For the latest stable version, please use Spring Security 6.1.12! |
Authentication Events
For each authentication that succeeds or fails, a AuthenticationSuccessEvent
or AuthenticationFailureEvent
, respectively, is fired.
To listen for these events, you must first publish an AuthenticationEventPublisher
.
Spring Security’s DefaultAuthenticationEventPublisher
works fine for this purpose:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
@Bean
public AuthenticationEventPublisher authenticationEventPublisher
(ApplicationEventPublisher applicationEventPublisher) {
return new DefaultAuthenticationEventPublisher(applicationEventPublisher);
}
@Bean
fun authenticationEventPublisher
(applicationEventPublisher: ApplicationEventPublisher?): AuthenticationEventPublisher {
return DefaultAuthenticationEventPublisher(applicationEventPublisher)
}
Then you can use Spring’s @EventListener
support:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
@Component
public class AuthenticationEvents {
@EventListener
public void onSuccess(AuthenticationSuccessEvent success) {
// ...
}
@EventListener
public void onFailure(AbstractAuthenticationFailureEvent failures) {
// ...
}
}
@Component
class AuthenticationEvents {
@EventListener
fun onSuccess(success: AuthenticationSuccessEvent?) {
// ...
}
@EventListener
fun onFailure(failures: AbstractAuthenticationFailureEvent?) {
// ...
}
}
While similar to AuthenticationSuccessHandler
and AuthenticationFailureHandler
, these are nice in that they can be used independently from the servlet API.
Adding Exception Mappings
By default, DefaultAuthenticationEventPublisher
publishes an AuthenticationFailureEvent
for the following events:
Exception |
Event |
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The publisher does an exact Exception
match, which means that sub-classes of these exceptions do not also produce events.
To that end, you may want to supply additional mappings to the publisher through the setAdditionalExceptionMappings
method:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
@Bean
public AuthenticationEventPublisher authenticationEventPublisher
(ApplicationEventPublisher applicationEventPublisher) {
Map<Class<? extends AuthenticationException>,
Class<? extends AbstractAuthenticationFailureEvent>> mapping =
Collections.singletonMap(FooException.class, FooEvent.class);
AuthenticationEventPublisher authenticationEventPublisher =
new DefaultAuthenticationEventPublisher(applicationEventPublisher);
authenticationEventPublisher.setAdditionalExceptionMappings(mapping);
return authenticationEventPublisher;
}
@Bean
fun authenticationEventPublisher
(applicationEventPublisher: ApplicationEventPublisher?): AuthenticationEventPublisher {
val mapping: Map<Class<out AuthenticationException>, Class<out AbstractAuthenticationFailureEvent>> =
mapOf(Pair(FooException::class.java, FooEvent::class.java))
val authenticationEventPublisher = DefaultAuthenticationEventPublisher(applicationEventPublisher)
authenticationEventPublisher.setAdditionalExceptionMappings(mapping)
return authenticationEventPublisher
}
Default Event
You can also supply a catch-all event to fire in the case of any AuthenticationException
:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
@Bean
public AuthenticationEventPublisher authenticationEventPublisher
(ApplicationEventPublisher applicationEventPublisher) {
AuthenticationEventPublisher authenticationEventPublisher =
new DefaultAuthenticationEventPublisher(applicationEventPublisher);
authenticationEventPublisher.setDefaultAuthenticationFailureEvent
(GenericAuthenticationFailureEvent.class);
return authenticationEventPublisher;
}
@Bean
fun authenticationEventPublisher
(applicationEventPublisher: ApplicationEventPublisher?): AuthenticationEventPublisher {
val authenticationEventPublisher = DefaultAuthenticationEventPublisher(applicationEventPublisher)
authenticationEventPublisher.setDefaultAuthenticationFailureEvent(GenericAuthenticationFailureEvent::class.java)
return authenticationEventPublisher
}