Jump to content

Spring Security

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Excalibur Junior (talk | contribs) at 12:18, 9 June 2019 (Add recent releases 5.1.5, 5.0.12, 4.2.12). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Spring Security
Developer(s)4
Stable release
5.0.0 / November 28, 2017 (2017-11-28) [1]
Written inJava
Operating systemCross-platform
Typeweb application framework security
LicenseApache License 2.0
Websiteprojects.spring.io/spring-security/

Spring Security is a Java/Java EE framework that provides authentication, authorization and other security features for enterprise applications. The project was started in late 2003 as 'Acegi Security' (pronounced Ah-see-gee, whose letters are characters 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 from the English alphabet, in order to prevent name conflicts[2]) by Ben Alex, with it being publicly released under the Apache License in March 2004. Subsequently, Acegi was incorporated into the Spring portfolio as Spring Security, an official Spring sub-project. The first public release under the new name was Spring Security 2.0.0 in April 2008, with commercial support and training available from SpringSource.

Authentication flow

Diagram 1 shows the basic flow of an authentication request using the Spring Security system. It shows the different filters and how they interact from the initial browser request, to either a successful authentication or an HTTP 403 error.

Key authentication features

Key authorization features

Instance-based security features

Other features

  • Software localization so user interface messages can be in any language.
  • Channel security, to automatically switch between HTTP and HTTPS upon meeting particular rules.
  • Caching in all database-touching areas of the framework.
  • Publishing of messages to facilitate event-driven programming.
  • Support for performing integration testing via JUnit.
  • Spring Security itself has comprehensive JUnit isolation tests.
  • Several sample applications, detailed JavaDocs and a reference guide.
  • Web framework independence.

Releases

  • 2.0.0 (April 2008)
  • 3.0.0 (December 2009)
  • 3.1.0 (December 07, 2011)
  • 3.1.2 (August 10, 2012)
  • 3.2.0 (December 16, 2013)
  • 4.0.0 (March 26, 2015)
  • 4.1.3 (August 24, 2016)
  • 4.2.0 (November 10, 2016)
  • 3.2.10, 4.1.4, 4.2.1 (December 22, 2016)
  • 4.2.2 (March 02, 2017)
  • 4.2.3 (June 08, 2017)
  • 5.0.0 (November 28, 2017)
  • 5.1.5, 5.0.12, 4.2.12 (April 3, 2019)[1]

References

  1. ^ "Spring Security 5.0.0.RELEASE Released". spring.io.
  2. ^ "Why the name Acegi?". spring.io.