Minor updates to namespace text

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Luke Taylor 2008-04-08 20:51:30 +00:00
parent 8367591554
commit ef8a4fa055
1 changed files with 39 additions and 38 deletions

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<title>Introduction</title>
</info>
<para>
Namespace configuration is a feature of Spring 2.0 which allows a bean or beans to be
configured by parsing XML elements from a namespace which are included in your application
context file (in addition to elements from the tradtitional Spring "beans" namespace). You can
find more information in the Spring
Namespace configuration has been available since version 2.0 of the Spring framework. It allows you to
supplement the traditional Spring beans application context syntax with elements from additional XML schema.
You can find more information in the Spring
<link xlink:href="http://static.springframework.org/spring/docs/2.5.x/reference/xsd-config.html">
Reference Documentation</link>. A namespace element be used simply to allow a more concise
way of configuring an existing bean or, more powerfully, to define an alternative
Reference Documentation</link>. A namespace element can be used simply to allow a more concise
way of configuring an individual bean or, more powerfully, to define an alternative
configuration syntax which more closely matches the problem domain and hides the underlying
complexity from the user. A relatively simple element may conceal the fact that many beans and
complexity from the user. A simple element may conceal the fact that multiple beans and
processing steps are being added to the application context. For example, adding the following
element from the securty namespace to an application context will start up an embedded LDAP
element from the security namespace to an application context will start up an embedded LDAP
server for testing use within the application:
<programlisting><![CDATA[
<security:ldap-server id="embeddedLdapServer"/>
<security:ldap-server />
]]></programlisting>
which is much simpler than wiring up the equivalent Apache Directory Server beans. The most
This is much simpler than wiring up the equivalent Apache Directory Server beans. The most
common alterative configuration requirements are supported by attributes on the
<literal>ldap-server</literal> element.
<literal>ldap-server</literal> element and the user is isolated from worrying about which
beans they need to be set on and what the bean property names are.
<footnote>
<para>You can find out more about the use of the
<literal>ldap-server</literal>
element in the chapter on
<link xlink:href="ldap">LDAP</link>.</para>
</footnote>. The user is isolated from worrying about which beans they need to be set
on and what the bean property names are. Use of a good XML editor while editing the
configuration file should provide information on the attributes and elements that are
available (and their purpose).
</footnote>. Use of a good XML editor while editing the application context
file should provide information on the attributes and elements that are
available. We would recommend that you try out the
<link xlink:href="http://www.springsource.com/products/sts">SpringSource Tool Suite</link>
as it has special features for working with the Spring portfolio namespaces.
</para>
<para>
To start using the security namespace in your application context, all you need to do is add
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In many of the examples you will see (and in the sample) applications, we will often use "security" as the default
namespace rather than "beans", which means we can omit the prefix on all the security namespace elements,
making the context easier to read. You may also want to do this if you have your application context divided up
into separate files and have most of your security configuration in one of them. Your application context file would then
into separate files and have most of your security configuration in one of them. Your security application context file would then
start like this
<programlisting><![CDATA[
<beans:beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/security"
@ -61,7 +62,6 @@
</beans:beans>
]]></programlisting>
</para>
</section>
<section>
<info>
<title>Design</title>
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within the framework, and can be divided up into the following areas:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><para><emphasis>Web/HTTP Security</emphasis> - the most complex part. Sets up the filters and
related service beans used to apply the framework authentication mechanisms, secure URLs, render login and error pages and much more.</para></listitem>
related service beans used to apply the framework authentication mechanisms, to secure URLs, render login and error pages and much more.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para><emphasis>Business Object (Method) Security</emphasis> - options for securing the service layer.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para><emphasis>AuthenticationManager</emphasis> - handles authentication requests from other parts of the framework.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para><emphasis>AccessDecisionManager</emphasis> - provides access decisions for web and method security.</para></listitem>
@ -84,4 +84,5 @@
</para>
</section>
</section>
</chapter>