public final class SubjectDelegationPermission extends BasicPermission
Permission required by an authentication identity to perform operations on behalf of an authorization identity.
A SubjectDelegationPermission contains a name (also referred to as a "target name") but no actions list; you either have the named permission or you don't.
The target name is the name of the authorization principal
classname followed by a period and the authorization principal
name, that is
"PrincipalClassName.PrincipalName"
.
An asterisk may appear by itself, or if immediately preceded by a "." may appear at the end of the target name, to signify a wildcard match.
For example, "*", "javax.management.remote.JMXPrincipal.*" and
"javax.management.remote.JMXPrincipal.delegate" are valid target
names. The first one denotes any principal name from any principal
class, the second one denotes any principal name of the concrete
principal class javax.management.remote.JMXPrincipal
and the third one denotes a concrete principal name
delegate
of the concrete principal class
javax.management.remote.JMXPrincipal
.
Constructor and Description |
---|
SubjectDelegationPermission(String name)
Creates a new SubjectDelegationPermission with the specified name.
|
SubjectDelegationPermission(String name,
String actions)
Creates a new SubjectDelegationPermission object with the
specified name.
|
equals, getActions, hashCode, implies, newPermissionCollection
checkGuard, getName, toString
public SubjectDelegationPermission(String name)
name
- the name of the SubjectDelegationPermissionNullPointerException
- if name
is
null
.IllegalArgumentException
- if name
is empty.public SubjectDelegationPermission(String name, String actions)
name
- the name of the SubjectDelegationPermissionactions
- must be null.NullPointerException
- if name
is
null
.IllegalArgumentException
- if name
is empty
or actions
is not null. Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
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