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Session Management
Force Eager Session Creation
At times it can be valuable to eagerly create sessions.
This can be done by using the ForceEagerSessionCreationFilter
which can be configured using:
-
Java
-
XML
@Bean
public SecurityFilterChain filterChain(HttpSecurity http) {
http
.sessionManagement(session -> session
.sessionCreationPolicy(SessionCreationPolicy.ALWAYS)
);
return http.build();
}
<http create-session="ALWAYS">
</http>
Detecting Timeouts
You can configure Spring Security to detect the submission of an invalid session ID and redirect the user to an appropriate URL.
This is achieved through the session-management
element:
-
Java
-
XML
@Bean
public SecurityFilterChain filterChain(HttpSecurity http) {
http
.sessionManagement(session -> session
.invalidSessionUrl("/invalidSession.htm")
);
return http.build();
}
<http>
...
<session-management invalid-session-url="/invalidSession.htm" />
</http>
Note that if you use this mechanism to detect session timeouts, it may falsely report an error if the user logs out and then logs back in without closing the browser. This is because the session cookie is not cleared when you invalidate the session and will be resubmitted even if the user has logged out. You may be able to explicitly delete the JSESSIONID cookie on logging out, for example by using the following syntax in the logout handler:
-
Java
-
XML
@Bean
public SecurityFilterChain filterChain(HttpSecurity http) {
http
.logout(logout -> logout
.deleteCookies("JSESSIONID")
);
return http.build();
}
<http>
<logout delete-cookies="JSESSIONID" />
</http>
Unfortunately this can’t be guaranteed to work with every servlet container, so you will need to test it in your environment
If you are running your application behind a proxy, you may also be able to remove the session cookie by configuring the proxy server.
For example, using Apache HTTPD’s mod_headers, the following directive would delete the
|
Concurrent Session Control
If you wish to place constraints on a single user’s ability to log in to your application, Spring Security supports this out of the box with the following simple additions. First, you need to add the following listener to your configuration to keep Spring Security updated about session lifecycle events:
-
Java
-
XML
@Bean
public HttpSessionEventPublisher httpSessionEventPublisher() {
return new HttpSessionEventPublisher();
}
<listener>
<listener-class>
org.springframework.security.web.session.HttpSessionEventPublisher
</listener-class>
</listener>
Then add the following lines to your application context:
-
Java
-
XML
@Bean
public SecurityFilterChain filterChain(HttpSecurity http) {
http
.sessionManagement(session -> session
.maximumSessions(1)
);
return http.build();
}
<http>
...
<session-management>
<concurrency-control max-sessions="1" />
</session-management>
</http>
This will prevent a user from logging in multiple times - a second login will cause the first to be invalidated. Often you would prefer to prevent a second login, in which case you can use
-
Java
-
XML
@Bean
public SecurityFilterChain filterChain(HttpSecurity http) {
http
.sessionManagement(session -> session
.maximumSessions(1)
.maxSessionsPreventsLogin(true)
);
return http.build();
}
<http>
<session-management>
<concurrency-control max-sessions="1" error-if-maximum-exceeded="true" />
</session-management>
</http>
The second login will then be rejected.
By "rejected", we mean that the user will be sent to the authentication-failure-url
if form-based login is being used.
If the second authentication takes place through another non-interactive mechanism, such as "remember-me", an "unauthorized" (401) error will be sent to the client.
If instead you want to use an error page, you can add the attribute session-authentication-error-url
to the session-management
element.
If you are using a customized authentication filter for form-based login, then you have to configure concurrent session control support explicitly. More details can be found in the Session Management chapter.
Session Fixation Attack Protection
Session fixation attacks are a potential risk where it is possible for a malicious attacker to create a session by accessing a site, then persuade another user to log in with the same session (by sending them a link containing the session identifier as a parameter, for example).
Spring Security protects against this automatically by creating a new session or otherwise changing the session ID when a user logs in.
