement HTTP Basic Authentication, it is necessary to add |
|
the following filter to <literal>web.xml</literal>:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><filter> |
|
<filter-name>Acegi HTTP BASIC Authorization Filter</filter-name> |
|
<filter-class>net.sf.acegisecurity.util.FilterToBeanProxy</filter-class> |
|
<init-param> |
|
<param-name>targetClass</param-name> |
|
<param-value>net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.basicauth.BasicProcessingFilter</param-value> |
|
</init-param> |
|
</filter> |
|
|
|
<filter-mapping> |
|
<filter-name>Acegi HTTP BASIC Authorization Filter</filter-name> |
|
<url-pattern>/*</url-pattern> |
|
</filter-mapping></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>For a discussion of <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal>, please |
|
refer to the Filters section. The application context will need to |
|
define the <literal>BasicProcessingFilter</literal> and its required |
|
collaborator:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><bean id="basicProcessingFilter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.basicauth.BasicProcessingFilter"> |
|
<property name="authenticationManager"><ref bean="authenticationManager"/></property> |
|
<property name="authenticationEntryPoint"><ref bean="authenticationEntryPoint"/></property> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="authenticationEntryPoint" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.basicauth.BasicProcessingFilterEntryPoint"> |
|
<property name="realmName"><value>Name Of Your Realm</value></property> |
|
</bean></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>The configured <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> |
|
processes each authentication request. If authentication fails, the |
|
configured <literal>AuthenticationEntryPoint</literal> will be used to |
|
retry the authentication process. Usually you will use the |
|
<literal>BasicProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal>, which returns a |
|
401 response with a suitable header to retry HTTP Basic |
|
authentication. If authentication is successful, the resulting |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object will be placed into the |
|
<literal>HttpSession</literal> attribute indicated by |
|
<literal>HttpSessionIntegrationFilter.ACEGI_SECURITY_AUTHENTICATION_KEY</literal>. |
|
This becomes the "well-known location" from which the |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object is later extracted.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>If the authentication event was successful, or authentication |
|
was not attempted because the HTTP header did not contain a supported |
|
authentication request, the filter chain will continue as normal. The |
|
only time the filter chain will be interrupted is if authentication |
|
fails and the <literal>AuthenticationEntryPoint</literal> is called, |
|
as discussed in the previous paragraph.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>HTTP Basic Authentication is recommended to be used instead of |
|
Container Adapters. It can be used in conjunction with HTTP Session |
|
Authentication, as demonstrated in the Contacts sample application. |
|
You can also use it instead of HTTP Session Authentication if you |
|
wish.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-ui-well-known"> |
|
<title>Well-Known Location Integration</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Once a web application has used either HTTP Session |
|
Authentication, HTTP Basic Authentication, or a Container Adapter, an |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object will exist in a well-known |
|
location. The final step in automatically integrating the user |
|
interface with the backend security interceptor is to extract this |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object from the well-known location |
|
and place it into a <literal>SecureContext</literal> in the |
|
<literal>ContextHolder</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>AbstractIntegrationFilter</literal> and its |
|
subclasses provide this well-known location integration. These classes |
|
are standard filters, and at the start of each request they will |
|
attempt to extract the <literal>Authentication</literal> object from a |
|
well-known location. The <literal>Authentication</literal> object will |
|
then be added to a <literal>SecureContext</literal>, the |
|
<literal>SecureContext</literal> associated with the |
|
<literal>ContextHolder</literal> for the duration of the request, and |
|
the <literal>ContextHolder</literal> be cleared when the request is |
|
finished. Four concrete subclasses of |
|
<literal>AbstractIntegrationFilter</literal> are provided with the |
|
Acegi Security System for Spring:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><itemizedlist> |
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>HttpSessionIntegrationFilter</literal> is used |
|
with HTTP Session Authentication, HTTP Basic Authentication, or |
|
any other approach that populates the |
|
<literal>HttpSession</literal> accordingly. It extracts the |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object from the |
|
<literal>HttpSession</literal> attribute indicated by |
|
<literal>HttpSessionIntegrationFilter.ACEGI_SECURITY_AUTHENTICATION_KEY</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>HttpRequestIntegrationFilter</literal> is used |
|
with Catalina, Jetty and Resin Container Adapters. It extracts |
|
the authentication information from |
|
<literal>HttpServletRequest.getUserPrincipal()</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>JbossIntegrationFilter</literal> is used with the |
|
JBoss Container Adapter. It extracts the authentication from |
|
<literal>java:comp/env/security/subject</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>AutoIntegrationFilter</literal> automatically |
|
determines which filter to use. This makes a web application WAR |
|
file more portable, as the <literal>web.xml</literal> is not |
|
hard-coded to a specific |
|
<literal>AbstractIntegrationFilter</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
</itemizedlist></para> |
|
|
|
<para>To define the <literal>AutoIntegrationFilter</literal> |
|
(recommended), simply add the following to your web.xml:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><filter> |
|
<filter-name>Acegi Security System for Spring Auto Integration Filter</filter-name> |
|
<filter-class>net.sf.acegisecurity.util.FilterToBeanProxy</filter-class> |
|
<init-param> |
|
<param-name>targetClass</param-name> |
|
<param-value>net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.AutoIntegrationFilter</param-value> |
|
</init-param> |
|
</filter> |
|
|
|
<filter-mapping> |
|
<filter-name>Acegi Security System for Spring Auto Integration Filter</filter-name> |
|
<url-pattern>/*</url-pattern> |
|
</filter-mapping></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>You will also need to add the following line to your application |
|
context:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><bean id="autoIntegrationFilter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.AutoIntegrationFilter" /></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>Once in the <literal>ContextHolder</literal>, the standard Acegi |
|
Security System for Spring classes can be used. Because |
|
<literal>ContextHolder</literal> is a standard object which is |
|
populated using a filter at the container level, JSPs and Servlets do |
|
not need to use Spring's MVC packages. This enables those applications |
|
that use other MVC frameworks to still leverage Spring's other |
|
capabilities, with full authentication and authorization support. The |
|
<literal>debug.jsp</literal> page provided with the sample application |
|
demonstrates accessing the <literal>ContextHolder</literal> |
|
independent of Spring's MVC packages.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
</sect1> |
|
|
|
<sect1 id="security-container-adapters"> |
|
<title>Container Adapters</title> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-container-adapters-overview"> |
|
<title>Overview</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Early versions of the Acegi Security System for Spring |
|
exclusively used Container Adapters for interfacing authentication |
|
with end users. Whilst this worked well, it required considerable time |
|
to support multiple container versions and the configuration itself |
|
was relatively time-consuming for developers. For this reason the HTTP |
|
Session Authentication and HTTP Basic Authentication approaches were |
|
developed, and are today recommended for most applications.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Container Adapters enable the Acegi Security System for Spring |
|
to integrate directly with the containers used to host end user |
|
applications. This integration means that applications can continue to |
|
leverage the authentication and authorization capabilities built into |
|
containers (such as <literal>isUserInRole()</literal> and form-based |
|
or basic authentication), whilst benefiting from the enhanced security |
|
interception capabilities provided by the Acegi Security System for |
|
Spring.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The integration between a container and the Acegi Security |
|
System for Spring is achieved through an adapter. The adapter provides |
|
a container-compatible user authentication provider, and needs to |
|
return a container-compatible user object.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The adapter is instantiated by the container and is defined in a |
|
container-specific configuration file. The adapter then loads a Spring |
|
application context which defines the normal authentication manager |
|
settings, such as the authentication providers that can be used to |
|
authenticate the request. The application context is usually named |
|
<literal>acegisecurity.xml</literal> and is placed in a |
|
container-specific location.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The Acegi Security System for Spring currently supports Jetty, |
|
Catalina (Tomcat), JBoss and Resin. Additional container adapters can |
|
easily be written.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-container-adapters-adapter-provider"> |
|
<title>Adapter Authentication Provider</title> |
|
|
|
<para>As is always the case, the container adapter generated |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object still needs to be |
|
authenticated by an <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> when |
|
requested to do so by the |
|
<literal>AbstractSecurityInterceptor</literal>. The |
|
<literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> needs to be certain the |
|
adapter-provided <literal>Authentication</literal> object is valid and |
|
was actually authenticated by a trusted adapter.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Adapters create <literal>Authentication</literal> objects which |
|
are immutable and implement the <literal>AuthByAdapter</literal> |
|
interface. These objects store the hash of a key that is defined by |
|
the adapter. This allows the <literal>Authentication</literal> object |
|
to be validated by the <literal>AuthByAdapterProvider</literal>. This |
|
authentication provider is defined as follows:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><bean id="authByAdapterProvider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.AuthByAdapterProvider"> |
|
<property name="key"><value>my_password</value></property> |
|
</bean></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>The key must match the key that is defined in the |
|
container-specific configuration file that starts the adapter. The |
|
<literal>AuthByAdapterProvider</literal> automatically accepts as |
|
valid any <literal>AuthByAdapter</literal> implementation that returns |
|
the expected hash of the key.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>To reiterate, this means the adapter will perform the initial |
|
authentication using providers such as |
|
<literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal>, returning an |
|
<literal>AuthByAdapter</literal> instance that contains a hash code of |
|
the key. Later, when an application calls a security interceptor |
|
managed resource, the <literal>AuthByAdapter</literal> instance in the |
|
<literal>SecureContext</literal> in the |
|
<literal>ContextHolder</literal> will be tested by the application's |
|
<literal>AuthByAdapterProvider</literal>. There is no requirement for |
|
additional authentication providers such as |
|
<literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal> within the |
|
application-specific application context, as the only type of |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> instance that will be presented by |
|
the application is from the container adapter.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Classloader issues are frequent with containers and the use of |
|
container adapters illustrates this further. Each container requires a |
|
very specific configuration. The installation instructions are |
|
provided below. Once installed, please take the time to try the sample |
|
application to ensure your container adapter is properly |
|
configured.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>When using container adapters with the |
|
<literal>DaoAuthenticationProvider</literal>, ensure you set its |
|
<literal>forcePrincipalAsString</literal> property to |
|
<literal>true</literal>.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-container-adapters-catalina"> |
|
<title>Catalina (Tomcat) Installation</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The following was tested with Jakarta Tomcat 4.1.30 and 5.0.19. |
|
We automatically test the following directions using our container |
|
integration test system and these versions of Catalina |
|
(Tomcat).</para> |
|
|
|
<para><literal>$CATALINA_HOME</literal> refers to the root of your |
|
Catalina (Tomcat) installation.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Edit your <literal>$CATALINA_HOME/conf/server.xml</literal> file |
|
so the <literal><Engine></literal> section contains only one |
|
active <literal><Realm></literal> entry. An example realm |
|
entry:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting> <Realm className="net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.catalina.CatalinaAcegiUserRealm" |
|
appContextLocation="conf/acegisecurity.xml" |
|
key="my_password" /></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>Be sure to remove any other <literal><Realm></literal> |
|
entry from your <literal><Engine></literal> section.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Copy <literal>acegisecurity.xml</literal> into |
|
<literal>$CATALINA_HOME/conf</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Copy <literal>acegi-security-catalina-server.jar</literal> into |
|
<literal>$CATALINA_HOME/server/lib</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Copy the following files into |
|
<literal>$CATALINA_HOME/common/lib</literal>:</para> |
|
|
|
<itemizedlist> |
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>aopalliance.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>spring.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>acegi-security-catalina-common.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>commons-codec.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>burlap.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>hessian.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
</itemizedlist> |
|
|
|
<para>None of the above JAR files (or |
|
<literal>acegi-security.jar</literal>) should be in your application's |
|
<literal>WEB-INF/lib</literal>. The realm name indicated in your |
|
<literal>web.xml</literal> does not matter with Catalina.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>We have received reports of problems using this Container |
|
Adapter with Mac OS X. A work-around is to use a script such as |
|
follows:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting>#!/bin/sh |
|
export CATALINA_HOME="/Library/Tomcat" |
|
export JAVA_HOME="/Library/Java/Home" |
|
cd / |
|
$CATALINA_HOME/bin/startup.sh</programlisting></para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-container-adapters-jetty"> |
|
<title>Jetty Installation</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The following was tested with Jetty 4.2.18. We automatically |
|
test the following directions using our container integration test |
|
system and this version of Jetty.</para> |
|
|
|
<para><literal>$JETTY_HOME</literal> refers to the root of your Jetty |
|
installation.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Edit your <literal>$JETTY_HOME/etc/jetty.xml</literal> file so |
|
the <literal><Configure class></literal> section has a new |
|
addRealm call:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting> <Call name="addRealm"> |
|
<Arg> |
|
<New class="net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.jetty.JettyAcegiUserRealm"> |
|
<Arg>Spring Powered Realm</Arg> |
|
<Arg>my_password</Arg> |
|
<Arg>etc/acegisecurity.xml</Arg> |
|
</New> |
|
</Arg> |
|
</Call></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>Copy <literal>acegisecurity.xml</literal> into |
|
<literal>$JETTY_HOME/etc</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Copy the following files into |
|
<literal>$JETTY_HOME/ext</literal>:<itemizedlist> |
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>aopalliance.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>commons-logging.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>spring.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>acegi-security-jetty-ext.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>commons-codec.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>burlap.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>hessian.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
</itemizedlist></para> |
|
|
|
<para>None of the above JAR files (or |
|
<literal>acegi-security.jar</literal>) should be in your application's |
|
<literal>WEB-INF/lib</literal>. The realm name indicated in your |
|
<literal>web.xml</literal> does matter with Jetty. The |
|
<literal>web.xml</literal> must express the same |
|
<literal><realm-name></literal> as your |
|
<literal>jetty.xml</literal> (in the example above, "Spring Powered |
|
Realm").</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-container-adapters-joss"> |
|
<title>JBoss Installation</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The following was tested with JBoss 3.2.3. We automatically test |
|
the following directions using our container integration test system |
|
and this version of JBoss.</para> |
|
|
|
<para><literal>$JBOSS_HOME</literal> refers to the root of your JBoss |
|
installation.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Edit your |
|
<literal>$JBOSS_HOME/server/your_config/conf/login-config.xml</literal> |
|
file so that it contains a new entry under the |
|
<literal><Policy></literal> section:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting> <application-policy name = "SpringPoweredRealm"> |
|
<authentication> |
|
<login-module code = "net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.jboss.JbossSpringLoginModule" |
|
flag = "required"> |
|
<module-option name = "appContextLocation">acegisecurity.xml</module-option> |
|
<module-option name = "key">my_password</module-option> |
|
</login-module> |
|
</authentication> |
|
</application-policy></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>Copy <literal>acegisecurity.xml</literal> into |
|
<literal>$JBOSS_HOME/server/your_config/conf</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Copy the following files into |
|
<literal>$JBOSS_HOME/server/your_config/lib</literal>:<itemizedlist> |
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>aopalliance.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>spring.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>acegi-security-jboss-lib.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>commons-codec.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>burlap.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>hessian.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
</itemizedlist></para> |
|
|
|
<para>None of the above JAR files (or |
|
<literal>acegi-security.jar</literal>) should be in your application's |
|
<literal>WEB-INF/lib</literal>. The realm name indicated in your |
|
<literal>web.xml</literal> does not matter with JBoss. However, your |
|
web application's <literal>WEB-INF/jboss-web.xml</literal> must |
|
express the same <literal><security-domain></literal> as your |
|
<literal>login-config.xml</literal>. For example, to match the above |
|
example, your <literal>jboss-web.xml</literal> would look like |
|
this:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><jboss-web> |
|
<security-domain>java:/jaas/SpringPoweredRealm</security-domain> |
|
</jboss-web></programlisting></para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-container-adapters-resin"> |
|
<title>Resin Installation</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The following was tested with Resin 3.0.6.</para> |
|
|
|
<para><literal>$RESIN_HOME</literal> refers to the root of your Resin |
|
installation.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Resin provides several ways to support the container adapter. In |
|
the instructions below we have elected to maximise consistency with |
|
other container adapter configurations. This will allow Resin users to |
|
simply deploy the sample application and confirm correct |
|
configuration. Developers comfortable with Resin are naturally able to |
|
use its capabilities to package the JARs with the web application |
|
itself, and/or support single sign-on.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Copy the following files into |
|
<literal>$RESIN_HOME/lib</literal>:<itemizedlist> |
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>aopalliance.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>commons-logging.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>spring.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>acegi-security-resin-lib.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>commons-codec.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>burlap.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>hessian.jar</literal></para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
</itemizedlist></para> |
|
|
|
<para>Unlike the container-wide <literal>acegisecurity.xml</literal> |
|
files used by other container adapters, each Resin web application |
|
will contain its own |
|
<literal>WEB-INF/resin-acegisecurity.xml</literal> file. Each web |
|
application will also contain a <literal>resin-web.xml</literal> file |
|
which Resin uses to start the container adapter:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><web-app> |
|
<authenticator> |
|
<type>net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.resin.ResinAcegiAuthenticator</type> |
|
<init> |
|
<app-context-location>WEB-INF/resin-acegisecurity.xml</app-context-location> |
|
<key>my_password</key> |
|
</init> |
|
</authenticator> |
|
</web-app></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>With the basic configuration provided above, none of the JAR |
|
files listed (or <literal>acegi-security.jar</literal>) should be in |
|
your application's <literal>WEB-INF/lib</literal>. The realm name |
|
indicated in your <literal>web.xml</literal> does not matter with |
|
Resin, as the relevant authentication class is indicated by the |
|
<literal><authenticator></literal> setting.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
</sect1> |
|
|
|
<sect1 id="security-cas"> |
|
<title>Yale Central Authentication Service (CAS) Single Sign On</title> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-cas-overview"> |
|
<title>Overview</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Yale University produces an enterprise-wide single sign on |
|
system known as CAS. Unlike other initiatives, Yale's Central |
|
Authentication Service is open source, widely used, simple to |
|
understand, platform independent, and supports proxy capabilities. The |
|
Acegi Security System for Spring fully supports CAS, and provides an |
|
easy migration path from single-application deployments of Acegi |
|
Security through to multiple-application deployments secured by an |
|
enterprise-wide CAS server.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>You can learn more about CAS at |
|
<literal>http://www.yale.edu/tp/auth/</literal>. You will need to |
|
visit this URL to download the CAS Server files. Whilst the Acegi |
|
Security System for Spring includes two CAS libraries in the |
|
"-with-dependencies" ZIP file, you will still need the CAS Java Server |
|
Pages and <literal>web.xml</literal> to customise and deploy your CAS |
|
server.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-cas-how-cas-works"> |
|
<title>How CAS Works</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Whilst the CAS web site above contains two documents that detail |
|
the architecture of CAS, we present the general overview again here |
|
within the context of the Acegi Security System for Spring. The |
|
following refers to CAS 2.0, being the version of CAS that Acegi |
|
Security System for Spring supports.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Somewhere in your enterprise you will need to setup a CAS |
|
server. The CAS server is simply a standard WAR file, so there isn't |
|
anything difficult about setting up your server. Inside the WAR file |
|
you will customise the login and other single sign on pages displayed |
|
to users. You will also need to specify in the web.xml a |
|
<literal>PasswordHandler</literal>. The |
|
<literal>PasswordHandler</literal> has a simple method that returns a |
|
boolean as to whether a given username and password is valid. Your |
|
<literal>PasswordHandler</literal> implementation will need to link |
|
into some type of backend authentication repository, such as an LDAP |
|
server or database.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>If you're running an existing CAS server, you will have already |
|
established a <literal>PasswordHandler</literal>. If you have not, |
|
might prefer to use the Acegi Security System for Spring |
|
<literal>CasPasswordHandler</literal> class. This class delegates |
|
through to the standard Acegi Security |
|
<literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>, enabling you to use a |
|
security configuration you might already have in place. You do not |
|
need to use the <literal>CasPasswordHandler</literal> class on your |
|
CAS server if you do not wish. The Acegi Security System for Spring |
|
will function as a CAS client successfully irrespective of the |
|
<literal>PasswordHandler</literal> you've chosen for your CAS |
|
server.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Apart from the CAS server itself, the other key player is of |
|
course the secure web applications deployed throughout your |
|
enterprise. These web applications are known as "services". There are |
|
two types of services: standard services and proxy services. A proxy |
|
service is able to request resources from other services on behalf of |
|
the user. This will be explained more fully later.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Services can be developed in a large variety of languages, due |
|
to CAS 2.0's very light XML-based protocol. The Yale CAS home page |
|
contains a clients archive which demonstrates CAS clients in Java, |
|
Active Server Pages, Perl, Python and others. Naturally, Java support |
|
is very strong given the CAS server is written in Java. You do not |
|
need to use any of CAS' client classes in applications secured by the |
|
Acegi Security System for Spring. This is handled transparently for |
|
you.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The basic interaction between a web browser, CAS server and an |
|
Acegi Security for System Spring secured service is as follows:</para> |
|
|
|
<orderedlist> |
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>The web user is browsing the service's public pages. CAS or |
|
Acegi Security is not involved.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>The user eventually requests a page that is either secure or |
|
one of the beans it uses is secure. Acegi Security's |
|
<literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal> will detect the |
|
<literal>AuthenticationException</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Because the user's <literal>Authentication</literal> object |
|
(or lack thereof) caused an |
|
<literal>AuthenticationException</literal>, the |
|
<literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal> will call the |
|
configured <literal>AuthenticationEntryPoint</literal>. If using |
|
CAS, this will be the |
|
<literal>CasProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> class.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>The <literal>CasProcessingFilterEntry</literal> point will |
|
redirect the user's browser to the CAS server. It will also |
|
indicate a <literal>service</literal> parameter, which is the |
|
callback URL for the Acegi Security service. For example, the URL |
|
the browser is redirected to might be |
|
<literal>https://my.company.com/cas/login?service=https://server3.company.com/webapp/j_acegi_cas_security_check</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>After the user's browser redirects to CAS, they will be |
|
prompted for their username and password. If the user presents a |
|
session cookie which indicates they've previously logged on, they |
|
will not be prompted to login again (there is an exception to this |
|
procedure, which we'll cover later). CAS will use the |
|
<literal>PasswordHandler</literal> discussed above to decide |
|
whether the username and password is valid.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Upon successful login, CAS will redirect the user's browser |
|
back to the original service. It will also include a |
|
<literal>ticket</literal> parameter, which is an opaque string |
|
representing the "service ticket". Continuing our earlier example, |
|
the URL the browser is redirected to might be |
|
<literal>https://server3.company.com/webapp/j_acegi_cas_security_check?ticket=ST-0-ER94xMJmn6pha35CQRoZ</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Back in the service web application, the |
|
<literal>CasProcessingFilter</literal> is always listening for |
|
requests to <literal>/j_acegi_cas_security_check</literal> (this |
|
is configurable, but we'll use the defaults in this introduction). |
|
The processing filter will construct a |
|
<literal>UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken</literal> |
|
representing the service ticket. The principal will be equal to |
|
<literal>CasProcessingFilter.CAS_STATEFUL_IDENTIFIER</literal>, |
|
whilst the credentials will be the service ticket opaque value. |
|
This authentication request will then be handed to the configured |
|
<literal>AuthenticationManager</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>The <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> implementation |
|
will be the <literal>ProviderManager</literal>, which is in turn |
|
configured with the <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal>. |
|
The <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> only responds to |
|
<literal>UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken</literal>s containing |
|
the CAS-specific principal (such as |
|
<literal>CasProcessingFilter.CAS_STATEFUL_IDENTIFIER</literal>) |
|
and <literal>CasAuthenticationToken</literal>s (discussed |
|
later).</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> will validate |
|
the service ticket using a <literal>TicketValidator</literal> |
|
implementation. Acegi Security includes one implementation, the |
|
<literal>CasProxyTicketValidator</literal>. This implementation a |
|
ticket validation class included in the CAS client library. The |
|
<literal>CasProxyTicketValidator</literal> makes a HTTPS request |
|
to the CAS server in order to validate the service ticket. The |
|
<literal>CasProxyTicketValidator</literal> may also include a |
|
proxy callback URL, which is included in this example: |
|
<literal>https://my.company.com/cas/proxyValidate?service=https://server3.company.com/webapp/j_acegi_cas_security_check&ticket=ST-0-ER94xMJmn6pha35CQRoZ&pgtUrl=https://server3.company.com/webapp/casProxy/receptor</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Back on the CAS server, the proxy validation request will be |
|
received. If the presented service ticket matches the service URL |
|
the ticket was issued to, CAS will provide an affirmative response |
|
in XML indicating the username. If any proxy was involved in the |
|
authentication (discussed below), the list of proxies is also |
|
included in the XML response.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>[OPTIONAL] If the request to the CAS validation service |
|
included the proxy callback URL (in the <literal>pgtUrl</literal> |
|
parameter), CAS will include a <literal>pgtIou</literal> string in |
|
the XML response. This <literal>pgtIou</literal> represents a |
|
proxy-granting ticket IOU. The CAS server will then create its own |
|
HTTPS connection back to the <literal>pgtUrl</literal>. This is to |
|
mutually authenticate the CAS server and the claimed service URL. |
|
The HTTPS connection will be used to send a proxy granting ticket |
|
to the original web application. For example, |
|
<literal>https://server3.company.com/webapp/casProxy/receptor?pgtIou=PGTIOU-0-R0zlgrl4pdAQwBvJWO3vnNpevwqStbSGcq3vKB2SqSFFRnjPHt&pgtId=PGT-1-si9YkkHLrtACBo64rmsi3v2nf7cpCResXg5MpESZFArbaZiOKH</literal>. |
|
We suggest you use CAS' <literal>ProxyTicketReceptor</literal> |
|
servlet to receive these proxy-granting tickets, if they are |
|
required.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>The <literal>CasProxyTicketValidator</literal> will parse |
|
the XML received from the CAS server. It will return to the |
|
<literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> a |
|
<literal>TicketResponse</literal>, which includes the username |
|
(mandatory), proxy list (if any were involved), and proxy-granting |
|
ticket IOU (if the proxy callback was requested).</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Next <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> will call |
|
a configured <literal>CasProxyDecider</literal>. The |
|
<literal>CasProxyDecider</literal> indicates whether the proxy |
|
list in the <literal>TicketResponse</literal> is acceptable to the |
|
service. Several implementations are provided with the Acegi |
|
Security System: <literal>RejectProxyTickets</literal>, |
|
<literal>AcceptAnyCasProxy</literal> and |
|
<literal>NamedCasProxyDecider</literal>. These names are largely |
|
self-explanatory, except <literal>NamedCasProxyDecider</literal> |
|
which allows a <literal>List</literal> of trusted proxies to be |
|
provided.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para><literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> will next |
|
request a <literal>CasAuthoritiesPopulator</literal> to advise the |
|
<literal>GrantedAuthority</literal> objects that apply to the user |
|
contained in the <literal>TicketResponse</literal>. Acegi Security |
|
includes a <literal>DaoCasAuthoritiesPopulator</literal> which |
|
simply uses the <literal>AuthenticationDao</literal> |
|
infrastructure to find the <literal>UserDetails</literal> and |
|
their associated <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>s. Note that |
|
the password and enabled/disabled status of |
|
<literal>UserDetails</literal> returned by the |
|
<literal>AuthenticationDao</literal> are ignored, as the CAS |
|
server is responsible for authentication decisions. |
|
<literal>DaoCasAuthoritiesPopulator</literal> is only concerned |
|
with retrieving the <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>s.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>If there were no problems, |
|
<literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> constructs a |
|
<literal>CasAuthenticationToken</literal> including the details |
|
contained in the <literal>TicketResponse</literal> and the |
|
<literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>s. The |
|
<literal>CasAuthenticationToken</literal> contains the hash of a |
|
key, so that the <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> |
|
knows it created it.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Control then returns to |
|
<literal>CasProcessingFilter</literal>, which places the created |
|
<literal>CasAuthenticationToken</literal> into the |
|
