SessionAuthenticationFilter requires accessing the HttpSession to do its
job. Previously, there was no way to just disable the
SessionAuthenticationFilter despite the fact that
SessionAuthenticationStrategy is invoked by the authentication filters
directly.
This commit adds an option to disable SessionManagmentFilter in favor of
requiring explicit SessionAuthenticationStrategy invocation already
performed by the authentication filters.
Closes gh-11455
SessionAuthenticationFilter requires accessing the HttpSession to do its
job. Previously, there was no way to just disable the
SessionAuthenticationFilter despite the fact that
SessionAuthenticationStrategy is invoked by the authentication filters
directly.
This commit adds an option to disable SessionManagmentFilter in favor of
requiring explicit SessionAuthenticationStrategy invocation already
performed by the authentication filters.
Closes gh-11455
Previously the CsrfToken was set on the request attribute with the name
equal to CsrfToken.getParameterName(). This didn't really make a lot of
sense because the CsrfToken.getParameterName() is intended to be used as
the HTTP parameter that the CSRF token was provided. What's more is it
meant that the CsrfToken needed to be read for every request to place it
as an HttpServletRequestAttribute. This causes unnecessary HttpSession
access which can decrease performance for applications.
This commit allows setting CsrfFilter.csrfReqeustAttributeName to
remove the dual purposing of CsrfToken.parameterName and to allow deferal
of reading the CsrfToken to prevent unnecessary HttpSession access.
Issue gh-11699
Previously the CsrfToken was set on the request attribute with the name
equal to CsrfToken.getParameterName(). This didn't really make a lot of
sense because the CsrfToken.getParameterName() is intended to be used as
the HTTP parameter that the CSRF token was provided. What's more is it
meant that the CsrfToken needed to be read for every request to place it
as an HttpServletRequestAttribute. This causes unnecessary HttpSession
access which can decrease performance for applications.
This commit allows setting CsrfFilter.csrfReqeustAttributeName to
remove the dual purposing of CsrfToken.parameterName and to allow deferal
of reading the CsrfToken to prevent unnecessary HttpSession access.
Issue gh-11699
This removes `@Configuration` from all `@Enable` Annotations and explicitly
adds `@Configuration` to wherever the `@Enable*` Annotations are used.
Closes gh-11653
The default redirect strategy will provide authorization redirect
URI within HTTP 302 response Location header.
Allowing the configuration of custom redirect strategy will provide
an option for the clients to obtain the authorization URI from e.g.
HTTP response body as JSON payload, without a need to handle
automatic redirection initiated by the HTTP Location header.
Closes gh-11373
The default redirect strategy will provide authorization redirect
URI within HTTP 302 response Location header.
Allowing the configuration of custom redirect strategy will provide
an option for the clients to obtain the authorization URI from e.g.
HTTP response body as JSON payload, without a need to handle
automatic redirection initiated by the HTTP Location header.
Closes gh-11373
Before, Spring Security's @Enable* annotations were meta-annotated with @Configuration.
While convenient, this is not consistent with the rest of the Spring projects and most notably
Spring Framework's @Enable annotations. Additionally, the introduction of support for
@Configuration(proxyBeanMethods=false) in Spring Framework provides a compelling reason to
remove @Configuration meta-annotation from Spring Security's @Enable annotations and allow
users to opt into their preferred configuration mode.
Closes gh-6613
Signed-off-by: Joshua Sattler <joshua.sattler@mailbox.org>