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Spring Security: custom userdetails

I'm pretty new to Java and Spring 3 (used primarily PHP the past 8 years). I've gotten spring security 3 to work with all the default userDetails and userDetailsService and I know I can access the logged in user's username in a controller by using:

Authentication auth = SecurityContextHolder.getContext().getAuthentication();
String username = auth.getName(); //get logged in username

But there are two problems I can't figure out:

  1. There are a lot of other user details I would like stored when a user logs in (such as DOB, gender, etc.) and to be accessible via the controllers later on. What do I need to do so that the userDetails object that is created contains my custom fields?

  2. I'm already calling "HttpSession session = request.getSession(true);" at the top of each of my methods in my controller. Is it possible to store the logged in user's userDetails in a session upon login so that I don't need to also call "Authentication auth = SecurityContextHolder.getContext().getAuthentication();" at the beginning of every method?

Security-applicationContext.xml:

<global-method-security secured-annotations="enabled"></global-method-security>     
<http auto-config='true' access-denied-page="/access-denied.html">
    <!-- NO RESTRICTIONS -->        
    <intercept-url pattern="/login.html" access="IS_AUTHENTICATED_ANONYMOUSLY" />
    <intercept-url pattern="/*.html" access="IS_AUTHENTICATED_ANONYMOUSLY"  /> 
    <!-- RESTRICTED PAGES -->
    <intercept-url pattern="/admin/*.html" access="ROLE_ADMIN" />
    <intercept-url pattern="/member/*.html" access="ROLE_ADMIN, ROLE_STAFF" />

    <form-login login-page="/login.html"
                login-processing-url="/loginProcess"
                authentication-failure-url="/login.html?login_error=1"
                default-target-url="/member/home.html" />
    <logout logout-success-url="/login.html"/>
</http>

<authentication-manager>
    <authentication-provider>
        <jdbc-user-service data-source-ref="dataSource" authorities-by-username-query="SELECT U.username, UR.authority, U.userid FROM users U, userroles UR WHERE U.username=? AND U.roleid=UR.roleid LIMIT 1" />
        <password-encoder hash="md5"/>
    </authentication-provider>
</authentication-manager>

login.jsp:

<%@ taglib prefix="c" uri="http://java.sun.com/jsp/jstl/core" %>
<%@ taglib uri="http://tiles.apache.org/tags-tiles" prefix="tiles" %>
<%@ taglib uri="http://www.springframework.org/tags/form" prefix="form"%>

<tiles:insertDefinition name="header" />
<tiles:insertDefinition name="menu" />
<tiles:insertDefinition name="prebody" />

<h1>Login</h1>

<c:if test="${not empty param.login_error}">
    <font color="red"><c:out value="${SPRING_SECURITY_LAST_EXCEPTION.message}"/>.<br /><br /></font>
</c:if>
<form name="f" action="<c:url value='/loginProcess'/>" method="POST">
    <table>
        <tr><td>User:</td><td><input type='text' name='j_username' value='<c:if test="${not empty param.login_error}"><c:out value="${SPRING_SECURITY_LAST_USERNAME}"/></c:if>' /></td></tr>
            <tr><td>Password:</td><td><input type='password' name='j_password' /></td></tr>
            <tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td><input type="checkbox" name="_spring_security_remember_me" /> Remember Me</td></tr>
            <tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td><input name="submit" type="submit" value="Login" /></td></tr>
        </table>
    </form>

<tiles:insertDefinition name="postbody" />
<tiles:insertDefinition name="footer" />
like image 616
Felix Avatar asked May 15 '12 19:05

Felix


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2 Answers

There's an awful lot going on in this question. I'll try to address it in pieces...

Q#1: There are a couple possible approaches here.

Approach #1: If you have other attributes that you want to add to your UserDetails object, then you should provide your own alternate implementation of the UserDetails interface that includes those attributes along with corresponding getters and setters. This would require that you also provide your own alternate implementation of the UserDetailsService interface. This component would have to understand how to persist these additional attributes to the underlying datastore, or when reading from that datastore, would have to understand how to populate those additional attributes. You'd wire all of this up like so:

<beans:bean id="userDetailsService" class="com.example.MyCustomeUserDetailsService">
<!-- ... -->
</beans:bean>

<authentication-manager alias="authenticationManager">
    <authentication-provider ref="authenticationProvider"/>
</authentication-manager>

<beans:bean id="authenticationProvider" class="org.springframework.security.authentication.dao.DaoAuthenticationProvider">
    <beans:property name="userDetailsService" ref="userDetailsService"/>
</beans:bean>

Approache #2: Like me, you may find (especially over the span of several iterations) that you're better served to keep domain-specific user/account details separate from Spring Security specific user/account details. This may or may not be the case for you. But if you can find any wisdom in this approach, then you'd stick with the setup you have currently and add an additional User/Account domain object, corresponding repository/DAO, etc. If you want to retrieve the domain-specific user/account, you can do so as follows:

User user = userDao.getByUsername(SecurityContextHolder.getContext().getAuthentication().getName());

Q#2: Spring Security automatically stores the UserDetails in the session (unless you've explicitly taken steps to override that behavior). So there's no need for you to do this yourself in each of your controller methods. The SecurityContextHolder object you've been dealing with is actually populated (by SS) with SecurityContext including the Authentication object, UserDetails, etc. at the beginning of every request. This context is cleared at the end of each request, but the data always remains in the session.

It's worth noting, however, that it's not really a great practice to be dealing with HttpServletRequest, HttpSession objects, etc. in a Spring MVC controller if you can avoid it. Spring almost always offers cleaner, more idiomatic means of achieving things without the need for doing so. The advantage to that would be that controller method signatures and logic cease to be dependent on things that are difficult to mock in a unit test (e.g. the HttpSession) and instead of dependent on your own domain objects (or stubs/mocks of those domain objects). This drastically increases the testability of your controllers... and thus increases the liklihood that you actually WILL test your controllers. :)

Hope this helps some.

like image 191
Kent Rancourt Avatar answered Sep 23 '22 17:09

Kent Rancourt


In my opinion, Custom UserDetails implementation is great but should only be used for immutable characteristics of your user.

Once your custom User object overrides UserDetails, it's not easily changed. You have to create a whole new authentication object with the modified details and cannot just stick the modified UserDetails object back into the security context.

In application that I'm building I've realized this and had to rearchitect it so that upon successful authentication details about the user that are changing with every request (but that I don't want to reload from the db on every page load) are going to need to be kept in the session separately, but still only accessible/changeable after an authentication check.

Trying to figure out if this WebArgumentResolver mentioned in https://stackoverflow.com/a/8769670/1411545 is a better solution for my situation.

like image 38
Marc Johnson Avatar answered Sep 21 '22 17:09

Marc Johnson