<literal>HttpSession</literal> attribute named |
|
<literal>HttpSessionIntegrationFilter.ACEGI_SECURITY_AUTHENTICATION_KEY</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>The user's browser is redirected to the original page that |
|
caused the <literal>AuthenticationException</literal>.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>As the <literal>Authentication</literal> object is now in |
|
the well-known location, it is handled like any other |
|
authentication approach. Usually the |
|
<literal>AutoIntegrationFilter</literal> will be used to associate |
|
the <literal>Authentication</literal> object with the |
|
<literal>ContextHolder</literal> for the duration of each |
|
request.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
</orderedlist> |
|
|
|
<para>It's good that you're still here! It might sound involved, but |
|
you can relax as the Acegi Security System for Spring classes hide |
|
much of the complexity. Let's now look at how this is |
|
configured.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-cas-install-server"> |
|
<title>CAS Server Installation (Optional)</title> |
|
|
|
<para>As mentioned above, the Acegi Security System for Spring |
|
includes a <literal>PasswordHandler</literal> that bridges your |
|
existing <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> into CAS. You do not |
|
need to use this <literal>PasswordHandler</literal> to use Acegi |
|
Security on the client side (any CAS |
|
<literal>PasswordHandler</literal> will do).</para> |
|
|
|
<para>To install, you will need to download and extract the CAS server |
|
archive. We used version 2.0.12. There will be a |
|
<literal>/web</literal> directory in the root of the deployment. Copy |
|
an <literal>applicationContext.xml</literal> containing your |
|
<literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> as well as the |
|
<literal>CasPasswordHandler</literal> into the |
|
<literal>/web/WEB-INF</literal> directory. A sample |
|
<literal>applicationContext.xml</literal> is included below:</para> |
|
|
|
<programlisting><bean id="inMemoryDaoImpl" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.dao.memory.InMemoryDaoImpl"> |
|
<property name="userMap"> |
|
<value> |
|
marissa=koala,ROLES_IGNORED_BY_CAS |
|
dianne=emu,ROLES_IGNORED_BY_CAS |
|
scott=wombat,ROLES_IGNORED_BY_CAS |
|
peter=opal,disabled,ROLES_IGNORED_BY_CAS |
|
</value> |
|
</property> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="daoAuthenticationProvider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.dao.DaoAuthenticationProvider"> |
|
<property name="authenticationDao"><ref bean="inMemoryDaoImpl"/></property> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="authenticationManager" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.ProviderManager"> |
|
<property name="providers"> |
|
<list> |
|
<ref bean="daoAuthenticationProvider"/> |
|
</list> |
|
</property> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="casPasswordHandler" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.cas.CasPasswordHandler"> |
|
<property name="authenticationManager"><ref bean="authenticationManager"/></property> |
|
</bean></programlisting> |
|
|
|
<para>Note the granted authorities are ignored by CAS because it has |
|
no way of communicating the granted authorities to calling |
|
applications. CAS is only concerned with username and passwords (and |
|
the enabled/disabled status).</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Next you will need to edit the existing |
|
<literal>/web/WEB-INF/web.xml</literal> file. Add (or edit in the case |
|
of the <literal>authHandler</literal> property) the following |
|
lines:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><context-param> |
|
<param-name>edu.yale.its.tp.cas.authHandler</param-name> |
|
<param-value>net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.cas.CasPasswordHandlerProxy</param-value> |
|
</context-param> |
|
|
|
<context-param> |
|
<param-name>contextConfigLocation</param-name> |
|
<param-value>/WEB-INF/applicationContext.xml</param-value> |
|
</context-param> |
|
|
|
<listener> |
|
<listener-class>org.springframework.web.context.ContextLoaderListener</listener-class> |
|
</listener></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>Copy the <literal>spring.jar</literal> and |
|
<literal>acegi-security.jar</literal> files into |
|
<literal>/web/WEB-INF/lib</literal>. Now use the <literal>ant |
|
dist</literal> task in the <literal>build.xml</literal> in the root of |
|
the directory structure. This will create |
|
<literal>/lib/cas.war</literal>, which is ready for deployment to your |
|
servlet container.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Note CAS heavily relies on HTTPS. You can't even test the system |
|
without a HTTPS certificate. Whilst you should refer to your web |
|
container's documentation on setting up HTTPS, if you need some |
|
additional help or a test certificate you might like to check the |
|
<literal>samples/contacts/etc/ssl</literal> directory.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-cas-install-client"> |
|
<title>CAS Acegi Security System Client Installation</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The web application side of CAS is made easy due to the Acegi |
|
Security System for Spring. It is assumed you already know the basics |
|
of using the Acegi Security System for Spring, so these are not |
|
covered again below. Only the CAS-specific beans are mentioned.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>You will need to add a <literal>ServiceProperties</literal> bean |
|
to your application context. This represents your service:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><bean id="serviceProperties" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.cas.ServiceProperties"> |
|
<property name="service"><value>https://localhost:8443/contacts-cas/j_acegi_cas_security_check</value></property> |
|
<property name="sendRenew"><value>false</value></property> |
|
</bean></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>service</literal> must equal a URL that will be |
|
monitored by the <literal>CasProcessingFilter</literal>. The |
|
<literal>sendRenew</literal> defaults to false, but should be set to |
|
true if your application is particularly sensitive. What this |
|
parameter does is tell the CAS login service that a single sign on |
|
login is unacceptable. Instead, the user will need to re-enter their |
|
username and password in order to gain access to the service.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The following beans should be configured to commence the CAS |
|
authentication process:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><bean id="casProcessingFilter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.cas.CasProcessingFilter"> |
|
<property name="authenticationManager"><ref bean="authenticationManager"/></property> |
|
<property name="authenticationFailureUrl"><value>/casfailed.jsp</value></property> |
|
<property name="defaultTargetUrl"><value>/</value></property> |
|
<property name="filterProcessesUrl"><value>/j_acegi_cas_security_check</value></property> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="securityEnforcementFilter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.intercept.web.SecurityEnforcementFilter"> |
|
<property name="filterSecurityInterceptor"><ref bean="filterInvocationInterceptor"/></property> |
|
<property name="authenticationEntryPoint"><ref bean="casProcessingFilterEntryPoint"/></property> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="casProcessingFilterEntryPoint" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.cas.CasProcessingFilterEntryPoint"> |
|
<property name="loginUrl"><value>https://localhost:8443/cas/login</value></property> |
|
<property name="serviceProperties"><ref bean="serviceProperties"/></property> |
|
</bean></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>You will also need to add the |
|
<literal>CasProcessingFilter</literal> to web.xml:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><filter> |
|
<filter-name>Acegi CAS Processing Filter</filter-name> |
|
<filter-class>net.sf.acegisecurity.util.FilterToBeanProxy</filter-class> |
|
<init-param> |
|
<param-name>targetClass</param-name> |
|
<param-value>net.sf.acegisecurity.ui.cas.CasProcessingFilter</param-value> |
|
</init-param> |
|
</filter> |
|
|
|
<filter-mapping> |
|
<filter-name>Acegi CAS Processing Filter</filter-name> |
|
<url-pattern>/*</url-pattern> |
|
</filter-mapping></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>CasProcessingFilter</literal> has very similar |
|
properties to the <literal>AuthenticationProcessingFilter</literal> |
|
(used for form-based logins). Each property is |
|
self-explanatory.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>For CAS to operate, the |
|
<literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal> must have its |
|
<literal>authenticationEntryPoint</literal> property set to the |
|
<literal>CasProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> bean.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>CasProcessingFilterEntryPoint</literal> must refer |
|
to the <literal>ServiceProperties</literal> bean (discussed above), |
|
which provides the URL to the enterprise's CAS login server. This is |
|
where the user's browser will be redirected.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Next you need to add an <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> |
|
that uses <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> and its |
|
collaborators:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><bean id="authenticationManager" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.ProviderManager"> |
|
<property name="providers"> |
|
<list> |
|
<ref bean="casAuthenticationProvider"/> |
|
</list> |
|
</property> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="casAuthenticationProvider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.cas.CasAuthenticationProvider"> |
|
<property name="casAuthoritiesPopulator"><ref bean="casAuthoritiesPopulator"/></property> |
|
<property name="casProxyDecider"><ref bean="casProxyDecider"/></property> |
|
<property name="ticketValidator"><ref bean="casProxyTicketValidator"/></property> |
|
<property name="statelessTicketCache"><ref bean="statelessTicketCache"/></property> |
|
<property name="key"><value>my_password_for_this_auth_provider_only</value></property> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="casProxyTicketValidator" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.cas.ticketvalidator.CasProxyTicketValidator"> |
|
<property name="casValidate"><value>https://localhost:8443/cas/proxyValidate</value></property> |
|
<property name="proxyCallbackUrl"><value>https://localhost:8443/contacts-cas/casProxy/receptor</value></property> |
|
<property name="serviceProperties"><ref bean="serviceProperties"/></property> |
|
<!-- <property name="trustStore"><value>/some/path/to/your/lib/security/cacerts</value></property> --> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="statelessTicketCache" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.cas.cache.EhCacheBasedTicketCache"> |
|
<property name="minutesToIdle"><value>20</value></property> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="casAuthoritiesPopulator" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.cas.populator.DaoCasAuthoritiesPopulator"> |
|
<property name="authenticationDao"><ref bean="inMemoryDaoImpl"/></property> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="casProxyDecider" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.providers.cas.proxy.RejectProxyTickets"/></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>The beans are all reasonable self-explanatory if you refer back |
|
to the "How CAS Works" section. Careful readers might notice one |
|
surprise: the <literal>statelessTicketCache</literal> property of the |
|
<literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal>. This is discussed in |
|
detail in the "Advanced CAS Usage" section.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Note the <literal>CasProxyTicketValidator</literal> has a |
|
remarked out <literal>trustStore</literal> property. This property |
|
might be helpful if you experience HTTPS certificate issues. Also note |
|
the <literal>proxyCallbackUrl</literal> is set so the service can |
|
receive a proxy-granting ticket. As mentioned above, this is optional |
|
and unnecessary if you do not require proxy-granting tickets. If you |
|
do use this feature, you will need to configure a suitable servlet to |
|
receive the proxy-granting tickets. We suggest you use CAS' |
|
<literal>ProxyTicketReceptor</literal> by adding the following to your |
|
web application's <literal>web.xml</literal>:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><servlet> |
|
<servlet-name>casproxy</servlet-name> |
|
<servlet-class>edu.yale.its.tp.cas.proxy.ProxyTicketReceptor</servlet-class> |
|
</servlet> |
|
|
|
<servlet-mapping> |
|
<servlet-name>casproxy</servlet-name> |
|
<url-pattern>/casProxy/*</url-pattern> |
|
</servlet-mapping></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>This completes the configuration of CAS. If you haven't made any |
|
mistakes, your web application should happily work within the |
|
framework of CAS single sign on. No other parts of the Acegi Security |
|
System for Spring need to be concerned about the fact CAS handled |
|
authentication.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>There is also a <literal>contacts-cas.war</literal> file in the |
|
sample applications directory. This sample application uses the above |
|
settings and can be deployed to see CAS in operation.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-cas-advanced-usage"> |
|
<title>Advanced CAS Usage</title> |
|
|
|
<para>[DRAFT - COMMENTS WELCOME]</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> distinguishes |
|
between stateful and stateless clients. A stateful client is |
|
considered any that originates via the |
|
<literal>CasProcessingFilter</literal>. A stateless client is any that |
|
presents an authentication request via the |
|
<literal>UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken</literal> with a |
|
principal equal to |
|
<literal>CasProcessingFilter.CAS_STATELESS_IDENTIFIER</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Stateless clients are likely to be via remoting protocols such |
|
as Hessian and Burlap. The <literal>BasicProcessingFilter</literal> is |
|
still used in this case, but the remoting protocol client is expected |
|
to present a username equal to the static string above, and a password |
|
equal to a CAS service ticket. Clients should acquire a CAS service |
|
ticket directly from the CAS server.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Because remoting protocols have no way of presenting themselves |
|
within the context of a <literal>HttpSession</literal>, it isn't |
|
possible to rely on the <literal>HttpSession</literal>'s |
|
<literal>HttpSessionIntegrationFilter.ACEGI_SECURITY_AUTHENTICATION_KEY</literal> |
|
attribute to locate the <literal>CasAuthenticationToken</literal>. |
|
Furthermore, because the CAS server invalidates a service ticket after |
|
it has been validated by the <literal>TicketValidator</literal>, |
|
presenting the same service ticket on subsequent requests will not |
|
work. It is similarly very difficult to obtain a proxy-granting ticket |
|
for a remoting protocol client, as they are often deployed on client |
|
machines which rarely have HTTPS URLs that would be accessible to the |
|
CAS server.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>One obvious option is to not use CAS at all for remoting |
|
protocol clients. However, this would eliminate many of the desirable |
|
features of CAS.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>As a middle-ground, the |
|
<literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> uses a |
|
<literal>StatelessTicketCache</literal>. This is used solely for |
|
requests with a principal equal to |
|
<literal>CasProcessingFilter.CAS_STATELESS_IDENTIFIER</literal>. What |
|
happens is the <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> will store |
|
the resulting <literal>CasAuthenticationToken</literal> in the |
|
<literal>StatelessTicketCache</literal>, keyed on the service ticket. |
|
Accordingly, remoting protocol clients can present the same service |
|
ticket and the <literal>CasAuthenticationProvider</literal> will not |
|
need to contact the CAS server for validation (aside from the first |
|
request).</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The other aspect of advanced CAS usage involves creating proxy |
|
tickets from the proxy-granting ticket. As indicated above, we |
|
recommend you use CAS' <literal>ProxyTicketReceptor</literal> to |
|
receive these tickets. The <literal>ProxyTicketReceptor</literal> |
|
provides a static method that enables you to obtain a proxy ticket by |
|
presenting the proxy-granting IOU ticket. You can obtain the |
|
proxy-granting IOU ticket by calling |
|
<literal>CasAuthenticationToken.getProxyGrantingTicketIou()</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>It is hoped you find CAS integration easy and useful with the |
|
Acegi Security System for Spring classes. Welcome to enterprise-wide |
|
single sign on!</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
</sect1> |
|
|
|
<sect1 id="security-channels"> |
|
<title>Channel Security</title> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-channels-overview"> |
|
<title>Overview</title> |
|
|
|
<para>In addition to coordinating the authentication and authorization |
|
requirements of your application, the Acegi Security System for Spring |
|
is also able to ensure unauthenticated web requests have certain |
|
properties. These properties may include being of a particular |
|
transport type, having a particular <literal>HttpSession</literal> |
|
attribute set and so on. The most common requirement is for your web |
|
requests to be received using a particular transport protocol, such as |
|
HTTPS.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>An important issue in considering transport security is that of |
|
session hijacking. Your web container manages a |
|
<literal>HttpSession</literal> by reference to a |
|
<literal>jsessionid</literal> that is sent to user agents either via a |
|
cookie or URL rewriting. If the <literal>jsessionid</literal> is ever |
|
sent over HTTP, there is a possibility that session identifier can be |
|
intercepted and used to impersonate the user after they complete the |
|
authentication process. This is because most web containers maintain |
|
the same session identifier for a given user, even after they switch |
|
from HTTP to HTTPS pages.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>If session hijacking is considered too significant a risk for |
|
your particular application, the only option is to use HTTPS for every |
|
request. This means the <literal>jsessionid</literal> is never sent |
|
across an insecure channel. You will need to ensure your |
|
<literal>web.xml</literal>-defined |
|
<literal><welcome-file></literal> points to a HTTPS location, |
|
and the application never directs the user to a HTTP location. The |
|
Acegi Security System for Spring provides a solution to assist with |
|
the latter.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-channels-installation"> |
|
<title>Configuration</title> |
|
|
|
<para>To utilise Acegi Security's channel security services, add the |
|
following lines to <literal>web.xml</literal>:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><filter> |
|
<filter-name>Acegi Channel Processing Filter</filter-name> |
|
<filter-class>net.sf.acegisecurity.util.FilterToBeanProxy</filter-class> |
|
<init-param> |
|
<param-name>targetClass</param-name> |
|
<param-value>net.sf.acegisecurity.securechannel.ChannelProcessingFilter</param-value> |
|
</init-param> |
|
</filter> |
|
|
|
<filter-mapping> |
|
<filter-name>Acegi Channel Processing Filter</filter-name> |
|
<url-pattern>/*</url-pattern> |
|
</filter-mapping></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>As usual when running <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal>, you |
|
will also need to configure the filter in your application |
|
context:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><bean id="channelProcessingFilter" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.securechannel.ChannelProcessingFilter"> |
|
<property name="channelDecisionManager"><ref bean="channelDecisionManager"/></property> |
|
<property name="filterInvocationDefinitionSource"> |
|
<value> |
|
CONVERT_URL_TO_LOWERCASE_BEFORE_COMPARISON |
|
\A/secure/.*\Z=REQUIRES_SECURE_CHANNEL |
|
\A/acegilogin.jsp.*\Z=REQUIRES_SECURE_CHANNEL |
|
\A/j_acegi_security_check.*\Z=REQUIRES_SECURE_CHANNEL |
|
\A.*\Z=REQUIRES_INSECURE_CHANNEL |
|
</value> |
|
</property> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="channelDecisionManager" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.securechannel.ChannelDecisionManagerImpl"> |
|
<property name="channelProcessors"> |
|
<list> |
|
<ref bean="secureChannelProcessor"/> |
|
<ref bean="insecureChannelProcessor"/> |
|
</list> |
|
</property> |
|
</bean> |
|
|
|
<bean id="secureChannelProcessor" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.securechannel.SecureChannelProcessor"/> |
|
<bean id="insecureChannelProcessor" class="net.sf.acegisecurity.securechannel.InsecureChannelProcessor"/></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>Like <literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor</literal>, Apache Ant |
|
style paths are also supported by the |
|
<literal>ChannelProcessingFilter</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>ChannelProcessingFilter</literal> operates by |
|
filtering all web requests and determining the configuration |
|
attributes that apply. It then delegates to the |
|
<literal>ChannelDecisionManager</literal>. The default implementation, |
|
<literal>ChannelDecisionManagerImpl</literal>, should suffice in most |
|
cases. It simply delegates through the list of configured |
|
<literal>ChannelProcessor</literal> instances. A |
|
<literal>ChannelProcessor</literal> will review the request, and if it |
|
is unhappy with the request (eg it was received across the incorrect |
|
transport protocol), it will perform a redirect, throw an exception or |
|
take whatever other action is appropriate.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Included with the Acegi Security System for Spring are two |
|
concrete <literal>ChannelProcessor</literal> implementations: |
|
<literal>SecureChannelProcessor</literal> ensures requests with a |
|
configuration attribute of <literal>REQUIRES_SECURE_CHANNEL</literal> |
|
are received over HTTPS, whilst |
|
<literal>InsecureChannelProcessor</literal> ensures requests with a |
|
configuration attribute of |
|
<literal>REQUIRES_INSECURE_CHANNEL</literal> are received over HTTP. |
|
Both implementations delegate to a |
|
<literal>ChannelEntryPoint</literal> if the required transport |
|
protocol is not used. The two <literal>ChannelEntryPoint</literal> |
|
implementations included with Acegi Security simply redirect the |
|
request to HTTP and HTTPS as appropriate. Appropriate defaults are |
|
assigned to the <literal>ChannelProcessor</literal> implementations |
|
for the configuration attribute keywords they respond to and the |
|
<literal>ChannelEntryPoint</literal> they delegate to, although you |
|
have the ability to override these using the application |
|
context.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Note that the redirections are absolute (eg |
|
http://www.company.com:8080/app/page), not relative (eg /app/page). |
|
During testing it was discovered that Internet Explorer 6 Service Pack |
|
1 has a bug whereby it does not respond correctly to a redirection |
|
instruction which also changes the port to use. Accordingly, absolute |
|
URLs are used in conjunction with bug detection logic in the |
|
<literal>PortResolverImpl</literal> that is wired up by default to |
|
many Acegi Security beans. Please refer to the JavaDocs for |
|
<literal>PortResolverImpl</literal> for further details.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-channels-usage"> |
|
<title>Usage</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Once configured, using the channel security filter is very easy. |
|
Simply request pages without regard to the protocol (ie HTTP or HTTPS) |
|
or port (eg 80, 8080, 443, 8443 etc). Obviously you'll still need a |
|
