The accepted answer from Kevin Bowersox works, but I didn't like having the T(fully.qualified.path) stuff so I kept looking. I started by creating a custom security method using the answer from James Watkins here:
How to create custom methods for use in spring security expression language annotations
However, instead of a String, I used my enums.Permissions class as the parameter type:
@Component
public class MySecurityService {
public boolean hasPermission(enums.Permissions permission) {
...do some work here...
return true;
}
}
Now the neat part is that when I call the hasPermission from an annotation, I don't have to have to type the whole path, but I do have to enclose it in single quotes:
@PreAuthorize("@mySecurityService.hasPermission('SOME_ROLE_NAME')")
Because the hasPermission method expects an Enum, it will automatically find the Enum value with that name. If it doesn't find it you'll get an exception:
org.springframework.expression.spel.SpelEvaluationException: Type conversion problem, cannot convert from java.lang.String to enums.Permissions
You can rename hasPermission to hasRole, in which case the only trade off is that you are trading T(fully.qualified.path) for @mySecurityService and extra single quotes.
Not sure if it is any better, but there it is. Since none of this is going to verify the values at compile time anyways, my next step is to make an annotation processor.
I also have to give credit to krosenvold for pointing out that spring can automatically convert to an enum:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/516899/618881