Update ManagementSecurityAutoConfiguration so that MVC Endpoints that
have Principal arguments are not treated in any special way. This
restores Spring Boot 1.1.x behavior where the 'sensitive' flag is used
to determine access rules.
The HealthMvcEndpoint still uses the Principal (when available) to
determine if full status information can be displayed. It now also
explicitly checks the environment for `endpoints.health.sensitive`
to determine if the user has opted-out and requires complete health
details.
The health MVC endpoint should now work as follows:
* Default configuration - No login is required, full information is only
displayed if a Principal is available.
* endpoints.health.sensitive=true - Login is required, full information
is displayed.
* endpoints.health.sensitive=false - Login is not required, full
information is displayed.
Fixes gh-2211
Shares the /health endpoint request mapping between security config
and MVC dispatcher. Generalizes so that instead of a marker
interface (AnonymouslyAccessibleMvcEndpoint), an MvcEndpoint
signals that it wants to control its own access rules by adding
a Principal to the @RequestMapping method parameters (more @MVC).
Fixes gh-2015 slightly differently
The changes in 3bb598a overload the health endpoint's sensitive
property such that it's now considered sensitive if management
security is enabled. When an endpoint is sensitive anonymous
access is prevented. This breaks the health endpoint which should
return a filtered view of the server's health when it's accessed
anonymously rather than rejecting the request.
This commit introduces AnonymouslyAccessibleMvcEndpoint, a marker
extension of the MvcEndpoint interface. It is implemented by
HealthMvcEndpoint. ManagementSecurityAutoConfiguration has been
updated to allow anonymous access to endpoints that aren't sensitive
or that implement AnonymouslyAccessibleMvcEndpoint.
Fixes gh-2015
Including maps and lists. Beans with no metadata (in
/META-INF/*spring-configuration-metadata.json) are just serialized
as they come (so might have problems like cycles). Serialization
errors are caught and rendered as an "error" for that bean. Any
problems can be fixed by preparing metadata and specifying which
properties are to be rendered that way.
Fixes gh-1746, fixes gh-1921
The http.mappers.* configuration properties assumed that the mapping
was JSON (on of the property names was jsonPrettyPrint) and also only
exposed a small subset of the configuration options supported by
Jackson (and GSON). The property names implied that it would configure
all HTTP mapping, however it was ignored by GsonAutoConfiguration.
This commit deprecates the support for http.mappers.* in favour of
configuring Jackson or Gson instead. Jackson can be configured
declaratively using the spring.jackson.* properties or programtically.
Gson can be configured programatically by using a GsonBuilder to
create a Gson instance with the desired configuration.
gh-1946 has been opened to add support for declarative configuration
of Gson.
Closes gh-1945
It *is* very useful to have filtering on by default, so that is now
the case (in spring-boot-starter-parent). Users can filter resources
by default by adding @*@ placeholders (so as not to clash with Spring
${} placeholders).
Fixes gh-1199
Then we can optionally find a non-anonymous principal if there
is one. If the user is anonymous then the health result is cached
up to endpoints.health.ttl (default 1000ms) to prevent a DOS attack.
Fixes gh-1353
If the actuator endpoints are configured on a different port then there
are some settings in the main ServerProperties that we would like to
re-use (e.g. the access log). The easiest way to do that is to just
configure the management server using the same ServerProperties instance
and then overwrite the things that are different (and stored in
ManagementServerProperties).
Fixes gh-1581
The request is being made to '/' and, while the application does have
a mapping for '/', that mapping is not looked for before Spring
Security's filter rejects the request with a 401. This means that the
request is considered to be unmapped and this is reflected in the
metric's name.
See #1331 and #1333