Auth0 allows you to quickly add authentication and gain access to user profile information in your application.
This guide demonstrates how to integrate Auth0 with any new or existing Java Servlet application.If you are using Maven, add them to your
1
Configure Auth0
To use Auth0 services, you’ll need to have an application set up in the Auth0 Dashboard. The Auth0 application is
where you will configure how you want authentication to work for the project you are developing.
Configure an application
Use the interactive selector to create a new Auth0 application or select an existing application that represents the project you want to integrate with. Every application in Auth0 is assigned an alphanumeric, unique client ID that your application code will use to call Auth0 APIs through the SDK.Any settings you configure using this quickstart will automatically update for your Application in the Dashboard, which is where you can manage your Applications in the future.If you would rather explore a complete configuration, you can view a sample application instead.Configure Callback URLs
A callback URL is a URL in your application that you would like Auth0 to redirect users to after they have authenticated. If not set, users will not be returned to your application after they log in.If you are following along with our sample project, set this to
http://localhost:3000/callback
.Configure Logout URLs
A logout URL is a URL in your application that you would like Auth0 to redirect users to after they have logged out. If not set, users will not be able to log out from your application and will receive an error.If you are following along with our sample project, set this to
http://localhost:3000/
.2
Integrate Auth0 in your application
Setup dependencies
To integrate your Java application with Auth0, add the following dependencies:- javax.servlet-api : is the library that allows you to create Java Servlets. You then need to add a Server dependency like Tomcat or Gretty, which one is up to you. Check our sample code for more information.
- auth0-java-mvc-commons: is the Java library that allows you to use Auth0 with Java for server-side MVC web apps. It generates the Authorize URL that you need to call in order to authenticate and validates the result received on the way back to finally obtain the Auth0 Tokens that identify the user.
build.gradle
:pom.xml
:3
Configure your Java application
Your Java App needs some information in order to authenticate against your Auth0 account. The samples read this
information from the deployment descriptor file The project contains a single JSP: the
src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/web.xml
, but you could store
them anywhere else.This information will be used to configure the auth0-java-mvc-commons library to enable users to login to
your application. To learn more about the library, including its various configuration options, see the library’s documentation.Check populated attributes
If you downloaded this sample using the Download Sample button, thedomain
,
clientId
and clientSecret
attributes will be populated for you. You should verify that
the values are correct, especially if you have multiple Auth0 applications in your account.Project structure
The example project, which can be downloaded using the Download Sample button, has the following structure:home.jsp
which will display the tokens associated with the
user after a successful login and provide the option to logout.The project contains a WebFilter: the Auth0Filter.java
which will check for existing tokens before
giving the user access to our protected /portal/*
path. If the tokens don’t exist, the request will
be redirected to the LoginServlet
.The project contains also four servlets:LoginServlet.java
: Invoked when the user attempts to log in. The servlet uses theclient_id
anddomain
parameters to create a valid Authorize URL and redirects the user there.CallbackServlet.java
: The servlet captures requests to our Callback URL and processes the data to obtain the credentials. After a successful login, the credentials are then saved to the request’s HttpSession.HomeServlet.java
: The servlet reads the previously saved tokens and shows them on thehome.jsp
resource.LogoutServlet.java
: Invoked when the user clicks the logout link. The servlet invalidates the user session and redirects the user to the login page, handled by theLoginServlet
.AuthenticationControllerProvider.java
: Responsible to create and manage a single instance of theAuthenticationController
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Create the AuthenticationController
To enable users to authenticate, create an instance of the
AuthenticationController
provided by the
auth0-java-mvc-commons
SDK using the domain
, clientId
, and
clientSecret
. The sample shows how to configure the component for use with tokens signed using the
RS256 asymmetric signing algorithm, by specifying a JwkProvider
to fetch the public key used to
verify the token’s signature. See the jwks-rsa-java repository to learn about additional configuration options. If you
are using HS256, there is no need to configure the JwkProvider
.The
AuthenticationController
does not store any context, and is inteded to be reused.
Unneccessary creation may result in additonal resources being created which could impact performance.5
Login Redirection
To enable users to log in, your application will redirect them to the Universal Login page. Using the
AuthenticationController
instance, you can generate the redirect URL by calling the
buildAuthorizeUrl(HttpServletRequest request
, HttpServletResponse response
,
String redirectUrl)
method. The redirect URL must be the URL that was added to the Allowed
Callback URLs of your Auth0 application.6
Handling the tokens
After the user logs in, the result will be received in our
CallbackServlet
via either a GET or POST
HTTP request. Because we are using the Authorization Code Flow (the default), a GET request will be sent. If you
have configured the library for the Implicit Flow, a POST request will be sent instead.The request holds the call context that the library previously set by generating the Authorize URL with the
AuthenticationController
. When passed to the controller, you get back either a valid
Tokens
instance or an Exception indicating what went wrong. In the case of a successful call, you
need to save the credentials somewhere to access them later. You can use the HttpSession
of the
request by using the SessionsUtils
class included in the library.It is recommended to store the time in which we requested the tokens and the received
expiresIn
value, so that the next time when we are going to use the token we can check if
it has already expired or if it’s still valid. For the sake of this sample, we will skip that
validation.7
Display the home page
Now that the user is authenticated (the tokens exists), the
Auth0Filter
will allow them to access
our protected resources. In the HomeServlet
we obtain the tokens from the request’s session and set
them as the userId
attribute so they can be used from the JSP code.8
Handle logout
To properly handle logout, we need to clear the session and log the user out of Auth0. This is handled in the
LogoutServlet
of our sample application.First, we clear the session by calling request.getSession().invalidate()
. We then construct the
logout URL, being sure to include the returnTo
query parameter, which is where the user will be
redirected to after logging out. Finally, we redirect the response to our logout URL.9
Run the sample
To run the sample from a terminal, change the directory to the root folder of the project and execute the
following line:After a few seconds, the application will be accessible on
After a successful authentication, you’ll be able to see the home page contents.
Log out by clicking the logout button at the top right of the home page.
http://localhost:3000/
. Try to access the
protected resource http://localhost:3000/portal/home and note how you’re redirected by the
Auth0Filter
to the Auth0 Login Page. The widget displays all the social and database connections that
you have defined for this application in the dashboard.

Next Steps
Excellent work! If you made it this far, you should now have login, logout, and user profile information running in your application.This concludes our quickstart tutorial, but there is so much more to explore. To learn more about what you can do with Auth0, check out:- Auth0 Dashboard - Learn how to configure and manage your Auth0 tenant and applications
- auth0-java-mvc-common SDK - Explore the SDK used in this tutorial more fully
- Auth0 Marketplace - Discover integrations you can enable to extend Auth0’s functionality