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Spring Security

You're reading from   Spring Security Secure your web applications, RESTful services, and microservice architectures

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787129511
Length 542 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Authors (3):
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Robert Winch Robert Winch
Author Profile Icon Robert Winch
Robert Winch
Peter Mularien Peter Mularien
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Peter Mularien
Mick Knutson Mick Knutson
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Mick Knutson
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Anatomy of an Unsafe Application 2. Getting Started with Spring Security FREE CHAPTER 3. Custom Authentication 4. JDBC-Based Authentication 5. Authentication with Spring Data 6. LDAP Directory Services 7. Remember-Me Services 8. Client Certificate Authentication with TLS 9. Opening up to OAuth 2 10. Single Sign-On with the Central Authentication Service 11. Fine-Grained Access Control 12. Access Control Lists 13. Custom Authorization 14. Session Management 15. Additional Spring Security Features 16. Migration to Spring Security 4.2 17. Microservice Security with OAuth 2 and JSON Web Tokens 18. Additional Reference Material

Introducing the Central Authentication Service

CAS is an open source, single sign-on server, providing centralized access control, and authentication to web-based resources within an organization. The benefits of CAS are numerous to administrators, and it supports many applications and diverse user communities. The benefits are as follows:

  • Individual or group access to resources (applications) can be configured in one location
  • Broad support for a wide variety of authentication stores (to centralize user management) provides a single point of authentication and control to a widespread, cross-machine environment
  • Wide authentication support is provided for web-based and non-web-based Java applications through CAS client libraries
  • A single point of reference for user credentials (via CAS) is provided so that CAS client applications are not required to have any knowledge of the user...
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