81

How can I specify order of my Filter in spring-boot? I need to insert my MDC filter after Spring Security filter. I tried almost everything but my filter was always first. This didn't work:

@Bean
@Order(Ordered.LOWEST_PRECEDENCE)
public UserInsertingMdcFilter userInsertingMdcFilter() {
    return new UserInsertingMdcFilter();
}

This didn't work too:

@Bean
public FilterRegistrationBean userInsertingMdcFilterRegistrationBean() {
    FilterRegistrationBean registrationBean = new FilterRegistrationBean();
    UserInsertingMdcFilter userFilter = new UserInsertingMdcFilter();
    registrationBean.setFilter(userFilter);
    registrationBean.setOrder(Integer.MAX_VALUE);
    return registrationBean;
}
5
  • 7
    @Order(Ordered.LOWEST_PRECEDENCE + 100) will not work because Ordered.LOWEST_PRECEDENCE = Integer.Max and Integer.Max + 100 = some negative number, this would mean a very high precedence
    – Ralph
    Sep 21, 2014 at 9:57
  • @Ralph - I also tried event @Order(Ordered.LOWEST_PRECEDENCE) with no success.
    – igo
    Sep 21, 2014 at 10:15
  • What version of Spring Boot? Did you try 1.1.7?
    – Dave Syer
    Oct 1, 2014 at 10:28
  • @DaveSyer, I tried, no difference
    – igo
    Oct 1, 2014 at 18:04
  • 2

6 Answers 6

62

Guys from Spring helped again. See the following:

From the former:

Spring Security doesn't set an order on the Filter bean that it creates. This means that, when Boot is creating a FilterRegistrationBean for it, it gets the default order which is LOWEST_PRECEDENCE.

If you want your own Filter to go after Spring Security's you can create your own registration for Spring Security's filter and specify the order.

So the answer to my question is:

@Bean
public FilterRegistrationBean securityFilterChain(@Qualifier(AbstractSecurityWebApplicationInitializer.DEFAULT_FILTER_NAME) Filter securityFilter) {
    FilterRegistrationBean registration = new FilterRegistrationBean(securityFilter);
    registration.setOrder(Integer.MAX_VALUE - 1);
    registration.setName(AbstractSecurityWebApplicationInitializer.DEFAULT_FILTER_NAME);
    return registration;
}

@Bean
public FilterRegistrationBean userInsertingMdcFilterRegistrationBean() {
    FilterRegistrationBean registrationBean = new FilterRegistrationBean();
    UserInsertingMdcFilter userFilter = new UserInsertingMdcFilter();
    registrationBean.setFilter(userFilter);
    registrationBean.setOrder(Integer.MAX_VALUE);
    return registrationBean;
}
5
  • 5
    Given HIGHEST_PRECEDENCE = -2147483648 and LOWEST_PRECEDENCE = 2147483647 I would assume lowest precedence would go last? Everything would go before it?
    – ianstarz
    May 19, 2018 at 16:58
  • 4
    It should go last. From JavaDoc of @Order: Lower values have higher priority. The default value is Ordered.LOWEST_PRECEDENCE, indicating lowest priority (losing to any other specified order value).
    – lrxw
    Jun 6, 2018 at 6:56
  • 4
    @OrangeDog Precedence != priority
    – anon
    Nov 4, 2018 at 2:30
  • @Irxw plus one for the lowest value having highest priority!
    – Gaurav
    Mar 10, 2020 at 7:35
35

Here's an answer compatible with Spring Boot 2 / Spring Security 5 that will allow you to insert your filter in an arbitrary place in the filter chain.

My use case was a custom logging javax.servlet.Filter that I wanted to execute before any Spring Security filters; however the below steps should allow you to put a filter anywhere in your existing Spring filter chain:

Step 1: Find out the order of Spring filters in your existing setup.

Connect your favorite remote debugger to your application, and set a breakpoint in the doFilter(ServletRequest request, ServletResponse response) method of org.springframework.security.web.FilterChainProxy.

