/spring-boot-security-oauth2-jwt

An example of how to use a JWT token to secure a Spring Boot 2.x application

Primary LanguageJava

Spring Boot Security OAuth2 JWT example (Spring Boot 2.x)

This project provides an example of how to use a JWT token to secure a Spring Boot application. There are a lot of examples available on github for doing this, but most of them weren't fully satisfying for several reasons:

  • They don't use the Spring JWT implementation. Spring Security now provides its own JWT project (spring-security-jwt) that is fully integrated with Spring, preventing you from writing a lot of boilerplate code.
  • They don't use the Spring Boot autoconfiguration and redefine a lot of things they don't need to. You just need to provide your RSA key and your client id, that's all.
  • They use 2 or 3 different applications for handling the OAuth authorization, serving the resources, and the client. If you want to have everything in just one app, the configuration is simpler.

For this reasons I share my own example that tries to re-use the already defined Spring Security code.

Configuring Spring Oauth2 with JWT

Step 1: Generate a RSA key pair

Here are the steps to create a RSA key pairs with the Java keytool command.

$ keytool -genkey -alias mytestkey -keyalg RSA -keystore keystore.jks -storepass mystorepass -dname "CN=Web Server,OU=Unit,O=Organization,L=City,S=State,C=US"

Put this file in your src/main/resources

This file contains your public and your private RSA keys. Keep this file private, do not commit it on a public git repo. You can export and publish the public key.

Step 2: Configure Spring Oauth to use the keypair

Update the file application.yml to set your keystore password and your key alias

resource.jwt:
  key-store-password: mystorepass
  key-alias: mytestkey

Step 3: Customize the Oauth client informations

Update the file application.yml to set your own client id and secret

client:
  clientId: myClient
  clientSecret: myClientSecret

This is your client 'API key' you will have to use each time you make a request to the OAuth2 authorization server. You just need to set it once, and provide it in each OAuth requests thanks to a HTTP Basic header (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basic_access_authentication).

Step 4 (Optionnal) : Override the default Spring Oauth2 config

Once you have completed the step 3, you are all done ! Spring Boot will handle all the boilerplate config for you and use the config provided in the application.yml.

See http://docs.spring.io/spring-boot/docs/current/reference/html/boot-features-security.html for more informations about the way Spring Boot autoconfigures the security layer.

OAuth2 Authorization config

You can override the Spring Boot Oauth2 authorization config by making OAuth2AuthorizationConfig extending AuthorizationServerConfigurerAdapter

Web security config

By default, all the endpoints need full authentication, excepting the ones under /oauth/, /css/, /js/, /images/. You can change this behavior by making WebSecurityConfiguration extending ResourceServerConfigurerAdapter and override the configure method. You can also use this method to enable or disable csrf

public class WebSecurityConfiguration extends ResourceServerConfigurerAdapter {
  @Override
  public void configure(HttpSecurity httpSecurity) throws Exception {
    httpSecurity
      .csrf()
        .disable()
      .authorizeRequests()
        .antMatchers("/my-public-api/**").permitAll()
        .anyRequest().authenticated();
  }
}

Retrieving users

Users a retrieved thanks to the UserService. This class extends UserDetailsService that is a Spring Security class, and implements the loadUserByUsername() method. Spring will automatically uses this method to retrieve users from database.

Passwords hashing

The passwords stored in the database are hashed thanks to a BCrypt algorithm using a cost of 10. The OAuth2AuthorizationConfig.passwordEncoder()method configures spring to use this algorithm automatically to compare the password received by the /oauth endpoints with the password in database.

Testing the application

The users defined in the import.sql file are automatically inserted in the database when Spring Boot starts. We will use the user 'user' with a password 'password' (encrypted in the database with BCrypt).

Step 1 : Get a JWT access token

Use the /oauth/token endpoint. Note that the provided user password is not encrypted. Spring will automatically hash the password with a BCrypt algorithm and compare it with the entry in the database.

$ curl myClient:myClientSecret@localhost:8080/oauth/token -d grant_type=password -d username=user -d password=password

The myClient:myClientSecret is your OAuth2 client API key, provided as Basic HTTP headers.

Result :

{"access_token":"abcdefg","token_type":"bearer","refresh_token":"abcdefg","expires_in":43199,"scope":"openid","jti":"88821280-ac82-4066-af0c-e7a602f1bce6"}                                                                                          

The access_token is your jwt token. It contains your user informations.

Step 2 : Use the JWT token to access secured endpoints

Use this access token in an Authorization header to query a secured endpoint. Note that you do not need to provide the client OAuth2 API key anymore (myClient:myClientSecret).

$ curl -H "Authorization: Bearer abcdefg" localhost:8080/

Result :

Hello World

That's all !