HttpSecurity, WebSecurity and AuthenticationManagerBuilder

Solution 1:

configure(AuthenticationManagerBuilder) is used to establish an authentication mechanism by allowing AuthenticationProviders to be added easily: e.g. The following defines the in-memory authentication with the in-built 'user' and 'admin' logins.

public void configure(AuthenticationManagerBuilder auth) {
    auth
        .inMemoryAuthentication()
        .withUser("user")
        .password("password")
        .roles("USER")
    .and()
        .withUser("admin")
        .password("password")
        .roles("ADMIN","USER");
}

configure(HttpSecurity) allows configuration of web based security at a resource level, based on a selection match - e.g. The example below restricts the URLs that start with /admin/ to users that have ADMIN role, and declares that any other URLs need to be successfully authenticated.

protected void configure(HttpSecurity http) throws Exception {
    http
        .authorizeRequests()
        .antMatchers("/admin/**").hasRole("ADMIN")
        .anyRequest().authenticated()
}

configure(WebSecurity) is used for configuration settings that impact global security (ignore resources, set debug mode, reject requests by implementing a custom firewall definition). For example, the following method would cause any request that starts with /resources/ to be ignored for authentication purposes.

public void configure(WebSecurity web) throws Exception {
    web
        .ignoring()
        .antMatchers("/resources/**");
}

You can refer to the following link for more information Spring Security Java Config Preview: Web Security

Solution 2:

General use of WebSecurity ignoring() method omits Spring Security and none of Spring Security’s features will be available. WebSecurity is based above HttpSecurity.

@Override
public void configure(WebSecurity web) throws Exception {
    web
        .ignoring()
        .antMatchers("/resources/**")
        .antMatchers("/publics/**");
}

@Override
protected void configure(HttpSecurity http) throws Exception {
    http
        .authorizeRequests()
        .antMatchers("/admin/**").hasRole("ADMIN")
        .antMatchers("/publics/**").hasRole("USER") // no effect
        .anyRequest().authenticated();
}

WebSecurity in the above example lets Spring ignore /resources/** and /publics/**. Therefore the .antMatchers("/publics/**").hasRole("USER") in HttpSecurity is unconsidered.

This will omit the request pattern from the security filter chain entirely. Note that anything matching this path will then have no authentication or authorization services applied and will be freely accessible.

configure(HttpSecurity) allows configuration of web-based security at a resource level, based on a selection match - e.g. The example below restricts the URLs that start with /admin/ to users that have ADMIN role, and declares that any other URLs need to be successfully authenticated.

configure(WebSecurity) is used for configuration settings that impact global security (ignore resources, set debug mode, reject requests by implementing a custom firewall definition). For example, the following method would cause any request that starts with /resources/ to be ignored for authentication purposes.

AuthenticationManagerBuilder
extends AbstractConfiguredSecurityBuilder<AuthenticationManager,AuthenticationManagerBuilder>
implements ProviderManagerBuilder<AuthenticationManagerBuilder>

SecurityBuilder used to create an AuthenticationManager. Allows for easily building in memory authentication, LDAP authentication, JDBC based authentication, adding UserDetailsService, and adding AuthenticationProvider's.

@Override
     protected void configure(AuthenticationManagerBuilder auth) throws Exception {
        auth.inMemoryAuthentication().withUser("user").password("password").roles("USER"); 
        auth.userDetailsService(customUserDetailService).passwordEncoder(new BCryptPasswordEncoder());
     }