gcc/libjava/java/security/AccessController.java
Tom Tromey 41bd2b1cc2 AccessController.java (checkPermission): Now throws AccessControlException.
* java/security/AccessController.java (checkPermission): Now
	throws AccessControlException.
	* java/security/AllPermission.java: Class now final.
	* java/security/Permission.java (getName): Now final.
	(name): Now private.
	(equals): New abstract method.
	* java/security/PermissionCollection.java (linesep): Now private.
	* java/security/Permissions.java: Class now final.
	* java/security/Security.java (Security): New private
	constructor.
	* java/security/UnresolvedPermission.java: Import
	java.security.cert.Certificate.  Class now final.
	* java/security/acl/Group.java: Now extends Principal.
	(isMember): Added Principal argument.
	* java/security/spec/X509EncodedKeySpec.java (getFormat): Now
	final.
	* java/security/spec/PKCS8EncodedKeySpec.java (getFormat): Now
	final.

From-SVN: r46246
2001-10-13 23:21:07 +00:00

187 lines
7.3 KiB
Java

/* AccessController.java --- Access control context and permission checker
Copyright (C) 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of GNU Classpath.
GNU Classpath is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
any later version.
GNU Classpath is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with GNU Classpath; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the
Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA
02111-1307 USA.
As a special exception, if you link this library with other files to
produce an executable, this library does not by itself cause the
resulting executable to be covered by the GNU General Public License.
This exception does not however invalidate any other reasons why the
executable file might be covered by the GNU General Public License. */
package java.security;
/**
* Access control context and permission checker.
* Can check permissions in the access control context of the current thread
* through the <code>checkPermission()</code> method.
* Manipulates the access control context for code that needs to be executed
* the protection domain of the calling class (by explicitly ignoring the
* context of the calling code) in the <code>doPriviliged()</code> methods.
* And provides a <code>getContext()</code> method which gives the access
* control context of the current thread that can be used for checking
* permissions at a later time and/or in another thread.
* <p>
* XXX - Mostly a stub implementation at the moment. Needs native support
* from the VM to function correctly. XXX - Do not forget to think about
* how to handle <code>java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke()</code> on the
* <code>doPrivileged()</code> methods.
*
* @author Mark Wielaard (mark@klomp.org)
* @since 1.2
*/
public final class AccessController
{
/**
* This class only has static methods so there is no public contructor.
*/
private AccessController()
{
}
/**
* Checks wether the access control context of the current thread allows
* the given Permission. Throws an <code>AccessControlException</code>
* when the permission is not allowed in the current context. Otherwise
* returns silently without throwing an exception.
*
* @param perm the permission to be checked.
* @exception AccessControlException thrown if the current context does not
* allow the given permission.
*/
public static void checkPermission(Permission perm)
throws AccessControlException
{
getContext().checkPermission(perm);
}
/**
* Calls the <code>run()</code> method of the given action with as
* (initial) access control context only the protection domain of the
* calling class. Calls to <code>checkPermission()</code> in the
* <code>run()</code> method ignore all earlier protection domains of
* classes in the call chain. Note that the protection domains of classes
* called by the code in the <code>run()</code> method are not ignored.
*
* @param action the <code>PrivilegedAction</code> whose <code>run()</code>
* should be be called.
* @returns the result of the <code>action.run()</code> method.
*/
public static Object doPrivileged(PrivilegedAction action)
{
return action.run();
}
/**
* Calls the <code>run()</code> method of the given action with as
* (initial) access control context the given context combined with the
* protection domain of the calling class. Calls to
* <code>checkPermission()</code> in the <code>run()</code> method ignore
* all earlier protection domains of classes in the call chain, but add
* checks for the protection domains given in the supplied context.
*
* @param action the <code>PrivilegedAction</code> whose <code>run()</code>
* should be be called.
* @param context the <code>AccessControlContext</code> whose protection
* domains should be added to the protection domain of the calling class.
* @returns the result of the <code>action.run()</code> method.
*/
public static Object doPrivileged(PrivilegedAction action,
AccessControlContext context)
{
return action.run();
}
/**
* Calls the <code>run()</code> method of the given action with as
* (initial) access control context only the protection domain of the
* calling class. Calls to <code>checkPermission()</code> in the
* <code>run()</code> method ignore all earlier protection domains of
* classes in the call chain. Note that the protection domains of classes
* called by the code in the <code>run()</code> method are not ignored.
* If the <code>run()</code> method throws an exception then this method
* will wrap that exception in an <code>PrivilegedActionException</code>.
*
* @param action the <code>PrivilegedExceptionAction</code> whose
* <code>run()</code> should be be called.
* @returns the result of the <code>action.run()</code> method.
* @exception PriviligedActionException wrapped around any exception that
* is thrown in the <code>run()</code> method.
*/
public static Object doPrivileged(PrivilegedExceptionAction action)
throws PrivilegedActionException
{
try
{
return action.run();
}
catch (Exception e)
{
throw new PrivilegedActionException(e);
}
}
/**
* Calls the <code>run()</code> method of the given action with as
* (initial) access control context the given context combined with the
* protection domain of the calling class. Calls to
* <code>checkPermission()</code> in the <code>run()</code> method ignore
* all earlier protection domains of classes in the call chain, but add
* checks for the protection domains given in the supplied context.
* If the <code>run()</code> method throws an exception then this method
* will wrap that exception in an <code>PrivilegedActionException</code>.
*
* @param action the <code>PrivilegedExceptionAction</code> whose
* <code>run()</code> should be be called.
* @param context the <code>AccessControlContext</code> whose protection
* domains should be added to the protection domain of the calling class.
* @returns the result of the <code>action.run()</code> method.
* @exception PriviligedActionException wrapped around any exception that
* is thrown in the <code>run()</code> method.
*/
public static Object doPrivileged(PrivilegedExceptionAction action,
AccessControlContext context)
throws PrivilegedActionException
{
try
{
return action.run();
}
catch (Exception e)
{
throw new PrivilegedActionException(e);
}
}
/**
* Returns the complete access control context of the current thread.
* <p>
* XXX - Should this include all the protection domains in the call chain
* or only the domains till the last <code>doPrivileged()</code> call?
* <p>
* XXX - needs native support. Currently returns an empty context.
*/
public static AccessControlContext getContext()
{
// For now just return an new empty context
return new AccessControlContext(new ProtectionDomain[0]);
}
}