/spring-security-pac4j

Multi protocols (OAuth, OpenID Connect, CAS, SAML, HTTP, GAE) security extension for Spring Security

Primary LanguageJavaApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

The spring-security-pac4j project is an easy and powerful security library for Spring Security web applications and web services (with or without Spring Boot). It supports authentication and authorization, but also advanced features like session fixation and CSRF protection. It's based on Java 8, Spring Security 5 and on the pac4j security engine v3. It's available under the Apache 2 license.

For a Spring Boot or Spring MVC project, you should use the spring-webmvc-pac4j library instead of this one, which offers similar capabilities, but is easier!

Main concepts and components:

  1. A client represents an authentication mechanism. It performs the login process and returns a user profile. An indirect client is for web applications authentication while a direct client is for web services authentication:

▸ OAuth - SAML - CAS - OpenID Connect - HTTP - OpenID - Google App Engine - Kerberos - LDAP - SQL - JWT - MongoDB - CouchDB - IP address - REST API

  1. An authorizer is meant to check authorizations on the authenticated user profile(s) or on the current web context:

▸ Roles/permissions - Anonymous/remember-me/(fully) authenticated - Profile type, attribute - CORS - CSRF - Security headers - IP address, HTTP method

  1. The SecurityFilter protects an url by checking that the user is authenticated and that the authorizations are valid, according to the clients and authorizers configuration. If the user is not authenticated, it performs authentication for direct clients or starts the login process for indirect clients

  2. The CallbackFilter finishes the login process for an indirect client

  3. The LogoutFilter logs out the user from the application and triggers the logout at the identity provider level

  4. The Pac4jEntryPoint handles when the user is not authenticated

  5. The J2EContext and the ProfileManager components can be injected (for a Spring Boot/MVC webapp and using the spring-webmvc-pac4j library)

  6. The @RequireAnyRole and @RequireAllRoles annotations check the user roles (for a Spring Boot/MVC webapp and using the spring-webmvc-pac4j library).

Usage

1) Add the required dependencies

2) Define:

- the security configuration

- the callback configuration, only for web applications

- the logout configuration

3) Apply security

4) Get the authenticated user profiles

Demos

The demo webapps for Spring Security without Spring Boot: spring-security-pac4j-demo or with Spring Boot: spring-security-pac4j-boot-demo are available for tests and implement many authentication mechanisms: Facebook, Twitter, form, basic auth, CAS, SAML, OpenID Connect, JWT...

Versions

The latest released version is the Maven Central, available in the Maven central repository. The next version is under development.

See the release notes. Learn more by browsing the pac4j documentation and the spring-security-pac4j Javadoc.

See the migration guide as well.

Need help?

If you need commercial support (premium support or new/specific features), contact us at info@pac4j.org.

If you have any questions, want to contribute or be notified about the new releases and security fixes, please subscribe to the following mailing lists: