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Custom Password Constraint Validator Annotation Example
This tutorial demonstrates how to create a custom password validator annotation using custom password rules. You’ll be able to annotate your password field with a @ValidPassword. This’ll trigger the custom PasswordConstraintValidator which’ll enforce a server-side password policy.
Date: 2019-08-10 View: 1520
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Integrate Google ReCaptcha Java Spring Web Application
This tutorial demonstrates how to integrate Google ReCaptcha into a Java Spring Web Application. reCAPTCHA is used to verify if the current computer is a human, preventing bots from automatically submitting forms. We integrated Google ReCaptcha using server side validation. We wrote a custom @ReCaptcha annotation which you can annotate your java fields. This’ll automatically handle the ReCaptcha server side validation process. At the bottom we also wrote some Unit and Integration tests using Mockito, spring-test and MockMvc.
Date: 2019-08-10 View: 1520
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Field Matching Bean Validation Annotation Example
This tutorial demonstrates a Field Matching Bean Validation Annotation Example. When you are building forms you may come across a requirement to validate/compare if different fields inside a form are equal to another field in the same form like password and/or email fields. In this example we build a simple form where we have a password and a confirmPassword field. We need to make sure the user has entered the correct password twice before submitting the request.
Date: 2019-08-10 View: 1520
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Spring Security In Memory Authentication Example
This tutorial demonstrates how to configure Spring Security to use In Memory Authentication. We can easily customize the Spring Security AuthenticationManager to use Spring Security in memory authentication and add multiple users with different attributes, authorities and roles. In this example we used HTTP Basic Authentication with stateless configuration for securing rest full web services. We also demonstrate how to create some Integration Tests using MockMvc.
Date: 2019-08-10 View: 1520
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Spring Security Remember Me Hashing Authentication Example
In this tutorial we demonstrate how to create a Spring Security Remember Me Hashing Authentication application. Remember me authentication is a feature that allows web sites to remember the identity of a user between sessions. Spring security provides two remember-me implementation. One uses hashing to preserve the security of cookie-based tokens which we’ll tackle in this tutorial. The second uses a database or other persistent storage mechanism to store the generated tokens.
Date: 2019-08-10 View: 1520