66

I'm using Spring Security 3 and Spring MVC 3.05.

I would like to print username of currently logged in user,how can I fetch UserDetails in my Controller?

@RequestMapping(value="/index.html", method=RequestMethod.GET)
    public ModelAndView indexView(){
         UserDetails user = ?
                mv.addObject("username", user.getUsername());
        ModelAndView mv = new ModelAndView("index");
        return mv;
    }   

6 Answers 6

123

If you already know for sure that the user is logged in (in your example if /index.html is protected):

UserDetails userDetails =
 (UserDetails)SecurityContextHolder.getContext().getAuthentication().getPrincipal();

To first check if the user is logged in, check that the current Authentication is not a AnonymousAuthenticationToken.

Authentication auth = SecurityContextHolder.getContext().getAuthentication();
if (!(auth instanceof AnonymousAuthenticationToken)) {
        // userDetails = auth.getPrincipal()
}
4
  • 14
    this gives me an exception: java.lang.ClassCastException: java.lang.String cannot be cast to org.springframework.security.core.userdetails.UserDetails
    – fresh_dev
    Oct 26, 2011 at 16:45
  • 1
    I use UsernamePasswordAuthenticationToken for my authentication, and that returns a String even for a logged in user. The object returned may vary depending on the type of Authentication used; cast your class as appropriate, for me it is String.
    – Erica Kane
    Jan 18, 2015 at 21:44
  • I believe this is not the best method due to SecurityContextHolder using ThreadLocal underneath (see this question stackoverflow.com/questions/609826/… ). Unless someone could provide some actual benchmark for this method (because there are also other strategies than simple ThreadLocal, but I have not tested them) I'd advise going with Farm's answer instead.
    – Michal M
    Feb 12, 2015 at 16:26
  • If principal is String, you can use SecurityContextHolder.getContext().getAuthentication().getDetails(). It works at least for Spring Security Saml this way.
    – csviri
    Apr 6, 2017 at 12:58
34

Let Spring 3 injection take care of this.

Thanks to tsunade21 the easiest way is:

 @RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.GET)   
 public ModelAndView anyMethodNameGoesHere(Principal principal) {
        final String loggedInUserName = principal.getName();

 }
1
  • Amazing. Makes testing much easier than when using static methods on SecurityContextHolder.
    – Planky
    Jul 15, 2016 at 20:41
4

If you just want to print user name on the pages, maybe you'll like this solution. It's free from object castings and works without Spring Security too:

@RequestMapping(value = "/index.html", method = RequestMethod.GET)
public ModelAndView indexView(HttpServletRequest request) {

    ModelAndView mv = new ModelAndView("index");

    String userName = "not logged in"; // Any default user  name
    Principal principal = request.getUserPrincipal();
    if (principal != null) {
        userName = principal.getName();
    }

    mv.addObject("username", userName);

    // By adding a little code (same way) you can check if user has any
    // roles you need, for example:

    boolean fAdmin = request.isUserInRole("ROLE_ADMIN");
    mv.addObject("isAdmin", fAdmin);

    return mv;
}

Note "HttpServletRequest request" parameter added.

Works fine because Spring injects it's own objects (wrappers) for HttpServletRequest, Principal etc., so you can use standard java methods to retrieve user information.

1

That's another solution (Spring Security 3):

public String getLoggedUser() throws Exception {
    String name = SecurityContextHolder.getContext().getAuthentication().getName();
    return (!name.equals("anonymousUser")) ? name : null;
}
1

if you are using spring security then you can get the current logged in user by

Authentication auth = SecurityContextHolder.getContext().getAuthentication();
     String name = auth.getName(); //get logged in username
0

You can use below code to find out principal (user email who logged in)

  org.opensaml.saml2.core.impl.NameIDImpl principal =  
  (NameIDImpl) SecurityContextHolder.getContext().getAuthentication().getPrincipal();

  String email = principal.getValue();

This code is written on top of SAML.

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.