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Hands-On Spring Security 5 for Reactive Applications

You're reading from   Hands-On Spring Security 5 for Reactive Applications Learn effective ways to secure your applications with Spring and Spring WebFlux

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781788995979
Length 268 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Tomcy John Tomcy John
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Tomcy John
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Table of Contents (9) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Overview of Spring 5 and Spring Security 5 FREE CHAPTER 2. Deep Diving into Spring Security 3. Authentication Using SAML, LDAP, and OAuth/OIDC 4. Authentication Using CAS and JAAS 5. Integrating with Spring WebFlux 6. REST API Security 7. Spring Security Add-Ons 8. Other Books You May Enjoy

Reactive Landscape in Java

It's hard to wrap your head around reactive concepts when you're coming from a traditional programming model. Some of the subsequent sections are aimed at introducing you to reactive concepts and how they evolved into their present state.

Reactive Streams and Reactive Streams Specifications

The official document for Reactive Streams (http://www.reactive-streams.org/) says that—Reactive Streams is an initiative to provide a standard for asynchronous stream processing with non-blocking back pressure. This encompasses efforts aimed at runtime environments (JVM and JavaScript) as well as network protocols.

It started as an initiative between a group of companies in 2013. In April 2015, 1.0 of the specification was released and there were a number of implementations (such as Akka Streams and Vert.x) available at the same time. The specification was initiated with a target to get it included in the official Java standard library and in 2017, with the release of JDK9, it made it's way into it officially. As with any specification, the ultimate aim is to have a number of implementations conforming to the specification, and over time, the specification evolves. The specification consists of some core interfaces, some rules around these, and a Technology Compatibility Kit (TCK).

TCK is a suite of tests that will be executed to check the correctness/compliance of a Java Specification Request (JSR) implementation. In Java Community Process (JCP), TCK is one of the three required components for ratifying a JSR. The other two are JSR specification and JSR reference implementation. The TCK for the Java platform is called Java Compatibility Kit (JCK).

Being a specification, it enables any implementation respecting the specification to cooperate and interoperate with each other. For example, an implementation written in Akka can talk to the Vert.x implementation over the Reactive Streams protocol without any trouble. Adoption is growing and, as we speak, more implementations that conform to the specifications written in different languages are being released:

Figure 3: Reactive Streams Specification/API

The preceding figure clearly shows the Reactive Streams Specification. Some of the important specification rules are as follows:

  • The calls from Publisher to Subscriber and Subscriber to Publisher shouldn't be concurrent in nature.
  • The Subscriber can perform its job synchronously or asynchronously but always has to be non-blocking in nature.
  • From Publisher to Subscriber there should be an upper bound defined. After that defined bound, buffer overflows occur and could result in errors.
  • Apart from NullPointerException (NPE), no other exception can be raised. In the case of NPE, Publisher calls the onError method and Subscriber cancels the Subscription.

In the preceding definition of Reactive Streams, there are some very important terms, namely non-blocking and backpressure, which we'll explore a bit more to understand the core concepts of Reactive Streams.

Non-blocking

Non-blocking means threads never block. If the thread needs to block, the code is written in such a way that the thread gets notified at the right time and the process continues. Reactive programming lets you implement a non-blocking, declarative, and event-driven architecture.

One of the approaches to writing non-blocking applications is by using messages as the means of sending data. A thread sends the request and soon after that, the thread is being used for something else. When the response is ready, it is delivered back using another thread and the requesting party is notified so that further processing can continue:

Figure 4: Non-blocking

The non-blocking concept is already implemented by well-known frameworks, such as Node.js and Akka. The approach that Node.js uses is a single thread that sends data in a multiplexing aspect.

In telecommunications and computer networks, multiplexing (sometimes contracted to muxing) is a method by which multiple analog or digital signals are combined into one signal over a shared medium. The aim is to share an expensive resource. For more information about multiplexing, you can visit the following link: http://www.icym.edu.my/v13/about-us/our-news/general/722-multiplexing.html.

Backpressure

In an ideal scenario, every message produced by the Producer is passed to the Subscriber as and when the message is produced without any delay. There is a chance that the Subscriber is unable to handle the messages at the same rate as they are produced and this can cramp its resources.

Backpressure is a method by which the Subscriber can tell the Producer to send messages at a slower rate to give the Subscriber time to handle these messages properly without putting too much pressure on its resources.

Since this is the first chapter, we are just introducing you to these important reactive concepts. Code examples will be covered in subsequent chapters.

Now that we have a brief idea of Reactive Streams and Reactive Streams Specification, we will go into next important reactive concept in Java, namely Reactive Extensions.

Reactive Extensions

Reactive Extensions (Rx or ReactiveX) (https://msdn.microsoft.com) is a library for composing asynchronous and event-based programs using observable sequences and LINQ-style query operators. Data sequences can take many forms, such as a stream of data from a file or web service, web services requests, system notifications, or a series of events such as user inputs.

