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Spring Security 3.x Cookbook

You're reading from   Spring Security 3.x Cookbook Secure your Java applications against online threats by learning the powerful mechanisms of Spring Security. Presented as a cookbook full of recipes, this book covers a wide range of vulnerabilities and scenarios.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782167525
Length 300 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Anjana Mankale Anjana Mankale
Author Profile Icon Anjana Mankale
Anjana Mankale
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Basic Security FREE CHAPTER 2. Spring Security with Struts 2 3. Spring Security with JSF 4. Spring Security with Grails 5. Spring Security with GWT 6. Spring Security with Vaadin 7. Spring Security with Wicket 8. Spring Security with ORM and NoSQL DB 9. Spring Security with Spring Social 10. Spring Security with Spring Web Services 11. More on Spring Security Index

Form-based authentication on servlet

In the previous sections, we demonstrated the basic authentication on servlets and JSPs. Now let's use form-based authentication on servlets.

Getting ready

Let's apply form-based authentication on servlet. You will need a simple web application with a servlet, a web container to handle the authentication, and the web.xml file that tells the container what to authenticate.

How to do it...

Let's see some simple steps for implementing form-based authentication on servlets:

  1. Create a JSP file named Containerform.jsp:
    <%@ page language="java" contentType="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1"
        pageEncoding="ISO-8859-1"%>
    <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
    <html>
    <head>
    <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1">
    <title>Insert title here</title>
    </head>
    <body>
    <form method="POST" action="j_security_check">
    Username:<input type="text" name="j_username">
    password:<input type="password" name="j_password">
    <input type=submit>
    </form>
    </body>
    </html>

    What do you observe in the previous code?

    action=j_security_check is the default URL, which is recognized by the web container. It tells the container that it has the user credentials to be authenticated.

  2. Now, edit the web.xml file:
    <login-config>
      <auth-method>FORM</auth-method>
      <form-login-config>
        <form-login-page>/Containerform.jsp</form-login-page>
        <form-error-page>/logoff.jsp</form-error-page>
      </form-login-config>
    </login-config>

Build the project and export the .war files to JBoss.

How it works...

The previous example demonstrated the Form-based authentication. The J2EE container reads the web.xml file, the <auth-method> tag has the form attribute set. Then it further looks for the login.jsp file, which needs to be displayed to do form-based authentication. The <form-error-page> and <form-login-page> has the login file name and the error page that needs to be displayed on authentication failure. When the user tries to access the secured resource, the J2EE container redirects the request to the login page. The user credentials are submitted to j_security_check action. This action is identified by the container and does the authentication and authorization; on success the user is redirected to the secured resource and on failure the error page shows up.

The following are the screenshots of the workflow which shows the login page for the user and displays the user information on successful authentication:

How it works...
How it works...

See also

  • The Form-based authentication with open LDAP and servlet recipe
  • The Hashing/Digest Authentication on servlet recipe
  • The Basic authentication for JAX-WS and JAX-RS recipe
  • The Enabling and disabling the file listing recipe
You have been reading a chapter from
Spring Security 3.x Cookbook
Published in: Nov 2013
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781782167525
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