InfoQ

InfoQ

Presentation

My Bookmarks

Login or Register to enable bookmarks for unlimited time.

The content has been bookmarked!

There was an error bookmarking this content! Please retry.

Recorded at:
Recorded at

Getting Started With Spring Security 3.1

Presented by Rob Winch on Dec 30, 2011 Length 01:26:21     Download: MP3
     Slides
Sections
Development
Topics
Spring ,
SpringSource ,
Dependency Injection ,
Java ,
VMWare ,
Languages ,
Websphere ,
Design Pattern ,
Programming ,
IBM ,
Application Servers ,
Patterns ,
Design ,
Object Oriented Design ,
Authorization ,
SpringOne 2GX 2011 ,
Authentication ,
Agile in the Enterprise ,
Companies ,
Identity Management ,
SpringOne ,
Agile ,
Security ,
Spring Security ,
Conferences
 

How would you like to view the presentation?

In case you are having issues watching this video, please follow these simple steps to help us investigate the issue:
1. Right click on the video player and select Copy log
2. Paste the copied information in an email to video-issue@infoq.com (clicking this link will fill in the default details in most email clients).
Note: in case your email client hasn't automatically picked up the email subject, please include in your email the URL of the video too.
3. Done.
We will investigate the issue and get back to you as soon as possible. Thanks for helping us improve our site!
Summary
Rob Winch demoes some of the new features in Spring Security 3.1: multiple http elements, stateless authentication mode for RESTful services, Debug Filter, CAS support for proxy tickets, JAAS, etc.

Bio
Rob Winch is a software engineer at Cerner Corporation with 5+ years of experience in securing health care applications and 10+ years writing web applications. He is a committer for Spring Security and actively responds to questions on the forums. His interests include web security and identity management, high performance computing, and ALM tooling.

About the conference
SpringOne 2GX is a one-of-a-kind conference for application developers, solution architects, web operations and IT teams who develop business applications, create multi-device aware web applications, design cloud architectures, and manage high performance infrastructure. The sessions are specifically tailored for developers using the hugely popular open source Spring technologies, Groovy & Grails, and Tomcat. Whether you're building and running mission-critical business applications or designing the next killer cloud application, SpringOne 2GX will keep you up to date with the latest enterprise technology.
  • This article is part of a featured topic series on Agile

No comments

Watch Thread Reply

Educational Content

Evolution in Data Integration From EII to Big Data

Approaches to integrating data are changing with emergence of cloud computing.

Winning Hearts and Minds: How to Embed UX from Scratch in a Large Organization

Michele Ide-Smith presents the lessons learned in the process of introducing UX principles and techniques into a large organization through a series of small steps.

LMAX Disruptor: 100K TPS at Less than 1ms Latency

Dave Farley and Martin Thompson discuss solutions for doing low-latency high throughput transactions based on the Disruptor concurrency pattern.

Thoughts on Test Automation in Agile

Rajneesh Namta shares his thoughts, experiences, and some of the critical lessons learned while implementing software test automation on a recent Agile project.

Actor Interaction Patterns

Dale Schumacher presents several patterns of actor interaction that can be used in collaborative programs written in any language.

Scalaz: Functional Programming in Scala

Rúnar Bjarnason discusses Scalaz, a Scala library of pure data structures, type classes, highly generalized functions, and concurrency abstractions to perform functional programming in Scala.

Faster, Better, Higher – But How?

One of the main challenges when designing software architecture is considering quality attributes. Not only their design turns out to be difficult, but also the specification of these attributes.

Software Naturalism - Embracing the Real Behind the Ideal

Michael Feathers analyzes real code bases concluding that code is not nearly as beautiful as designers aspire to, discussing the everyday decisions that alter the code bit by bit.