way of making the initial request (probably via the |
|
<literal>web.xml</literal> <literal><welcome-file></literal> or |
|
a well-known home page URL), but once this is done the filter will |
|
perform redirects as defined by your application context.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>You can also add your own <literal>ChannelProcessor</literal> |
|
implementations to the <literal>ChannelDecisionManagerImpl</literal>. |
|
For example, you might set a <literal>HttpSession</literal> attribute |
|
when a human user is detected via a "enter the contents of this |
|
graphic" procedure. Your <literal>ChannelProcessor</literal> would |
|
respond to say <literal>REQUIRES_HUMAN_USER</literal> configuration |
|
attributes and redirect to an appropriate entry point to start the |
|
human user validation process if the <literal>HttpSession</literal> |
|
attribute is not currently set.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>To decide whether a security check belongs in a |
|
<literal>ChannelProcessor</literal> or an |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal>, remember that the former is |
|
designed to handle unauthenticated requests, whilst the latter is |
|
designed to handle authenticated requests. The latter therefore has |
|
access to the granted authorities of the authenticated principal. In |
|
addition, problems detected by a <literal>ChannelProcessor</literal> |
|
will generally cause a HTTP/HTTPS redirection so its requirements can |
|
be met, whilst problems detected by an |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> will ultimately result in an |
|
<literal>AccessDeniedException</literal> (depending on the governing |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionManager</literal>).</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
</sect1> |
|
|
|
<sect1 id="acls"> |
|
<title>Instance-Based Access Control List (ACL) Security</title> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="acls-overview"> |
|
<title>Overview</title> |
|
|
|
<para>THIS FEATURE WAS ADDED IN VERSION 0.6. WE WELCOME YOUR COMMENTS |
|
AND IMPROVEMENTS.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Complex applications often will find the need to define access |
|
permissions not simply at a web request or method invocation level. |
|
Instead, security decisions need to comprise both who |
|
(<literal>Authentication</literal>), where |
|
(<literal>MethodInvocation</literal>) and what |
|
(<literal>SomeDomainObject</literal>). In other words, authorization |
|
decisions also need to consider the actual domain object instance |
|
subject of a method invocation.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Imagine you're designing an application for a pet clinic. There |
|
will be two main groups of users of your Spring-based application: |
|
staff of the pet clinic, as well as the pet clinic's customers. The |
|
staff will have access to all of the data, whilst your customers will |
|
only be able to see their own customer records. To make it a little |
|
more interesting, your customers can allow other users to see their |
|
customer records, such as their "puppy preschool "mentor or president |
|
of their local "Pony Club". Using Acegi Security System for Spring as |
|
the foundation, you have several approaches that can be |
|
used:<orderedlist> |
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Write your business methods to enforce the security. You |
|
could consult a collection within the |
|
<literal>Customer</literal> domain object instance to determine |
|
which users have access. By using the |
|
<literal>ContextHolder.getContext()</literal> and casting it to |
|
<literal>SecureContext</literal>, you'll be able to access the |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Write an <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> to enforce |
|
the security from the <literal>GrantedAuthority[]</literal>s |
|
stored in the <literal>Authentication</literal> object. This |
|
would mean your <literal>AuthenticationManager</literal> would |
|
need to populate the <literal>Authentication</literal> with |
|
custom <literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>[]s representing each |
|
of the <literal>Customer</literal> domain object instances the |
|
principal has access to.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Write an <literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> to enforce |
|
the security and open the target <literal>Customer</literal> |
|
domain object directly. This would mean your voter needs access |
|
to a DAO that allows it to retrieve the |
|
<literal>Customer</literal> object. It would then access the |
|
<literal>Customer</literal> object's collection of approved |
|
users and make the appropriate decision.</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
</orderedlist></para> |
|
|
|
<para>Each one of these approaches is perfectly legitimate. However, |
|
the first couples your authorization checking to your business code. |
|
The main problems with this include the enhanced difficulty of unit |
|
testing and the fact it would be more difficult to reuse the |
|
<literal>Customer</literal> authorization logic elsewhere. Obtaining |
|
the <literal>GrantedAuthority[]</literal>s from the |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object is also fine, but will not |
|
scale to large numbers of <literal>Customer</literal>s. If a user |
|
might be able to access 5,000 <literal>Customer</literal>s (unlikely |
|
in this case, but imagine if it were a popular vet for a large Pony |
|
Club!) the amount of memory consumed and time required to construct |
|
the <literal>Authentication</literal> object would be undesirable. The |
|
final method, opening the <literal>Customer</literal> directly from |
|
external code, is probably the best of the three. It achieves |
|
separation of concerns, and doesn't misuse memory or CPU cycles, but |
|
it is still inefficient in that both the |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> and the eventual business |
|
method itself will perform a call to the DAO responsible for |
|
retrieving the <literal>Customer</literal> object. Two accesses per |
|
method invocation is clearly undesirable. In addition, with every |
|
approach listed you'll need to write your own access control list |
|
(ACL) persistence and business logic from scratch.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Fortunately, there is another alternative, which we'll talk |
|
about below.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="acls-acl-package"> |
|
<title>The net.sf.acegisecurity.acl Package</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>net.sf.acegisecurity.acl</literal> package is very |
|
simple, comprising only a handful of interfaces and a single class. It |
|
provides the basic foundation for access control list (ACL) lookups. |
|
The central interface is <literal>AclManager</literal>, which is |
|
defined by two methods:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting>public AclEntry[] getAcls(java.lang.Object domainInstance); |
|
public AclEntry[] getAcls(java.lang.Object domainInstance, Authentication authentication);</programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para><literal>AclManager</literal> is intended to be used as a |
|
collaborator against your business objects, or, more desirably, |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal>s. This means you use Spring's |
|
normal <literal>ApplicationContext</literal> features to wire up your |
|
<literal>AccessDecisionVoter</literal> (or business method) with an |
|
<literal>AclManager</literal>. Consideration was given to placing the |
|
ACL information in the <literal>ContextHolder</literal>, but it was |
|
felt this would be inefficient both in terms of memory usage as well |
|
as the time spent loading potentially unused ACL information. The |
|
trade-off of needing to wire up a collaborator for those objects |
|
requiring ACL information is rather minor, particularly in a |
|
Spring-managed application.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The first method of the <literal>AclManager</literal> will |
|
return all ACLs applying to the domain object instance passed to it. |
|
The second method does the same, but only returns those ACLs which |
|
apply to the passed <literal>Authentication</literal> object.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>AclEntry</literal> interface returned by |
|
<literal>AclManager</literal> is merely a marker interface. You will |
|
need to provide an implementation that reflects that ACL permissions |
|
for your application.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Rounding out the <literal>net.sf.acegisecurity.acl</literal> |
|
package is an <literal>AclProviderManager</literal> class, with a |
|
corresponding <literal>AclProvider</literal> interface. |
|
<literal>AclProviderManager</literal> is a concrete implementation of |
|
<literal>AclManager</literal>, which iterates through registered |
|
<literal>AclProvider</literal>s. The first |
|
<literal>AclProvider</literal> that indicates it can authoritatively |
|
provide ACL information for the presented domain object instance will |
|
be used. This is very similar to the |
|
<literal>AuthenticationProvider</literal> interface used for |
|
authentication.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>With this background, let's now look at a usable ACL |
|
implementation.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="acls-masking"> |
|
<title>Integer Masked ACLs</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Acegi Security System for Spring includes a production-quality |
|
ACL provider implementation. The implementation is based on integer |
|
masking, which is commonly used for ACL permissions given its |
|
flexibility and speed. Anyone who has used Unix's |
|
<literal>chmod</literal> command will know all about this type of |
|
permission masking (eg <literal>chmod 777</literal>). You'll find the |
|
classes and interfaces for the integer masking ACL package under |
|
<literal>net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Extending the <literal>AclEntry</literal> interface is a |
|
<literal>BasicAclEntry</literal> interface, with the main methods |
|
shown below:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting>public AclObjectIdentity getAclObjectIdentity(); |
|
public AclObjectIdentity getAclObjectParentIdentity(); |
|
public int getMask(); |
|
public java.lang.Object getRecipient();</programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>As shown, each <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal> has four main |
|
properties. The <literal>mask</literal> is the integer that represents |
|
the permissions granted to the <literal>recipient</literal>. The |
|
<literal>aclObjectIdentity</literal> is able to identify the domain |
|
object instance for which the ACL applies, and the |
|
<literal>aclObjectParentIdentity</literal> optionally specifies the |
|
parent of the domain object instance. Multiple |
|
<literal>BasicAclEntry</literal>s usually exist against a single |
|
domain object instance, and as suggested by the parent identity |
|
property, permissions granted higher in the object hierarchy will |
|
trickle down and be inherited (unless blocked by integer zero).</para> |
|
|
|
<para><literal>BasicAclEntry</literal> implementations typically |
|
provide convenience methods, such as |
|
<literal>isReadAllowed()</literal>, to avoid application classes |
|
needing to perform bit masking themselves. The |
|
<literal>SimpleAclEntry</literal> and |
|
<literal>AbstractBasicAclEntry</literal> demonstrate and provide much |
|
of this bit masking logic.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>AclObjectIdentity</literal> itself is merely a |
|
marker interface, so you need to provide implementations for your |
|
domain objects. However, the package does include a |
|
<literal>NamedEntityObjectIdentity</literal> implementation which will |
|
suit many needs. The <literal>NamedEntityObjectIdentity</literal> |
|
identifies a given domain object instance by the classname of the |
|
instance and the identity of the instance. A |
|
<literal>NamedEntityObjectIdentity</literal> can be constructed |
|
manually (by calling the constructor and providing the classname and |
