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Spring Security

Spring Security

By : Badr Nasslahsen
5 (4)
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Spring Security

Spring Security

5 (4)
By: Badr Nasslahsen

Overview of this book

With experienced hackers constantly targeting apps, properly securing them becomes challenging when you integrate this factor with legacy code, new technologies, and other frameworks. Written by a Lead Cloud and Security Architect as well as CISSP, this book helps you easily secure your Java apps with Spring Security, a trusted and highly customizable authentication and access control framework. The book shows you how to implement different authentication mechanisms and properly restrict access to your app. You’ll learn to integrate Spring Security with popular web frameworks like Thymeleaf and Microservice and Cloud services like Zookeeper and Eureka, along with architecting solutions that leverage its full power while staying loosely coupled. You’ll also see how Spring Security defends against session fixation, moves into concurrency control, and how you can use session management for administrative functions. This fourth edition aligns with Java 17/21 and Spring Security 6, covering advanced security scenarios for RESTful web services and microservices. This ensures you fully understand the issues surrounding stateless authentication and discover a concise approach to solving those issues. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to integrate Spring Security 6 with GraalVM native images seamlessly, from start to finish.
Table of Contents (28 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Fundamentals of Application Security
5
Part 2: Authentication Techniques
11
Part 3: Exploring OAuth 2 and SAML 2
14
Part 4: Enhancing Authorization Mechanisms
18
Part 5: Advanced Security Features and Deployment Optimization

Summary

In this chapter, you learned the general difference between monolithic applications and microservices and compared SOA with microservices. You also learned the conceptual architecture of OAuth 2 and how it provides your services with trustworthy client access, and learned about the types of OAuth 2 access tokens and the types of OAuth 2 client credentials types.

We examined the JWT and their general structure, implemented a resource server and authorization server used to grant access rights to clients to access OAuth 2 resources, and implemented a RESTful client to gain access to resources through an OAuth 2 grant flow.

We’ve concluded by demonstrating a practical OAuth 2 example implementation using spring-security. Moving forward, the next chapter will explore the integration with Central Authentication Service (CAS) to enable Single Sign-On (SSO) and Single Logout (SLO) functionalities for your Spring Security-enabled applications.

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