public abstract class Permission extends Object implements Serializable
Most Permission objects also include an "actions" list that tells the actions that are permitted
for the object. For example, for a java.io.FilePermission
object, the permission
name is the pathname of a file (or directory), and the actions list (such as "read, write")
specifies which actions are granted for the specified file (or for files in the specified
directory). The actions list is optional for Permission objects, such as
java.lang.RuntimePermission
, that don't need such a list; you either have the named
permission (such as "system.exit") or you don't. See ActionPermission
.
An important method that must be implemented by each subclass is the implies
method
to compare Permissions. Basically, "permission p1 implies permission p2" means that if one is
granted permission p1, one is naturally granted permission p2. Thus, this is not an equality
test, but rather more of a subset test.
Permission objects are similar to String objects in that they are immutable once they have been
created. Subclasses should not provide methods that can change the state of a permission once it
has been created.
All permissions must at least have a public constructor accepting a String parameter which will
be used as name for the permission. Note that the ActionPermission
should also have a 2
argument constructor accepting a string as the name and a second
WaspAction
parameter to indicate which actions are
allowed.
Constructor and Description |
---|
Permission(String name)
Constructs a permission with a certain name.
|
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
abstract boolean |
equals(Object obj)
Checks two Permission objects for equality.
|
abstract String |
getActions()
Returns the actions as a String.
|
String |
getName()
Returns the name of this Permission.
|
abstract int |
hashCode()
Returns the hash code value for this Permission object.
|
abstract boolean |
implies(Permission permission)
Check if this permission implies the specified permission.
|
public Permission(String name)
name
- public abstract boolean implies(Permission permission)
permission
- public abstract boolean equals(Object obj)
Do not use the equals
method for making access control decisions; use the
implies
method.
public abstract int hashCode()
The required hashCode
behavior for Permission Objects is the following:
hashCode
method must consistently return the same
integer. This integer need not remain consistent from one execution of an application to
another execution of the same application.
equals
method, then
calling the hashCode
method on each of the two Permission objects must produce
the same integer result.
public abstract String getActions()
perm1 = new FilePermission(p1, "read,write"); perm2 = new FilePermission(p2, "write,read");both return "read,write" when the
getActions
method is invoked.public final String getName()
org.wicketstuff.security.hive.authorization.permissions.ComponentPermission
,
the name will be a component path.Copyright © 2015. All rights reserved.