Book Image

Spring Security - Third Edition

By : Mick Knutson, Peter Mularien, ROBERT WILLIAM WINCH
Book Image

Spring Security - Third Edition

By: Mick Knutson, Peter Mularien, ROBERT WILLIAM WINCH

Overview of this book

Knowing that experienced hackers are itching to test your skills makes security one of the most difficult and high-pressured concerns of creating an application. The complexity of properly securing an application is compounded when you must also integrate this factor with existing code, new technologies, and other frameworks. Use this book to easily secure your Java application with the tried and trusted Spring Security framework, a powerful and highly customizable authentication and access-control framework. The book starts by integrating a variety of authentication mechanisms. It then demonstrates how to properly restrict access to your application. It also covers tips on integrating with some of the more popular web frameworks. An example of how Spring Security defends against session fixation, moves into concurrency control, and how you can utilize session management for administrative functions is also included. It concludes with advanced security scenarios for RESTful webservices and microservices, detailing the issues surrounding stateless authentication, and demonstrates a concise, step-by-step approach to solving those issues. And, by the end of the book, readers can rest assured that integrating version 4.2 of Spring Security will be a seamless endeavor from start to finish.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)

Deprecations

A number of deprecations were removed in Spring Security 4 to clean up clutter.

The following is the final commit for the XML and JavaConfig deprecations, which contained 177 changed files with 537 additions and 5,023 deletions: https://github.com/spring-projects/spring-security/commit/6e204fff72b80196a83245cbc3bd0cd401feda00.

If you are using the XML namespace or Java-based configuration, there are many instances where you will be shielded from deprecation. If you (or a non-spring library you use) do not use an API directly, then you will not be impacted. You can easily search your workspace to find these listed deprecations.

The spring-security-core deprecations

This section described all of the deprecated APIs...