Issue
I'm trying to secure my website using Spring security following the guides on the web. So on my server side the WebSecurityConfigurerAdapter and controller looks like this
@Configuration
@EnableWebSecurity
public class WebSecurityConfig extends WebSecurityConfigurerAdapter
implements ApplicationContextAware {
@Override
protected void registerAuthentication(AuthenticationManagerBuilde r authManagerBuilder) throws Exception {
authManagerBuilder.inMemoryAuthentication()
.withUser("user").password("password").roles("ADMI N");
}
}
@Controller
//@RequestMapping("/course")
public class CourseController implements ApplicationContextAware{
@RequestMapping(value="/course", method = RequestMethod.GET, produces="application/json")
public @ResponseBody List<Course> get(// The critirion used to find.
@RequestParam(value="what", required=true) String what,
@RequestParam(value="value", required=true) String value) {
//.....
}
@RequestMapping(value="/course", method = RequestMethod.POST, produces="application/json")
public List<Course> upload(@RequestBody Course[] cs) {
}
}
What confused me very much is the server does not respond to the POST/DELETE method, while the GET method works fine. BTW, I'm using RestTemplate on the client side. Exceptions are:
Exception in thread "main" org.springframework.web.client.HttpClientErrorException: 403 Forbidden
at org.springframework.web.client.DefaultResponseErrorHandler.handleError(DefaultResponseErrorHandler.java:91)
at org.springframework.web.client.RestTemplate.handleResponseError(RestTemplate.java:574)
at org.springframework.web.client.RestTemplate.doExecute(RestTemplate.java:530)
at org.springframework.web.client.RestTemplate.execute(RestTemplate.java:487)
at org.springframework.web.client.RestTemplate.delete(RestTemplate.java:385)
at hello.Application.createRestTemplate(Application.java:149)
at hello.Application.main(Application.java:99)
I've searched the internet for days. Still don't have a clue. Please help. Thanks so much
Solution
The issue is likely due to CSRF protection. If users will not be using your application in a web browser, then it is safe to disable CSRF protection. Otherwise you should ensure to include the CSRF token in the request.
To disable CSRF protection you can use the following:
@Configuration
@EnableWebSecurity
public class WebSecurityConfig
extends WebSecurityConfigurerAdapter implements ApplicationContextAware {
@Override
protected void configure(HttpSecurity http) throws Exception {
http
// ...
.csrf().disable();
}
@Override
protected void registerAuthentication(AuthenticationManagerBuilder authManagerBuilder) throws Exception {
authManagerBuilder
.inMemoryAuthentication()
.withUser("user").password("password").roles("ADMIN");
}
}
Answered By - Rob Winch
Answer Checked By - Mildred Charles (JavaFixing Admin)