If you don’t require this protection, or it conflicts with some other requirement, you can control the behavior using the session-fixation-protection
attribute on <session-management>
, which has four options
-
none
- Don’t do anything. The original session will be retained. -
newSession
- Create a new "clean" session, without copying the existing session data (Spring Security-related attributes will still be copied). -
migrateSession
- Create a new session and copy all existing session attributes to the new session. This is the default in Servlet 3.0 or older containers. -
changeSessionId
- Do not create a new session. Instead, use the session fixation protection provided by the Servlet container (HttpServletRequest#changeSessionId()
). This option is only available in Servlet 3.1 (Java EE 7) and newer containers. Specifying it in older containers will result in an exception. This is the default in Servlet 3.1 and newer containers.
When session fixation protection occurs, it results in a SessionFixationProtectionEvent
being published in the application context.
If you use changeSessionId
, this protection will also result in any javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionIdListener
s being notified, so use caution if your code listens for both events.
See the Session Management chapter for additional information.
SessionManagementFilter
The SessionManagementFilter
checks the contents of the SecurityContextRepository
against the current contents of the SecurityContextHolder
to determine whether a user has been authenticated during the current request, typically by a non-interactive authentication mechanism, such as pre-authentication or remember-me [1].
If the repository contains a security context, the filter does nothing.
If it doesn’t, and the thread-local SecurityContext
contains a (non-anonymous) Authentication
object, the filter assumes they have been authenticated by a previous filter in the stack.
It will then invoke the configured SessionAuthenticationStrategy
.
If the user is not currently authenticated, the filter will check whether an invalid session ID has been requested (because of a timeout, for example) and will invoke the configured InvalidSessionStrategy
, if one is set.
The most common behaviour is just to redirect to a fixed URL and this is encapsulated in the standard implementation SimpleRedirectInvalidSessionStrategy
.
The latter is also used when configuring an invalid session URL through the namespace, as described earlier.
SessionAuthenticationStrategy
SessionAuthenticationStrategy
is used by both SessionManagementFilter
and AbstractAuthenticationProcessingFilter
, so if you are using a customized form-login class, for example, you will need to inject it into both of these.
In this case, a typical configuration, combining the namespace and custom beans might look like this:
<http>
<custom-filter position="FORM_LOGIN_FILTER" ref="myAuthFilter" />
<session-management session-authentication-strategy-ref="sas"/>
</http>
<beans:bean id="myAuthFilter" class=
"org.springframework.security.web.authentication.UsernamePasswordAuthenticationFilter">
<beans:property name="sessionAuthenticationStrategy" ref="sas" />
...
</beans:bean>
<beans:bean id="sas" class=
"org.springframework.security.web.authentication.session.SessionFixationProtectionStrategy" />
Note that the use of the default, SessionFixationProtectionStrategy
may cause issues if you are storing beans in the session which implement HttpSessionBindingListener
, including Spring session-scoped beans.
See the Javadoc for this class for more information.
Concurrency Control
Spring Security is able to prevent a principal from concurrently authenticating to the same application more than a specified number of times. Many ISVs take advantage of this to enforce licensing, whilst network administrators like this feature because it helps prevent people from sharing login names. You can, for example, stop user "Batman" from logging onto the web application from two different sessions. You can either expire their previous login or you can report an error when they try to log in again, preventing the second login. Note that if you are using the second approach, a user who has not explicitly logged out (but who has just closed their browser, for example) will not be able to log in again until their original session expires.
Concurrency control is supported by the namespace, so please check the earlier namespace chapter for the simplest configuration. Sometimes you need to customize things though.
The implementation uses a specialized version of SessionAuthenticationStrategy
, called ConcurrentSessionControlAuthenticationStrategy
.
Previously the concurrent authentication check was made by the |
To use concurrent session support, you’ll need to add the following to web.xml
:
<listener>
<listener-class>
org.springframework.security.web.session.HttpSessionEventPublisher
</listener-class>
</listener>
In addition, you will need to add the ConcurrentSessionFilter
to your FilterChainProxy
.
