-1

I have a project using login from database with Hibernate Annotations and jsf 2.2 with primefaces 4.0. the login works fine, but the components in the view "login.xhtml" doesn't look like primefaces components, look like only jsf components.

Spring-security.xml

     <global-method-security pre-post-annotations="enabled" />
     <http auto-config="true" access-denied-page="/AccesoDenegado.xhtml" use-expressions="true" >

    <!-- Se definen los dos perfiles y se interceptan las paginas para realizar la autenticacion-->


        <intercept-url pattern="/page1**" access="hasRole ('ROLE_PROFE')" />
        <intercept-url pattern="/page2**" access="hasRole ('ROLE_ALUMNO')"  />
        <intercept-url pattern="/javax.faces.resource/**" access="permitAll"/>


         <!--Se define una pagina de login personalizada, no a que viene por defecto-->

         <form-login 
         login-processing-url="/j_spring_security_check"
         login-page="/login.xhtml" 
         authentication-failure-url="/login"
         />

          <!-- Cerrar Sesion-->

          <logout invalidate-session="true" delete-cookies="JSESSIONID" logout- success-url="/" logout-url="/logout" /> 


    </http>

   <!--Autenticación de uuarios de la BBDD-->
    <authentication-manager >
      <authentication-provider user-service-ref="myUserDetailsService" >
      </authentication-provider>
    </authentication-manager>
</beans:beans>

MyUserDetailsService

public class MyUserDetailsService implements UserDetailsService {

 UserDao userDao;

@Override
public UserDetails loadUserByUsername(final String usuario)throws UsernameNotFoundException {

    proyecto.login.user.modelo.User user = userDao.buscarUser(usuario);

    List<GrantedAuthority> authorities = buildUserAuthority(user.getUserRole());

    return buildUserForAuthentication(user, authorities);


}


private User buildUserForAuthentication(proyecto.login.user.modelo.User user, List<GrantedAuthority> authorities) {
    return new User(user.getUsuario(), 
        user.getContraseña(), user.getHabilitado(), 
                    true, true, true, authorities);
}

private List<GrantedAuthority> buildUserAuthority(Set<Roles> userRoles) {

    Set<GrantedAuthority> setAuths = new HashSet<GrantedAuthority>();

    // Build user's authorities
    for (Roles userRole : userRoles) {
        setAuths.add(new SimpleGrantedAuthority(userRole.getRol()));
    }

    List<GrantedAuthority> Result = new ArrayList<GrantedAuthority>(setAuths);

    return Result;
}

public UserDao getUserDao() {
    return userDao;
}

public void setUserDao(UserDao userDao) {
    this.userDao = userDao;
}

}

LoginBean

public class LoginBean {

   /*este metodo se llama cuendo el usuario pulsa "acceder"*/
    public String doLogin() throws IOException, ServletException
    {
        ExternalContext context = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getExternalContext();

        RequestDispatcher dispatcher = ((ServletRequest) context.getRequest())
                 .getRequestDispatcher("/j_spring_security_check");

        dispatcher.forward((ServletRequest) context.getRequest(),
                (ServletResponse) context.getResponse());

        FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().responseComplete();
        // It's OK to return null here because Faces is just going to exit.
        return null;
    }
}

Login.xhtml

<p:messages globalOnly="true"/>



<!--Para q pueda soportar el Spring Security Check no hay q cambiar ID-->
<p:panel header="Autenticación" style="margin-bottom:20px">
    <h:panelGrid columns="3" cellpadding="5">

<p:outputLabel for="j_username" value="Usuario " />  
<p:inputText id="j_username" required="true" label="username" />  
<p:message for="j_username" display="text" style="color:red"/>

<p:outputLabel for="j_password" value="Contraseña" />  
<h:inputSecret id="j_password" label="password" required="true" />  
<p:message for="j_password" display="text" style="color:red"/>

<p:outputLabel for="_spring_security_remember_me" value="Recordarme" />
<p:selectBooleanCheckbox    id="_spring_security_remember_me" />        



    ![</h:panelGrid>      
    <p:commandButton type="submit" id="login" value="Acceder"  action="#{loginBean.doLogin}" />


    </p:panel>

   </h:form>
     <!-- Boton de Home -->

     <br/>

 <h:form>   
         <p:commandButton action="home?faces-redirect=true" value="Home" /> 

</h:form>
</h:body>
</html>]

These components are not PrimeFaces. Here's the screen shot:

Error in the browser's builtin JS console , Google Chrome

enter image description here

1

1 Answer 1

-1

I solve my problem using this: What is the JSF resource library for and how should it be used?

i added properly the css page in Login Page

3
  • @BalusC The problem was that the css library wasnt included in the login page (on <h:head>), so i found in the link i posted, the right way to include the css library on Login Page Feb 11, 2015 at 11:36
  • ok so i could change the question to Uncaught reference error: Primefaces is not defined in Custom Login Page with Spring Security+ Jsf2.2 primefaces 4, because you said that in Spring Security Login Page theres no need to include the css library , right? Feb 11, 2015 at 11:46
  • My login page is not the original Spring Security form, is customized , i translate it to spanish. So when i include the css library on <h:head> it works fine. You told me that if it was a standard Spring Security login page, it wont need to declare the css library on the <h:head>. So i would change my question to: "Uncaught reference error: Primefaces is not defined in** Custom **Login Page with Spring Security+ Jsf2.2 primefaces 4 " for those people who have custom login pages in spring security and primefaces and have the same problem. Feb 11, 2015 at 12:37

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.