|
identity <literal>String</literal>s), or by passing in any domain |
|
object that contains a <literal>getId()</literal> method.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The actual <literal>AclProvider</literal> implementation is |
|
named <literal>BasicAclProvider</literal>. It has adopted a similar |
|
design to that used by the authentication-related |
|
<literal>DaoAuthenticationProvder</literal>. Specifically, you define |
|
a <literal>BasicAclDao</literal> against the provider, so different |
|
ACL repository types can be accessed in a pluggable manner. The |
|
<literal>BasicAclProvider</literal> also supports pluggable cache |
|
providers (with Acegi Security System for Spring including an |
|
implementation that fronts EH-CACHE).</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>BasicAclDao</literal> interface is very simple to |
|
implement:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting>public BasicAclEntry[] getAcls(AclObjectIdentity aclObjectIdentity);</programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>A <literal>BasicAclDao</literal> implementation needs to |
|
understand the presented <literal>AclObjectIdentity</literal> and how |
|
it maps to a storage repository, find the relevant records, and create |
|
appropriate <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal> objects and return |
|
them.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Acegi Security includes a single <literal>BasicAclDao</literal> |
|
implementation called <literal>JdbcDaoImpl</literal>. As implied by |
|
the name, it accesses ACL information from a JDBC database. The |
|
default database schema and some sample data will aid in understanding |
|
its function:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting>CREATE TABLE acl_object_identity ( |
|
id IDENTITY NOT NULL, |
|
object_identity VARCHAR_IGNORECASE(250) NOT NULL, |
|
parent_object INTEGER, |
|
acl_class VARCHAR_IGNORECASE(250) NOT NULL, |
|
CONSTRAINT unique_object_identity UNIQUE(object_identity), |
|
FOREIGN KEY (parent_object) REFERENCES acl_object_identity(id) |
|
); |
|
|
|
CREATE TABLE acl_permission ( |
|
id IDENTITY NOT NULL, |
|
acl_object_identity INTEGER NOT NULL, |
|
recipient VARCHAR_IGNORECASE(100) NOT NULL, |
|
mask INTEGER NOT NULL, |
|
CONSTRAINT unique_recipient UNIQUE(acl_object_identity, recipient), |
|
FOREIGN KEY (acl_object_identity) REFERENCES acl_object_identity(id) |
|
); |
|
|
|
INSERT INTO acl_object_identity VALUES (1, 'corp.DomainObject:1', null, 'net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry'); |
|
INSERT INTO acl_object_identity VALUES (2, 'corp.DomainObject:2', 1, 'net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry'); |
|
INSERT INTO acl_object_identity VALUES (3, 'corp.DomainObject:3', 1, 'net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry'); |
|
INSERT INTO acl_object_identity VALUES (4, 'corp.DomainObject:4', 1, 'net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry'); |
|
INSERT INTO acl_object_identity VALUES (5, 'corp.DomainObject:5', 3, 'net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry'); |
|
INSERT INTO acl_object_identity VALUES (6, 'corp.DomainObject:6', 3, 'net.sf.acegisecurity.acl.basic.SimpleAclEntry'); |
|
|
|
INSERT INTO acl_permission VALUES (null, 1, 'ROLE_SUPERVISOR', 1); |
|
INSERT INTO acl_permission VALUES (null, 2, 'ROLE_SUPERVISOR', 0); |
|
INSERT INTO acl_permission VALUES (null, 2, 'marissa', 2); |
|
INSERT INTO acl_permission VALUES (null, 3, 'scott', 14); |
|
INSERT INTO acl_permission VALUES (null, 6, 'scott', 1);</programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>As can be seen, database-specific constraints are used |
|
extensively to ensure the integrity of the ACL information. If you |
|
need to use a different database (Hypersonic SQL statements are shown |
|
above), you should try to implement equivalent constraints.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>JdbcDaoImpl</literal> will only respond to requests |
|
for <literal>NamedEntityObjectIdentity</literal>s. It converts such |
|
identities into a single <literal>String</literal>, comprising |
|
the<literal> NamedEntityObjectIdentity.getClassname()</literal> + |
|
<literal>":"</literal> + |
|
<literal>NamedEntityObjectIdentity.getId()</literal>. This yields the |
|
type of <literal>object_identity</literal> values shown above. As |
|
indicated by the sample data, each database row corresponds to a |
|
single <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal>. As stated earlier and |
|
demonstrated by <literal>corp.DomainObject:2</literal> in the above |
|
sample data, each domain object instance will often have multiple |
|
<literal>BasicAclEntry</literal>[]s.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>As <literal>JdbcDaoImpl</literal> is required to return concrete |
|
<literal>BasicAclEntry</literal> classes, it needs to know which |
|
<literal>BasicAclEntry</literal> implementation it is to create and |
|
populate. This is the role of the <literal>acl_class</literal> column. |
|
<literal>JdbcDaoImpl</literal> will create the indicated class and set |
|
its <literal>mask</literal>, <literal>recipient</literal>, |
|
<literal>aclObjectIdentity</literal> and |
|
<literal>aclObjectParentIdentity</literal> properties.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>As you can probably tell from the sample data, the |
|
<literal>parent_object_identity</literal> value can either be null or |
|
in the same format as the <literal>object_identity</literal>. If |
|
non-null, <literal>JdbcDaoImpl</literal> will create a |
|
<literal>NamedEntityObjectIdentity</literal> to place inside the |
|
returned <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal> class.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Returning to the <literal>BasicAclProvider</literal>, before it |
|
can poll the <literal>BasicAclDao</literal> implementation it needs to |
|
convert the domain object instance it was passed into an |
|
<literal>AclObjectIdentity</literal>. |
|
<literal>BasicAclProvider</literal> has a <literal>protected |
|
AclObjectIdentity obtainIdentity(Object domainInstance)</literal> |
|
method that is responsible for this. As a protected method, it enables |
|
subclasses to easily override. The normal implementation checks |
|
whether the passed domain object instance implements the |
|
<literal>AclObjectIdentityAware</literal> interface, which is merely a |
|
getter for an <literal>AclObjectIdentity</literal>. If the domain |
|
object does implement this interface, that is the identity returned. |
|
If the domain object does not implement this interface, the method |
|
will attempt to create an <literal>AclObjectIdentity</literal> by |
|
passing the domain object instance to the constructor of a class |
|
defined by the |
|
<literal>BasicAclProvider.getDefaultAclObjectIdentity()</literal> |
|
method. By default the defined class is |
|
<literal>NamedEntityObjectIdentity</literal>, which was described in |
|
more detail above. Therefore, you will need to either (i) provide a |
|
<literal>getId()</literal> method on your domain objects, (ii) |
|
implement <literal>AclObjectIdentityAware</literal> on your domain |
|
objects, (iii) provide an alternative |
|
<literal>AclObjectIdentity</literal> implementation that will accept |
|
your domain object in its constructor, or (iv) override the |
|
<literal>obtainIdentity(Object)</literal> method.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Once the <literal>AclObjectIdentity</literal> of the domain |
|
object instance is determined, the <literal>BasicAclProvider</literal> |
|
will poll the DAO to obtain its <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal>[]s. |
|
If any of the entries returned by the DAO indicate there is a parent, |
|
that parent will be polled, and the process will repeat until there is |
|
no further parent. The permissions assigned to a |
|
<literal>recipient</literal> closest to the domain object instance |
|
will always take priority and override any inherited permissions. From |
|
the sample data above, the following inherited permissions would |
|
apply:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting>--- Mask integer 0 = no permissions |
|
--- Mask integer 1 = administer |
|
--- Mask integer 2 = read |
|
--- Mask integer 6 = read and write permissions |
|
--- Mask integer 14 = read and write and create permissions |
|
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
--- *** INHERITED RIGHTS FOR DIFFERENT INSTANCES AND RECIPIENTS *** |
|
--- INSTANCE RECIPIENT PERMISSION(S) (COMMENT #INSTANCE) |
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
--- 1 ROLE_SUPERVISOR Administer |
|
--- 2 ROLE_SUPERVISOR None (overrides parent #1) |
|
--- marissa Read |
|
--- 3 ROLE_SUPERVISOR Administer (from parent #1) |
|
--- scott Read, Write, Create |
|
--- 4 ROLE_SUPERVISOR Administer (from parent #1) |
|
--- 5 ROLE_SUPERVISOR Administer (from parent #3) |
|
--- scott Read, Write, Create (from parent #3) |
|
--- 6 ROLE_SUPERVISOR Administer (from parent #3) |
|
--- scott Administer (overrides parent #3)</programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>So the above explains how a domain object instance has its |
|
<literal>AclObjectIdentity</literal> discovered, and the |
|
<literal>BasicAclDao</literal> will be polled successively until an |
|
array of inherited permissions is constructed for the domain object |
|
instance. The final step is to determine the |
|
<literal>BasicAclEntry</literal>[]s that are actually applicable to a |
|
given <literal>Authentication</literal> object.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>As you would recall, the <literal>AclManager</literal> (and all |
|
delegates, up to and including <literal>BasicAclProvider</literal>) |
|
provides a method which returns only those |
|
<literal>BasicAclEntry</literal>[]s applying to a passed |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal> object. |
|
<literal>BasicAclProvider</literal> delivers this functionality by |
|
delegating the filtering operation to an |
|
<literal>EffectiveAclsResolver</literal> implementation. The default |
|
implementation, |
|
<literal>GrantedAuthorityEffectiveAclsResolver</literal>, will iterate |
|
through the <literal>BasicAclEntry</literal>[]s and include only those |
|
where the <literal>recipient</literal> is equal to either the |
|
<literal>Authentication</literal>'s <literal>principal</literal> or |
|
any of the <literal>Authentication</literal>'s |
|
<literal>GrantedAuthority</literal>[]s. Please refer to the JavaDocs |
|
for more information.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="acls-conclusion"> |
|
<title>Conclusion</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Acegi Security's instance-specific ACL packages shield you from |
|
much of the complexity of developing your own ACL approach. The |
|
interfaces and classes detailed above provide a scalable, customisable |
|
ACL solution that is decoupled from your application code. Whilst the |
|
reference documentation may suggest complexity, the basic |
|
implementation is able to support most typical applications |
|
out-of-the-box.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
</sect1> |
|
|
|
<sect1 id="security-filters"> |
|
<title>Filters</title> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-filters-overview"> |
|
<title>Overview</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The Acegi Security System for Spring uses filters extensively. |
|
Each filter is covered in detail in a respective section of this |
|
document. This section includes information that applies to all |
|
filters.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-filters-filtertobeanproxy"> |
|
<title>FilterToBeanProxy</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Most filters are configured using the |
|
<literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal>. An example configuration from |
|
<literal>web.xml</literal> follows:</para> |
|
|
|
<para><programlisting><filter> |
|
<filter-name>Acegi HTTP Request Security Filter</filter-name> |
|
<filter-class>net.sf.acegisecurity.util.FilterToBeanProxy</filter-class> |
|
<init-param> |
|
<param-name>targetClass</param-name> |
|
<param-value>net.sf.acegisecurity.ClassThatImplementsFilter</param-value> |
|
</init-param> |
|
</filter></programlisting></para> |
