FilePermission (Java 2 Platform SE 5.0) (original) (raw)


java.io

Class FilePermission

java.lang.Object extended by java.security.Permission extended by java.io.FilePermission

All Implemented Interfaces:

Serializable, Guard


public final class FilePermission

extends Permission

implements Serializable

This class represents access to a file or directory. A FilePermission consists of a pathname and a set of actions valid for that pathname.

Pathname is the pathname of the file or directory granted the specified actions. A pathname that ends in "/*" (where "/" is the file separator character, File.separatorChar) indicates all the files and directories contained in that directory. A pathname that ends with "/-" indicates (recursively) all files and subdirectories contained in that directory. A pathname consisting of the special token "<>" matches any file.

Note: A pathname consisting of a single "*" indicates all the files in the current directory, while a pathname consisting of a single "-" indicates all the files in the current directory and (recursively) all files and subdirectories contained in the current directory.

The actions to be granted are passed to the constructor in a string containing a list of one or more comma-separated keywords. The possible keywords are "read", "write", "execute", and "delete". Their meaning is defined as follows:

read

read permission

write

write permission

execute

execute permission. Allows Runtime.exec to be called. Corresponds to SecurityManager.checkExec.

delete

delete permission. Allows File.delete to be called. Corresponds to SecurityManager.checkDelete.

The actions string is converted to lowercase before processing.

Be careful when granting FilePermissions. Think about the implications of granting read and especially write access to various files and directories. The "<>" permission with write action is especially dangerous. This grants permission to write to the entire file system. One thing this effectively allows is replacement of the system binary, including the JVM runtime environment.

Please note: Code can always read a file from the same directory it's in (or a subdirectory of that directory); it does not need explicit permission to do so.

Since:

1.2

See Also:

Permission, Permissions, PermissionCollection


Constructor Summary
[FilePermission](../../java/io/FilePermission.html#FilePermission%28java.lang.String, java.lang.String%29)(String path,String actions) Creates a new FilePermission object with the specified actions.
Method Summary
boolean equals(Object obj) Checks two FilePermission objects for equality.
String getActions() Returns the "canonical string representation" of the actions.
int hashCode() Returns the hash code value for this object.
boolean implies(Permission p) Checks if this FilePermission object "implies" the specified permission.
PermissionCollection newPermissionCollection() Returns a new PermissionCollection object for storing FilePermission objects.
Methods inherited from class java.security.Permission
checkGuard, getName, toString
Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object
clone, finalize, getClass, notify, notifyAll, wait, wait, [wait](../../java/lang/Object.html#wait%28long, int%29)
Constructor Detail

FilePermission

public FilePermission(String path, String actions)

Creates a new FilePermission object with the specified actions.path is the pathname of a file or directory, and actions contains a comma-separated list of the desired actions granted on the file or directory. Possible actions are "read", "write", "execute", and "delete".

A pathname that ends in "/*" (where "/" is the file separator character, File.separatorChar) indicates a directory and all the files contained in that directory. A pathname that ends with "/-" indicates a directory and (recursively) all files and subdirectories contained in that directory. The special pathname "<>" matches all files.

A pathname consisting of a single "*" indicates all the files in the current directory, while a pathname consisting of a single "-" indicates all the files in the current directory and (recursively) all files and subdirectories contained in the current directory.

Parameters:

path - the pathname of the file/directory.

actions - the action string.

Method Detail

implies

public boolean implies(Permission p)

Checks if this FilePermission object "implies" the specified permission.

More specifically, this method returns true if:

Specified by:

[implies](../../java/security/Permission.html#implies%28java.security.Permission%29) in class [Permission](../../java/security/Permission.html "class in java.security")

Parameters:

p - the permission to check against.

Returns:

true if the specified permission is implied by this object, false if not.


equals

public boolean equals(Object obj)

Checks two FilePermission objects for equality. Checks that obj is a FilePermission, and has the same pathname and actions as this object.

Specified by:

[equals](../../java/security/Permission.html#equals%28java.lang.Object%29) in class [Permission](../../java/security/Permission.html "class in java.security")

Parameters:

obj - the object we are testing for equality with this object.

Returns:

true if obj is a FilePermission, and has the same pathname and actions as this FilePermission object.

See Also:

Object.hashCode(), Hashtable


hashCode

public int hashCode()

Returns the hash code value for this object.

Specified by:

[hashCode](../../java/security/Permission.html#hashCode%28%29) in class [Permission](../../java/security/Permission.html "class in java.security")

Returns:

a hash code value for this object.

See Also:

Object.equals(java.lang.Object), Hashtable


getActions

public String getActions()

Returns the "canonical string representation" of the actions. That is, this method always returns present actions in the following order: read, write, execute, delete. For example, if this FilePermission object allows both write and read actions, a call to getActions will return the string "read,write".

Specified by:

[getActions](../../java/security/Permission.html#getActions%28%29) in class [Permission](../../java/security/Permission.html "class in java.security")

Returns:

the canonical string representation of the actions.


newPermissionCollection

public PermissionCollection newPermissionCollection()

Returns a new PermissionCollection object for storing FilePermission objects.

FilePermission objects must be stored in a manner that allows them to be inserted into the collection in any order, but that also enables the PermissionCollection implies method to be implemented in an efficient (and consistent) manner.

For example, if you have two FilePermissions:

  1. "/tmp/-", "read"
  2. "/tmp/scratch/foo", "write"

and you are calling the implies method with the FilePermission:

"/tmp/scratch/foo", "read,write",

then the implies function must take into account both the "/tmp/-" and "/tmp/scratch/foo" permissions, so the effective permission is "read,write", and implies returns true. The "implies" semantics for FilePermissions are handled properly by the PermissionCollection object returned by this newPermissionCollection method.

Overrides:

[newPermissionCollection](../../java/security/Permission.html#newPermissionCollection%28%29) in class [Permission](../../java/security/Permission.html "class in java.security")

Returns:

a new PermissionCollection object suitable for storing FilePermissions.



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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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