This class is for various network permissions.
A NetPermission 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 network permission (see below). The naming
convention follows the hierarchical property naming convention.
Also, an asterisk
may appear at the end of the name, following a ".", or by itself, to
signify a wildcard match. For example: "foo.*" or "*" is valid,
"*foo" or "a*b" is not valid.
The following table lists all the possible NetPermission target names,
and for each provides a description of what the permission allows
and a discussion of the risks of granting code the permission.
Permission Target Name
What the Permission Allows
Risks of Allowing this Permission
setDefaultAuthenticator
The ability to set the
way authentication information is retrieved when
a proxy or HTTP server asks for authentication
Malicious
code can set an authenticator that monitors and steals user
authentication input as it retrieves the input from the user.
requestPasswordAuthentication
The ability
to ask the authenticator registered with the system for
a password
Malicious code may steal this password.
specifyStreamHandler
The ability
to specify a stream handler when constructing a URL
Malicious code may create a URL with resources that it would
normally not have access to (like file:/foo/fum/), specifying a
stream handler that gets the actual bytes from someplace it does
have access to. Thus it might be able to trick the system into
creating a ProtectionDomain/CodeSource for a class even though
that class really didn't come from that location.
Creates a new NetPermission with the specified name.
The name is the symbolic name of the NetPermission, such as
"setDefaultAuthenticator", etc. An asterisk
may appear at the end of the name, following a ".", or by itself, to
signify a wildcard match.
Creates a new NetPermission object with the specified name.
The name is the symbolic name of the NetPermission, and the
actions String is currently unused and should be null. This
constructor exists for use by the Policy object
to instantiate new Permission objects.
Submit a bug or feature For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java 2 SDK SE Developer Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
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