These are the Spring Security OAuth sample apps and integration tests.
They are split into OAuth (1a) and OAuth2 samples. Look in the
subdirectory oauth
and oauth2
respectively for components of the
sample you are interested in. They are broadly speaking similar
functionally - there are two web apps, one (sparklr
) is a provider
or OAuth services, and the other (tonr
) is a consumer of the
services. The tonr
app is also able to consume external resources
(e.g. Facebook), and the precise external resource it consumes has
been chosen to show the use of the relevant protocol.
The sparklr
app is a photo storage and browsing service, but it
doesn't know how to print your photos. Thats where tonr
comes in.
You go to tonr
to browse the photos that are stored in sparklr
and
"print" them (this feature is not actually implemented). The tonr
app has to get your permission to access the photos, but only for read
access - this is the key separation of concerns that is offered by
OAuth protocols: sparklr
is able to ask the user to authorize tonr
to read his photos for the purpose of printing them.
To run the apps the easiest thing is to first install all the
artifacts using mvn install
and then go to the tonr
directory (in
oauth
or oauth2
) and run mvn tomcat7:run
. You can also use the
command line to build war files with mvn package
and drop them in
your favourite server, or you can run them directly from an IDE.
Visit http://localhost:8080/tonr2
in a browser and go to the
sparklr
tab. The result should be:
-
You are prompted to authenticate with
tonr
(the login screen tells you the users available and their passwords) -
The correct authorization is not yet in place for
tonr
to access your photos onsparklr
on your behalf, sotonr
redirects your browser to thesparklr
UI to get the authorization. -
You are prompted to authenticate with
sparklr
. -
Then
sparklr
will ask you if you authorizetonr
to access your photos. -
If you say "yes" then your browser will be redirected back to
tonr
and this time the correct authorization is present, so you will be able to see your photos.
Use Maven (2.2.1 works) and, from this directory do
$ mvn package
and then look in */{sparklr,tonr}/target
for the war files. Deploy
them with context roots {/sparklr,/tonr}
(for OAuth 1) and
{/sparklr2,/tonr2}
(for OAuth 2) respectively in your favourite web
container, and fire up the tonr
app to see the two working together.
To deploy the apps in Eclipse you will need the Maven plugin (m2e
)
and the Web Tools Project (WTP) plugins. If you have SpringSource
Toolsuite (STS) you should already have those, aso you can deploy the
apps very simply. (Update the WTP plugin to at least version 0.12 at
http://download.eclipse.org/technology/m2e/releases if you have an older
one, or the context roots for the apps will be wrong.)
-
Ensure the Spring Security OAuth dependencies are available locally first. You can do this by importing all projects, or by building on the command line before importing the samples (using
mvn install
). -
Import the projects:
File->Import...->Maven->Existing Maven Projects->Next
browse to the parent directory containing all the samples and press
Finish
. -
Wait for the projects to build, and then just right click on the two webapps (
sparklr
andtonr
orsparklr2
andtonr2
) andRun As
thenRun on Server
. If you have a server set up already (e.g. tcServer is probably there out of teh box) select that, or else create a new server, and follow the dialogues.If you have a server instance set up you can also drag and drop the apps to a server instance (e.g. tcServer or Tomcat) in the
Servers
View. -
Visit the
tonr
app in a browser (e.g. http://localhost:8080/tonr2).