= Exploit Protection Migrations :spring-security-reference-base-url: https://docs.spring.io/spring-security/reference The 5.8 migration guide contains several steps for ifdef::spring-security-version[] {spring-security-reference-base-url}/5.8/migration/servlet/exploits.html[exploit protection migrations] when updating to 6.0. endif::[] ifndef::spring-security-version[] exploit protection migrations when updating to 6.0. endif::[] You are encouraged to follow those steps first. The following steps relate to how to finish migrating exploit protection support. == Defer Loading CsrfToken In Spring Security 5.8, the default `CsrfTokenRequestHandler` for making the `CsrfToken` available to the application is `CsrfTokenRequestAttributeHandler`. The default for the field `csrfRequestAttributeName` is `null`, which causes the CSRF token to be loaded on every request. In Spring Security 6, `csrfRequestAttributeName` defaults to `_csrf`. If you configured the following only for the purpose of updating to 6.0, you can now remove it: requestHandler.setCsrfRequestAttributeName("_csrf"); == Protect against CSRF BREACH In Spring Security 5.8, the default `CsrfTokenRequestHandler` for making the `CsrfToken` available to the application is `CsrfTokenRequestAttributeHandler`. `XorCsrfTokenRequestAttributeHandler` was added to allow opting into CSRF BREACH support. In Spring Security 6, `XorCsrfTokenRequestAttributeHandler` is the default `CsrfTokenRequestHandler` for making the `CsrfToken` available. If you configured the `XorCsrfTokenRequestAttributeHandler` only for the purpose of updating to 6.0, you can remove it completely. [NOTE] ==== If you have set the `csrfRequestAttributeName` to `null` in order to opt out of deferred tokens, or if you have configured a `CsrfTokenRequestHandler` for any other reason, you can leave the configuration in place. ==== == CSRF BREACH with WebSocket support In Spring Security 5.8, the default `ChannelInterceptor` for making the `CsrfToken` available with xref:servlet/integrations/websocket.adoc[WebSocket Security] is `CsrfChannelInterceptor`. `XorCsrfChannelInterceptor` was added to allow opting into CSRF BREACH support. In Spring Security 6, `XorCsrfChannelInterceptor` is the default `ChannelInterceptor` for making the `CsrfToken` available. If you configured the `XorCsrfChannelInterceptor` only for the purpose of updating to 6.0, you can remove it completely.