As stated in the preceding definition, these are APIs that allow stream composition using the Observer pattern. It's my duty to introduce you to the Observer pattern before going any further. The following is the definition of this pattern and it's quite intuitive:

The Observer pattern defines a provider (also known as a subject or an observable) and zero, one, or more observers (Subscriber). Observers register with the provider, and whenever a predefined condition, event, or state change occurs, the provider automatically notifies all observers by calling one of their methods. For more information about the Observer pattern, you can refer to this link: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/standard/events/observer-design-pattern.

Data can flow in a number of forms, such as streams or events. Reactive Extensions lets you convert this dataflow into observables and aids you in programming reactive code.

Rx is implemented in a variety of languages, including Java (RxJava). A full list of implemented languages and more detail on Rx can be found at http://reactivex.io/.

RxJava

RxJava is a Java VM implementation of ReactiveX—a library for composing asynchronous and event-based programs by using observable sequences.

RxJava was ported from .NET to the world of Java by Netflix. After almost two years of development, a stable release of the API was made available in 2014. This stable release targets Java (Version 6 and above), Scala, JRuby, Kotlin, and Clojure.

RxJava is a single-JAR, lightweight library and focuses on Observable abstraction. It facilitates integration with a variety of external libraries, making the library align with reactive principles. Some examples are rxjava-jdbc (database calls using JDBC with RxJava Observables) and Camel RX (Camel support for Reactive Extensions using RxJava).

Reactive Streams and RxJava

RxJava 2.x is a complete rewrite from its predecessor, RxJava 1.x.

RxJava 1.x was created before Reactive Streams Specification, and because of this it doesn't implement it. RxJava 2.x, on the other hand, is written on top of Reactive Streams Specification and fully implements it, and also targets Java 8+. RxJava types in RxJava 1.x have been fully tweaked to comply with the specification and suffered heavy changes when the rewrite took place. It's good to note that there exists a bridge library (https://github.com/ReactiveX/RxJavaReactiveStreams) that bridges between RxJava 1.x types and Reactive Streams, allowing RxJava 1.x to pass the Reactive Streams TCK-compliance tests.

In RxJava 2.x, many concepts remain intact but names have been changed to comply with the spec.

We will not be going deep into RxJava as it is a big topic and there are plenty of books available that dive deep into RxJava.

JDK 9 additions

As part of concurrency updates to JDK 9 (JEP 266), Reactive Streams was added to the Java standard library. Reactive Streams was initiated in 2013 by some of the well-known organizations that wanted to standardize the approach by which asynchronous data can be exchanged between software components. Soon, the concept became adopted by the industry and there evolved a number of implementations that all had similar core concepts but lacked standard nomenclature and terminologies, especially as regards interfaces and package naming. To avoid multiple nomenclatures and to enable interoperability between implementations, JDK 9 included basic interfaces as part of the Flow Concurrency library. This made applications want to implement Reactive Streams to depend on this library but not include specific implementations into the code base. Thus it is very easy to swap between implementations without any trouble.

These interfaces are coded as static interfaces within the java.util.concurrent.Flow class.

Important interfaces

Reactive Streams specifications in Java 9 revolve around just four interfaces—Publisher, Subscriber, Subscription, and Processor. The library also includes a Publisher implementation—SubmissionPublisher. All of these are included within the java.util.concurrent package in the Java standard library. We will touch upon these interfaces in the following subsections.

The Publisher Interface

The definition of this interface is as follows:

public interface Publisher<T> {
public void subscribe(Subscriber<? super T> s);
}

As you can see, Publisher allows the Subscriber interface to subscribe to it so as to receive the message when Publisher produces it.

The Subscriber Interface

The definition of this interface is as follows:

public interface Subscriber<T> {
public void onSubscribe(Subscription s);
public void onNext(T t);
public void onError(Throwable t);
public void onComplete();
}

As you can see, the Subscriber interface's onSubscribe method allows Subscriber to be notified when Publisher accepts the Subscription. The onNext method is invoked when new items get published. As the name suggests, the onError method is invoked when there's an error and the onComplete method gets invoked when Publisher has completed its function.

The Subscription interface

The definition of this interface is as follows:

public interface Subscription {
public void request(long n);
public void cancel();
}

The method request is for accepting requests for items and method cancel is for when Subscription is cancelled.

The Processor interface

The definition of this interface is as follows:

public interface Processor<T, R> extends Subscriber<T>, Publisher<R> {
}

It inherits from both the Publisher and Subscriber interfaces and therefore inherits all the methods of these interfaces. The main aspect is that the Publisher can produce an item but the Subscriber can consume a different item than that produced by the Publisher.

You have been reading a chapter from
Hands-On Spring Security 5 for Reactive Applications
Published in: Jul 2018
Publisher:
ISBN-13: 9781788995979
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