Acegi Security: Implementing security in your spring applications

Acegi Security is a Java/Java EE framework that provides advanced authentication, authorization and other security features for enterprise applications built using the Spring Framework (Java). This is a powerful, flexible security solution for enterprise software, with a particular emphasis on applications that use Spring. This provides your applications with comprehensive authentication, authorization, instance-based access control, channel security and human user detection capabilities. If you want to read more the please visit these links - Project site, Reference, API docs

Technorati: Spring, Security, acegi

1 Response to “Acegi Security: Implementing security in your spring applications”


  1. 1 Linh Chau August 5, 2007 at 7:18 pm

    Hi Lijin,
    I just knew about your web site yesterday, when I looked for Hibernate mapping type on the Internet using Google.

    This is a very nice site, very informative.

    However, I wonder if you have some free time to look outside of the J2EE world ?

    J2EE world is becoming bloated with too much complication and frameworks which J2EE developers bring unto themselves.

    (Having said that, I have worked with J2EE technologies for different companies in the U.S. for nearly 7 years - before that I had worked in Germany and Vietnam).

    Recently, I decide to abandon Java, and move to Ruby and Ruby On Rails.

    I will not write the whole article about Ruby and Ruby On Rails here. But I would like to urge you to give it a try.

    To end the note, here is why I looked for Hibernate mapping type, and came to your site.

    A company in the U.S. ask me to do some database design, create some database tables, and write some Hibernate XML files for them, for a hierarchy of different object types, which have inter-dependent relationship one-to-many, many-to-many …

    For a long time, I haven’t worked with Hibernate, so after finishing the database design, I had to look for mapping types to put in the XML file, for example, SQL “SMALLINT” maps to Hibernate “byte” and map to Java “byte” …

    They gave me about 3 hours to do that, and I fnished a little earlier. So I decided to build a test Web-based application using Rails, to prove that my database design work.

    In what was left of 3 hours, I built the whole Web-based application using Ruby On Rails, with some Ajax features, covering all the important use cases of the database design.

    Had I used Java, Spring, Hibernate, it would have taken me at least 10 more hours, if I were proficient in J2EE as I had been last year.

    So, if you are curious, and want to explore new territory, Ruby and Ruby On Rails are very interesting things to see.

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