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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

Using Struts 2 with digest/hashing-based Spring Security

Using the form-based or basic authentication doesn't make the Struts 2-based application secure since the passwords are exposed to the user as plain text. There is a crypto package available in Spring Security JAR. The package can decrypt the encrypted password, but we need to tell the Spring Security API about the algorithm used for encryption.

Getting ready

  • Create a dynamic web project in Eclipse
  • Add the Struts 2 JARs
  • Add Spring Security related JARs
  • The web.xml, struts2.xml, and JSP settings remain the same as the previous application

How to do it...

Let's encrypt the password: packt123456.

We need to use an external JAR, JACKSUM, which means Java checksum. It supports both MD5 and SHA1 encryption.

Download the jacksum.zip file (http://www.jonelo.de/java/jacksum/#Download) and extract the ZIP folder.

packt>java -jar jacksum.jar -a sha -q"txt:packt123456"
How to do it...

Update the applicationcontext-security.xml file:

<beans:beans...
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