|
|
|
<para>Notice that the filter in <literal>web.xml</literal> is actually |
|
a <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal>, and not the filter that will |
|
actually implements the logic of the filter. What |
|
<literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal> does is delegate the |
|
<literal>Filter</literal>'s methods through to a bean which is |
|
obtained from the Spring application context. This enables the bean to |
|
benefit from the Spring application context lifecycle support and |
|
configuration flexibility. The bean must implement |
|
<literal>javax.servlet.Filter</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The <literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal> only requires a single |
|
initialization parameter, <literal>targetClass</literal> or |
|
<literal>targetBean</literal>. The <literal>targetClass</literal> |
|
parameter locates the first object in the application context of the |
|
specified class, whilst <literal>targetBean</literal> locates the |
|
object by bean name. Like standard Spring web applications, the |
|
<literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal> accesses the application context |
|
via<literal> |
|
WebApplicationContextUtils.getWebApplicationContext(ServletContext)</literal>, |
|
so you should configure a <literal>ContextLoaderListener</literal> in |
|
<literal>web.xml</literal>.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
|
|
<sect2 id="security-filters-order"> |
|
<title>Filter Ordering</title> |
|
|
|
<para>The order that filters are defined in <literal>web.xml</literal> |
|
is important.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Irrespective of which filters you are actually using, the order |
|
of the <literal><filter-mapping></literal>s should be as |
|
follows:</para> |
|
|
|
<orderedlist> |
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Acegi Channel Processing Filter |
|
(<literal>ChannelProcessingFilter</literal>)</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Acegi Authentication Processing Filter |
|
(<literal>AuthenticationProcessingFilter</literal>)</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Acegi CAS Processing Filter |
|
(<literal>CasProcessingFilter</literal>)</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Acegi HTTP BASIC Authorization Filter |
|
(<literal>BasicProcessingFilter</literal>)</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Acegi Security System for Spring Auto Integration Filter |
|
(<literal>AutoIntegrationFilter</literal>)</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Acegi HTTP Request Security Filter |
|
(<literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal>)</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
</orderedlist> |
|
|
|
<para>All of the above filters use |
|
<literal>FilterToBeanProxy</literal>, which is discussed in the |
|
previous section.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>If you're using SiteMesh, ensure the Acegi Security filters |
|
execute before the SiteMesh filters are called. This enables the |
|
<literal>ContextHolder</literal> to be populated in time for use by |
|
SiteMesh decorators.</para> |
|
</sect2> |
|
</sect1> |
|
|
|
<sect1 id="security-sample"> |
|
<title>Contacts Sample Application</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Included with the Acegi Security System for Spring is a very |
|
simple application that can demonstrate the basic security facilities |
|
provided by the system (and confirm your Container Adapter is properly |
|
configured if you're using one).</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The Contacts sample application includes two deployable versions: |
|
<literal>contacts.war</literal> is configured with the HTTP Session |
|
Authentication approach, and does not use Container Adapters. The |
|
<literal>contacts-container-adapter.war</literal> is configured to use a |
|
Container Adapter. If you're just wanting to see how the sample |
|
application works, please use <literal>contacts.war</literal> as it does |
|
not require special configuration of your container.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>If you are going to use the |
|
<literal>contacts-container-adapter.war</literal> version, first |
|
configure your container as described in the Container Adapters section |
|
of this chapter. Do not modify <literal>acegisecurity.xml</literal>. It |
|
contains a very basic in-memory authentication configuration that is |
|
compatible with the sample application.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>To deploy, simply copy the relevant |
|
<literal>contacts.war</literal> or |
|
<literal>contacts-container-adapter.war</literal> file from the Acegi |
|
Security System for Spring distribution into your container’s |
|
<literal>webapps</literal> directory.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>After starting your container, check the application can load. |
|
Visit <literal>http://localhost:8080/contacts</literal> (or whichever |
|
URL is appropriate for your web container and the WAR you deployed). A |
|
random contact should be displayed. Click "Refresh" several times and |
|
you will see different contacts. The business method that provides this |
|
random contact is not secured.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Next, click "Debug". You will be prompted to authenticate, and a |
|
series of usernames and passwords are suggested on that page. Simply |
|
authenticate with any of these and view the resulting page. It should |
|
contain a success message similar to the following:</para> |
|
|
|
<blockquote> |
|
<para>Context on ContextHolder is of type: |
|
net.sf.acegisecurity.context.SecureContextImpl</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The Context implements SecureContext.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Authentication object is of type: |
|
net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.PrincipalAcegiUserToken</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Authentication object as a String: |
|
net.sf.acegisecurity.adapters.PrincipalAcegiUserToken@e9a7c2: |
|
Username: marissa; Password: [PROTECTED]; Authenticated: true; Granted |
|
Authorities: ROLE_TELLER, ROLE_SUPERVISOR</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Authentication object holds the following granted |
|
authorities:</para> |
|
|
|
<para>ROLE_TELLER (getAuthority(): ROLE_TELLER)</para> |
|
|
|
<para>ROLE_SUPERVISOR (getAuthority(): ROLE_SUPERVISOR)</para> |
|
|
|
<para>SUCCESS! Your [container adapter|web filter] appears to be |
|
properly configured!</para> |
|
</blockquote> |
|
|
|
<para>If you receive a different message, and deployed |
|
<literal>contacts-container-adapter.war</literal>, check you have |
|
properly configured your Container Adapter. Refer to the instructions |
|
provided above.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Once you successfully receive the above message, return to the |
|
sample application's home page and click "Manage". You can then try out |
|
the application. Notice that only the contacts belonging to the |
|
currently logged on user are displayed, and only users with |
|
<literal>ROLE_SUPERVISOR</literal> are granted access to delete their |
|
contacts. Behind the scenes, the |
|
<literal>MethodSecurityInterceptor</literal> is securing the business |
|
objects. If you're using <literal>contacts.war</literal>, the |
|
<literal>FilterSecurityInterceptor</literal> is also securing the HTTP |
|
requests. If using <literal>contacts.war</literal>, be sure to try |
|
visiting <literal>http://localhost:8080/contacts/secure/super</literal>, |
|
which will demonstrate access being denied by the |
|
<literal>SecurityEnforcementFilter</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>The Contacts sample application also include a |
|
<literal>client</literal> directory. Inside you will find a small |
|
application that queries the backend business objects using the Hessian |
|
and Burlap protocols. This demonstrates how to use the Acegi Security |
|
System for Spring for authentication with Spring remoting protocols. To |
|
try this client, ensure your servlet container is still running the |
|
Contacts sample application, and then execute <literal>client marissa |
|
marissa koala</literal>. The command-line parameters respectively |
|
represent the owner of the contacts to extract, the username to use, and |
|
the password to use. Note that you may need to edit |
|
<literal>client.properties</literal> to use a different target URL. To |
|
see that security does indeed work, try running <literal>client scott |
|
marissa koala</literal>, which will try to obtain |
|
<literal>scott</literal>'s contacts when authenticating as |
|
<literal>marissa</literal>. To see it work properly, use <literal>client |
|
scott scott wombat</literal>.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>Please note the sample application's <literal>client</literal> |
|
does not currently support CAS. You can still give it a try, though, if |
|
you're ambitious: try <literal>client scott _cas_stateless_ |
|
YOUR-SERVICE-TICKET-ID-FOR-SCOTT</literal>.</para> |
|
</sect1> |
|
|
|
<sect1 id="security-become-involved"> |
|
<title>Become Involved</title> |
|
|
|
<para>We welcome you to become involved in the Acegi Security System for |
|
Spring project. There are many ways of contributing, including reading |
|
the mailing list and responding to questions from other people, writing |
|
new code, improving existing code, assisting with documentation, or |
|
simply making suggestions.</para> |
|
|
|
<para>SourceForge provides CVS services for the project, allowing |
|
anybody to access the latest code. If you wish to contribute new code, |
|
please observe the following requirements. These exist to maintain the |
|
quality and consistency of the project:</para> |
|
|
|
<itemizedlist> |
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Run the Ant <literal>format</literal> task (or use a suitable |
|
IDE plug-in) to convert your code into the project's consistent |
|
style</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Ensure your code does not break any unit tests (run the Ant |
|
<literal>tests</literal> target)</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Please use the container integration test system to test your |
|
code in the project's officially supported containers</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>When writing a new container adapter, expand the container |
|
integration test system to properly test it</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>If you have added new code, please provide suitable unit tests |
|
(use <literal>ant clover.html</literal> to view coverage)</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Join the acegisecurity-developer and acegisecurity-cvs mailing |
|
lists so you're in the loop</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Use CamelCase</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
|
|
<listitem> |
|
<para>Add a CVS <literal>$Id: index.xml,v 1.3 2004/04/02 21:12:25 |
|
fbos Exp $</literal> tag to the JavaDocs for any new class you |
|
create</para> |
|
</listitem> |
|
</itemizedlist> |
|
|
|
<para>Mentioned above is our container integration test system, which |
|
aims to test the Acegi Security System for Spring container adapters |
|
with current, production versions of each container. Some containers |
|
might not be supported due to difficulties with starting or stopping the |
|
container within an Ant target. You will need to download the container |
|
release files as specified in the integration test |
|
<literal>readme.txt</literal> file. These files are intentionally |
|
excluded from CVS due to their large size.</para> |
|
</sect1> |
|
|
|
<sect1 id="security-further"> |
|
<title>Further Information</title> |
|
|
|
<para>Questions and comments on the Acegi Security System for Spring are |
|
welcome. Please direct comments to the Spring Users mailing list. You're |
|
also welcome to join the acegisecurity-developer mailing list. Our |
|
project home page (where you can obtain the latest release of the |
|
project and access to CVS, mailing lists etc) is at |
|
<literal>http://acegisecurity.sourceforge.net</literal>.</para> |
|
</sect1> |
|
</chapter> |
|
</book> |