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Spring Security - Third Edition

You're reading from  Spring Security - Third Edition

Product type Book
Published in Nov 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787129511
Pages 542 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
Authors (3):
Mick Knutson Mick Knutson
Profile icon Mick Knutson
Peter Mularien Peter Mularien
Profile icon Peter Mularien
ROBERT WILLIAM WINCH ROBERT WILLIAM WINCH
Profile icon ROBERT WILLIAM WINCH
View More author details

Table of Contents (19) Chapters

Preface 1. Anatomy of an Unsafe Application 2. Getting Started with Spring Security 3. Custom Authentication 4. JDBC-Based Authentication 5. Authentication with Spring Data 6. LDAP Directory Services 7. Remember-Me Services 8. Client Certificate Authentication with TLS 9. Opening up to OAuth 2 10. Single Sign-On with the Central Authentication Service 11. Fine-Grained Access Control 12. Access Control Lists 13. Custom Authorization 14. Session Management 15. Additional Spring Security Features 16. Migration to Spring Security 4.2 17. Microservice Security with OAuth 2 and JSON Web Tokens 18. Additional Reference Material

JSR-250 compliant standardized rules

JSR-250 Common Annotations for the Java platform defines a series of annotations, some that are security-related, which are intended to be portable across JSR-250 compliant runtime environments. The Spring Framework became compliant with JSR-250 as part of the Spring 2.x release, including the Spring Security framework.

While JSR-250 annotations are not as expressive as Spring native annotations, they have the benefit that the declarations they provide are compatible across implementing Java EE application servers such as Glassfish or service-oriented runtime frameworks such as Apache Tuscany. Depending on your application's needs and requirements for portability, you may decide that the trade-off of reduced specificity is worth the portability of the code.

To implement the rule we specified in the first example, we make a few changes...

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