How to create spring security login page in vaadin with Java only?
I'm currently building an web app with spring and vaadin. I searched for days to find a solution to create a custom login page with vaadin for spring security. I've got the layout, but don't know how to send the username and password to spring....
Can anybody help me or show me a good example?
By the way I'm using vaadin 10.
java spring security login vaadin
add a comment |
I'm currently building an web app with spring and vaadin. I searched for days to find a solution to create a custom login page with vaadin for spring security. I've got the layout, but don't know how to send the username and password to spring....
Can anybody help me or show me a good example?
By the way I'm using vaadin 10.
java spring security login vaadin
This should be possible using aAuthenticationProvider#authenticate
call. I am not sure but Spring Boot should already auto-configure one. For normal spring application you need to configure it manually I think.
– Steffen Harbich
Nov 14 '18 at 11:26
add a comment |
I'm currently building an web app with spring and vaadin. I searched for days to find a solution to create a custom login page with vaadin for spring security. I've got the layout, but don't know how to send the username and password to spring....
Can anybody help me or show me a good example?
By the way I'm using vaadin 10.
java spring security login vaadin
I'm currently building an web app with spring and vaadin. I searched for days to find a solution to create a custom login page with vaadin for spring security. I've got the layout, but don't know how to send the username and password to spring....
Can anybody help me or show me a good example?
By the way I'm using vaadin 10.
java spring security login vaadin
java spring security login vaadin
asked Nov 13 '18 at 18:34
Johnny
427
427
This should be possible using aAuthenticationProvider#authenticate
call. I am not sure but Spring Boot should already auto-configure one. For normal spring application you need to configure it manually I think.
– Steffen Harbich
Nov 14 '18 at 11:26
add a comment |
This should be possible using aAuthenticationProvider#authenticate
call. I am not sure but Spring Boot should already auto-configure one. For normal spring application you need to configure it manually I think.
– Steffen Harbich
Nov 14 '18 at 11:26
This should be possible using a
AuthenticationProvider#authenticate
call. I am not sure but Spring Boot should already auto-configure one. For normal spring application you need to configure it manually I think.– Steffen Harbich
Nov 14 '18 at 11:26
This should be possible using a
AuthenticationProvider#authenticate
call. I am not sure but Spring Boot should already auto-configure one. For normal spring application you need to configure it manually I think.– Steffen Harbich
Nov 14 '18 at 11:26
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
If you've configured Spring to use formLogin()
, you can just submit the data in a normal form.
<form method="POST" action="login">
<input name="username" />
<input name="password" />
<input type="submit" value="Log in" />
</form>
If you want to use Vaadin components inside, you need to wrap everything in an iron-form
<iron-form id="ironForm" allow-redirect="true">
<form method="POST" action="login">
<vaadin-text-field name="username"></vaadin-text-field>
<vaadin-password-field name="password"></vaadin-password-field>
<vaadin-button theme="primary" on-click="_submit">
Log in
</vaadin-button>
</form>
</iron-form>
and manually submit the form when the Vaadin button is clicked
_submit() {
this.$.ironForm.submit();
}
add a comment |
I managed it by created a Route for the login page with Vaadin and created a custom AuthenticationService that puts the Authentication Object into the SecurityContextHolder.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
If you've configured Spring to use formLogin()
, you can just submit the data in a normal form.
<form method="POST" action="login">
<input name="username" />
<input name="password" />
<input type="submit" value="Log in" />
</form>
If you want to use Vaadin components inside, you need to wrap everything in an iron-form
<iron-form id="ironForm" allow-redirect="true">
<form method="POST" action="login">
<vaadin-text-field name="username"></vaadin-text-field>
<vaadin-password-field name="password"></vaadin-password-field>
<vaadin-button theme="primary" on-click="_submit">
Log in
</vaadin-button>
</form>
</iron-form>
and manually submit the form when the Vaadin button is clicked
_submit() {
this.$.ironForm.submit();
}
add a comment |
If you've configured Spring to use formLogin()
, you can just submit the data in a normal form.
<form method="POST" action="login">
<input name="username" />
<input name="password" />
<input type="submit" value="Log in" />
</form>
If you want to use Vaadin components inside, you need to wrap everything in an iron-form
<iron-form id="ironForm" allow-redirect="true">
<form method="POST" action="login">
<vaadin-text-field name="username"></vaadin-text-field>
<vaadin-password-field name="password"></vaadin-password-field>
<vaadin-button theme="primary" on-click="_submit">
Log in
</vaadin-button>
</form>
</iron-form>
and manually submit the form when the Vaadin button is clicked
_submit() {
this.$.ironForm.submit();
}
add a comment |
If you've configured Spring to use formLogin()
, you can just submit the data in a normal form.
<form method="POST" action="login">
<input name="username" />
<input name="password" />
<input type="submit" value="Log in" />
</form>
If you want to use Vaadin components inside, you need to wrap everything in an iron-form
<iron-form id="ironForm" allow-redirect="true">
<form method="POST" action="login">
<vaadin-text-field name="username"></vaadin-text-field>
<vaadin-password-field name="password"></vaadin-password-field>
<vaadin-button theme="primary" on-click="_submit">
Log in
</vaadin-button>
</form>
</iron-form>
and manually submit the form when the Vaadin button is clicked
_submit() {
this.$.ironForm.submit();
}
If you've configured Spring to use formLogin()
, you can just submit the data in a normal form.
<form method="POST" action="login">
<input name="username" />
<input name="password" />
<input type="submit" value="Log in" />
</form>
If you want to use Vaadin components inside, you need to wrap everything in an iron-form
<iron-form id="ironForm" allow-redirect="true">
<form method="POST" action="login">
<vaadin-text-field name="username"></vaadin-text-field>
<vaadin-password-field name="password"></vaadin-password-field>
<vaadin-button theme="primary" on-click="_submit">
Log in
</vaadin-button>
</form>
</iron-form>
and manually submit the form when the Vaadin button is clicked
_submit() {
this.$.ironForm.submit();
}
answered Nov 14 '18 at 6:56
Tazavoo
768310
768310
add a comment |
add a comment |
I managed it by created a Route for the login page with Vaadin and created a custom AuthenticationService that puts the Authentication Object into the SecurityContextHolder.
add a comment |
I managed it by created a Route for the login page with Vaadin and created a custom AuthenticationService that puts the Authentication Object into the SecurityContextHolder.
add a comment |
I managed it by created a Route for the login page with Vaadin and created a custom AuthenticationService that puts the Authentication Object into the SecurityContextHolder.
I managed it by created a Route for the login page with Vaadin and created a custom AuthenticationService that puts the Authentication Object into the SecurityContextHolder.
answered Nov 28 '18 at 18:35
Johnny
427
427
add a comment |
add a comment |
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This should be possible using a
AuthenticationProvider#authenticate
call. I am not sure but Spring Boot should already auto-configure one. For normal spring application you need to configure it manually I think.– Steffen Harbich
Nov 14 '18 at 11:26