The ConcurrentSessionFilter
requires two constructor arguments, sessionRegistry
, which generally points to an instance of SessionRegistryImpl
, and sessionInformationExpiredStrategy
, which defines the strategy to apply when a session has expired.
A configuration using the namespace to create the FilterChainProxy
and other default beans might look like this:
<http>
<custom-filter position="CONCURRENT_SESSION_FILTER" ref="concurrencyFilter" />
<custom-filter position="FORM_LOGIN_FILTER" ref="myAuthFilter" />
<session-management session-authentication-strategy-ref="sas"/>
</http>
<beans:bean id="redirectSessionInformationExpiredStrategy"
class="org.springframework.security.web.session.SimpleRedirectSessionInformationExpiredStrategy">
<beans:constructor-arg name="invalidSessionUrl" value="/session-expired.htm" />
</beans:bean>
<beans:bean id="concurrencyFilter"
class="org.springframework.security.web.session.ConcurrentSessionFilter">
<beans:constructor-arg name="sessionRegistry" ref="sessionRegistry" />
<beans:constructor-arg name="sessionInformationExpiredStrategy" ref="redirectSessionInformationExpiredStrategy" />
</beans:bean>
<beans:bean id="myAuthFilter" class=
"org.springframework.security.web.authentication.UsernamePasswordAuthenticationFilter">
<beans:property name="sessionAuthenticationStrategy" ref="sas" />
<beans:property name="authenticationManager" ref="authenticationManager" />
</beans:bean>
<beans:bean id="sas" class="org.springframework.security.web.authentication.session.CompositeSessionAuthenticationStrategy">
<beans:constructor-arg>
<beans:list>
<beans:bean class="org.springframework.security.web.authentication.session.ConcurrentSessionControlAuthenticationStrategy">
<beans:constructor-arg ref="sessionRegistry"/>
<beans:property name="maximumSessions" value="1" />
<beans:property name="exceptionIfMaximumExceeded" value="true" />
</beans:bean>
<beans:bean class="org.springframework.security.web.authentication.session.SessionFixationProtectionStrategy">
</beans:bean>
<beans:bean class="org.springframework.security.web.authentication.session.RegisterSessionAuthenticationStrategy">
<beans:constructor-arg ref="sessionRegistry"/>
</beans:bean>
</beans:list>
</beans:constructor-arg>
</beans:bean>
<beans:bean id="sessionRegistry"
class="org.springframework.security.core.session.SessionRegistryImpl" />
Adding the listener to web.xml
causes an ApplicationEvent
to be published to the Spring ApplicationContext
every time a HttpSession
commences or ends.
This is critical, as it allows the SessionRegistryImpl
to be notified when a session ends.
Without it, a user will never be able to log back in again once they have exceeded their session allowance, even if they log out of another session or it times out.
Querying the SessionRegistry for currently authenticated users and their sessions
Setting up concurrency-control, either through the namespace or using plain beans has the useful side effect of providing you with a reference to the SessionRegistry
which you can use directly within your application, so even if you don’t want to restrict the number of sessions a user may have, it may be worth setting up the infrastructure anyway.
You can set the maximumSession
property to -1 to allow unlimited sessions.
If you’re using the namespace, you can set an alias for the internally-created SessionRegistry
using the session-registry-alias
attribute, providing a reference which you can inject into your own beans.
The getAllPrincipals()
method supplies you with a list of the currently authenticated users.
You can list a user’s sessions by calling the getAllSessions(Object principal, boolean includeExpiredSessions)
method, which returns a list of SessionInformation
objects.
You can also expire a user’s session by calling expireNow()
on a SessionInformation
instance.
When the user returns to the application, they will be prevented from proceeding.
You may find these methods useful in an administration application, for example.
Have a look at the Javadoc for more information.
SessionManagementFilter
, as the filter will not be invoked during the authenticating request. Session-management functionality has to be handled separately in these cases.