We have been using Spring Security with our application for a few years now. Last week we upgraded Spring Security from version 3.1.4 to 3.2.0. The upgrade went fine and we did not find any errors post the upgrade.
While looking through the Spring Security 3.2.0 documentation we came across the newly added features around CSRF protection and security headers. We followed the instructions in the Spring Security 3.2.0 documentation to enable CSRF protection for our protected resources. It works fine for regular forms but does not work for multipart forms in our application. On form submission, CsrfFilter
throws an Access Denied error citing the absence of a CSRF token in the request (determined through DEBUG logs). We have tried using the first option suggested in the Spring Security documentation for making CSRF protection work with multipart forms. We do not want to use the second suggested option as it leaks CSRF tokens through the URLs and poses a security risk.
The relevant part of our configuration based on the documentation is available as a Gist on Github. We are using Spring version 4.0.0.
Note that we have already tried the following variations without success:
MultipartFilter
in web.xml
.MultipartFilter
in web.xml
.filterMultipartResolver
in webContext.xml
.UPDATE: I have confirmed that the documented behaviour does not work even with a single page sample app. Can anyone confirm that the documented behaviour works as expected? Is there an example working application that can be used?
I was able to resolve this with help from the Spring Security team. I have updated the Gist to reflect a working configuration. I had to follow the steps given below in order to get everything to work as expected.
1. Common Step
Add a MultipartFilter
to web.xml
as described in the answer by @holmis83, ensuring that it is added before the Spring Security configuration:
<filter>
<display-name>springMultipartFilter</display-name>
<filter-name>springMultipartFilter</filter-name>
<filter-class>org.springframework.web.multipart.support.MultipartFilter</filter-class>
</filter>
<filter-mapping>
<filter-name>springMultipartFilter</filter-name>
<url-pattern>/*</url-pattern>
</filter-mapping>
<filter>
<display-name>springSecurityFilterChain</display-name>
<filter-name>springSecurityFilterChain</filter-name>
<filter-class>org.springframework.web.filter.DelegatingFilterProxy</filter-class>
</filter>
<filter-mapping>
<filter-name>springSecurityFilterChain</filter-name>
<url-pattern>/*</url-pattern>
<dispatcher>ERROR</dispatcher>
<dispatcher>FORWARD</dispatcher>
<dispatcher>REQUEST</dispatcher>
</filter-mapping>
2.1. Using Apache Commons Multipart Resolver
Ensure that there is an Apache Commons Multipart Resolver bean named filterMultipartResolver
in the root Spring application context. I will stress this again, make sure that the Multipart Resolver is declared in the root Spring Context (usually called applicationContext.xml). For example,
web.xml
<context-param>
<param-name>contextConfigLocation</param-name>
<param-value>
classpath*:springWebMultipartContext.xml
</param-value>
</context-param>
springWebMultipartContext.xml
<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd">
<bean id="filterMultipartResolver" class="org.springframework.web.multipart.commons.CommonsMultipartResolver">
<property name="maxUploadSize" value="100000000" />
</bean>
</beans>
Make sure that the bean is called filterMultipartResolver as any other bean name is not picked up by MultipartFilter
configured in web.xml
. My initial configuration was not working because this bean was named multipartResolver. I even tried passing the bean name to MultipartFilter
using web.xml
init-param
but that did not work either.
2.2. Using Tomcat Multipart support
Tomcat 7.0+ has in-built multipart support, but it has to be explicitly enabled. Either change the global Tomcat context.xml
file as follows or include a local context.xml
file in your WAR file for this support to work without making any other changes to your application.
<Context allowCasualMultipartParsing="true">
...
</Context>
After these changes using Apache Commons Multipart Resolver our application is working so far on Tomcat, Jetty and Weblogic.