As of Spring Security 5.1.6, that is line 311. In your debugger, find out the existing filters by inspecting this.additionalFilters. In my application, the order was something like:

0: WebAsyncManagerIntegrationFilter
1: SecurityContextPersistenceFilter
2: HeaderWriterFilter
...

Step 2: Insert your filter in the desired place using Spring's WebSecurityConfigurerAdapter and HttpSecurity

You likely already have a WebSecurityConfigurerAdapter with a @Override configure(HttpSecurity http) method. HttpSecurity exposes addFilterBefore and addFilterAfter methods to allow you to place your filter relative to an existing class in the chain. Your filter (instance) is the first argument of these methods, and the class of the filter you'd like to insert before or after is the second argument.

In my case, I wanted my custom logging filter to be first in the chain (my code snippet is Kotlin, I'll leave the Java implementation to you):

override fun configure(http: HttpSecurity) {
    http
        .addFilterBefore(MyCustomLoggingFilter(), WebAsyncManagerIntegrationFilter::class.java)
        .authorizeRequests()
        .antMatchers(
        ...
        )
}

Step 3: Profit!

Use the debugging method described in Step 1 above to verify that your filter is where you intended in the filter chain.

Hope this helps someone else out there.

2
  • 3
    Thanks you. This was helpful to me in debugging.
    – Srikanth
    Oct 29, 2020 at 10:06
  • In my case, there was no spring-security, so I debugged the order in ApplicationFilterChain class.
    – was_777
    Sep 14, 2023 at 15:12
26

This was fixed in Spring Boot 1.2. The security chain now defaults to order 0.

It can also be set via properties:

security.filter-order=0 # Security filter chain order.

https://github.com/spring-projects/spring-boot/issues/1640

2
  • 5
    In Spring Boot 1.3.x it is SecurityProperties.DEFAULT_FILTER_ORDER and is FilterRegistrationBean.REQUEST_WRAPPER_FILTER_MAX_ORDER - 100 or simply -100.
    – gavenkoa
    Jul 18, 2017 at 20:54
  • 12
    In Spring Boot 2.1.x => spring.security.filter.order=-100 Jun 14, 2019 at 11:43
5

Note that the Spring Security filter chain is not all there is when it comes to filters. In fact, there is a complete (non-security) filter chain at work, with one of the filters being an instance of DelegatingFilterProxy which (nomen est omen) delegates to another filter called FilterChainProxy which manages its own sublist of filters, all geared towards security related topics. This pattern has the advantage that all security filters are in one place and ordered correctly with respect to each other. This however doesn't help you at all if you need a filter to be executed either before or after all security filters. While it is true that you can configure this using the HttpSecurity object by selecting either the first or last filter in that list, it is logically weird, since chances are your filter has nothing at all to do with security. If you set a breakpoint in DelegatingFilterProxy::doFilter(ServletRequest, ServletResponse, FilterChain) you will see the entire filter chain of the application. You can even drill into the FilterChainProxy to find all the spring security filters if you want to. Then you can open the relevant classes one by one to find out their configured orders. Once you know, where your filter ought to be, you can annotate it.

If for example you need to configure a logging filter and you want to log all security failures (needs to go before FilterChainProxy) but also want a useful tracing ID (needs to go after LazyTracingFilter which has a configured default order of TraceHttpAutoConfiguration.TRACING_FILTER_ORDER = Ordered.HIGHEST_PRECEDENCE + 5) you can annotate your filter with @Order(Ordered.HIGHEST_PRECEDENCE + 6).

3

add

logging.level.web=debug

in your application.properties, you can see details of the registered filters, including their order and URL patterns when springboot onstartup.

1
1

in your first case ,it is a error config,and spring's docs has special reminder :

You cannot configure the order of a Filter by annotating its bean method with @Order.

and you can find from this: https://docs.spring.io/spring-boot/docs/current/reference/html/spring-boot-features.html#boot-features-embedded-container-servlets-filters-listeners-beans

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.