From d272b069aaf6665f50b0317792d26074b77e13d5 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Yi EungJun Date: Mon, 15 Jun 2015 10:06:43 +0900 Subject: [PATCH] Fix a broken link to a blog posting on the Spring website --- docs/manual/src/docs/asciidoc/index.adoc | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/docs/manual/src/docs/asciidoc/index.adoc b/docs/manual/src/docs/asciidoc/index.adoc index d8591180b6..4fbf2d0203 100644 --- a/docs/manual/src/docs/asciidoc/index.adoc +++ b/docs/manual/src/docs/asciidoc/index.adoc @@ -4322,7 +4322,7 @@ When we've used the attribute `IS_AUTHENTICATED_ANONYMOUSLY` to grant anonymous [[authz-custom-voter]] ===== Custom Voters -Obviously, you can also implement a custom `AccessDecisionVoter` and you can put just about any access-control logic you want in it. It might be specific to your application (business-logic related) or it might implement some security administration logic. For example, you'll find a http://blog.springsource.com/2009/01/02/spring-security-customization-part-2-adjusting-secured-session-in-real-time/[ blog article] on the SpringSource web site which describes how to use a voter to deny access in real-time to users whose accounts have been suspended. +Obviously, you can also implement a custom `AccessDecisionVoter` and you can put just about any access-control logic you want in it. It might be specific to your application (business-logic related) or it might implement some security administration logic. For example, you'll find a http://spring.io/blog/2009/01/03/spring-security-customization-part-2-adjusting-secured-session-in-real-time[ blog article] on the Spring web site which describes how to use a voter to deny access in real-time to users whose accounts have been suspended. [[authz-after-invocation-handling]]