In Spring Security 7, `AntPathRequestMatcher` and `MvcRequestMatcher` are no longer supported and the Java DSL requires that all URIs be absolute (less any context root).
At that time, Spring Security 7 will use `PathPatternRequestMatcher` by default.
To check how prepared you are for this change, you can publish this bean:
This will tell the Spring Security DSL to use `PathPatternRequestMatcher` for all request matchers that it constructs.
In the event that you are directly constructing an object (as opposed to having the DSL construct it) that has a `setRequestMatcher` method. you should also proactively specify a `PathPatternRequestMatcher` there as well.
For example, in the case of `LogoutFilter`, it constructs an `AntPathRequestMatcher` in Spring Security 6:
[method,java]
----
private RequestMatcher logoutUrl = new AntPathRequestMatcher("/logout");
----
and will change this to a `PathPatternRequestMatcher` in 7:
If you are constructing your own `LogoutFilter`, consider calling `setLogoutRequestMatcher` to provide this `PathPatternRequestMatcher` in advance.
== Include the Servlet Path Prefix in Authorization Rules
For many applications <<use-path-pattern, the above>> will make no difference since most commonly all URIs listed are matched by the default servlet.
However, if you have other servlets with servlet path prefixes, xref:servlet/authorization/authorize-http-requests.adoc[then these paths now need to be supplied separately].
For example, if I have a Spring MVC controller with `@RequestMapping("/orders")` and my MVC application is deployed to `/mvc` (instead of the default servlet), then the URI for this endpoint is `/mvc/orders`.
Historically, the Java DSL hasn't had a simple way to specify the servlet path prefix and Spring Security attempted to infer it.
Over time, we learned that these inference would surprise developers.
Instead of taking this responsibility away from developers, now it is simpler to specify the servlet path prefix like so:
== Use RedirectToHttps Instead of Channel Security
Years ago, HTTPS at large was enough of a performance and configuration concern that applications wanted to be able to decide which segments of an application would require HTTPS.
`requires-channel` in XML and `requiresChannel` in Java Config allowed configurating an application with that in mind:
Modern applications should either always require HTTPS.
However, there are times, like when developing locally, when one would like the application to use HTTP.
Or, you may have continuing circumstances that require part of your application to be HTTP.
In any case, you can migrate to `redirect-to-https-request-matcher-ref` and `redirectToHttps` by first constructing a `RequestMatcher` that contains all circumstances where redirecting to HTTPS is needed.
Then you can reference that request matcher like so: