The policy for a Java™ programming language application
environment (specifying which permissions are available for code
from various sources, and executing as various principals) is
represented by a Policy object. More specifically, it is
represented by a Policy
subclass providing an
implementation of the abstract methods in the Policy
class (which is in the java.security
package).
The source location for the policy information utilized by the Policy object is up to the Policy implementation. The Policy reference implementation obtains its information from static policy configuration files.
The rest of this document pertains to the Policy reference implementation and the syntax that must be used in policy files it reads. For information about using the Policy Tool to create a policy file (without needing to know the required syntax), see the Policy Tool documentation (for Solaris/Linux) (for Windows).
Here is an outline for the rest of this document:
A policy file can be composed via a simple text editor, or via the graphical Policy Tool utility.
There is by default a single system-wide policy file, and a single (optional) user policy file.
The Policy reference implementation is initialized the first
time its getPermissions
method is called, or whenever
its refresh
method is called. Initialization involves
parsing the policy configuration file(s) (see Policy File Syntax), and then populating the
Policy object.
As mentioned previously, there is by default a single system-wide policy file, and a single user policy file.
The system policy file is by default located at
java.home/lib/security/java.policy (Solaris/Linux) java.home\lib\security\java.policy (Windows)
Note: java.home
refers to the value
of the system property named "java.home
", which
specifies the directory that houses the runtime environment --
either the jre directory in the Java SE Development Kit
(JDK) or the top-level directory of the Java SE Runtime Environment
(JRE).
The system policy file is meant to grant system-wide code
permissions. The java.policy
file installed with the
JDK grants all permissions to standard extensions, allows anyone to
listen on un-privileged ports, and allows any code to read certain
"standard" properties that are not security-sensitive, such as the
"os.name
" and "file.separator
"
properties.
The user policy file is by default located at
user.home/.java.policy (Solaris/Linux) user.home\.java.policy (Windows)
Note: user.home
refers to the value
of the system property named "user.home
", which
specifies the user's home directory.
When the Policy is initialized, the system policy is loaded in first, and then the user policy is added to it. If neither policy is present, a built-in policy is used. This built-in policy is the same as the java.policy file installed with the JRE.
Policy file locations are specified in the security properties file, which is located at
java.home/lib/security/java.security (Solaris/Linux) java.home\lib\security\java.security (Windows)As noted above,
java.home
indicates the
directory that houses the runtime environment--either the
jre directory in the JDK or the top-level directory of the
JRE. The policy file locations are specified as the values of
properties whose names are of the form
policy.url.nwhere
n
is a number. You specify each such
property value in a line of the following form:
policy.url.n=URLHere,
URL
is a URL specification.
For example, the default system and user policy files are defined in the security properties file as
policy.url.1=file:${java.home}/lib/security/java.policy policy.url.2=file:${user.home}/.java.policy
(See Property Expansion for
information about specifying property values via a special syntax,
such as specifying the java.home
property value
via ${java.home}
.)
You can actually specify a number of URLs (including ones of the
form "http://
"), and all the designated policy files
will get loaded. You can also comment out or change the second one
to disable reading the default user policy file.
The algorithm starts at policy.url.1
, and keeps
incrementing until it does not find a URL. Thus if you have
policy.url.1
and policy.url.3
,
policy.url.3
will never be read.
It is also possible to specify an additional or a different
policy file when invoking execution of an application. This can be
done via the "-Djava.security.policy
" command line
argument, which sets the value of the
java.security.policy
property. For example, if
you use
java -Djava.security.manager -Djava.security.policy=someURL SomeAppwhere
someURL
is a URL specifying the location
of a policy file, then the specified policy file will be loaded in
addition to all the policy files that are specified in the security
properties file.
Notes:
java -Djava.security.manager -Djava.security.policy=mypolicy SomeApp
-Djava.security.manager
" argument ensures
that the default security manager is installed, and thus the
application is subject to policy checks. It is not required if the
application SomeApp
installs a security
manager.If you use
java -Djava.security.manager -Djava.security.policy==someURL SomeApp(note the double equals) then just the specified policy file will be used; all the ones indicated in the security properties file will be ignored.
If you want to pass a policy file to the appletviewer, then use
a "-J-Djava.security.policy
" argument as follows:
appletviewer -J-Djava.security.policy=someURL myAppletNote: The "
-Djava.security.policy
" policy file
value will be ignored (for both java
and
appletviewer
commands) if the
"policy.allowSystemProperty
" property in the security
properties file is set to false. The default is true.
An alternative policy class can be given to replace the Policy
reference implementation class, as long as the former is a subclass
of the abstract Policy class and implements the
getPermissions
method (and other methods as
necessary).
The Policy reference implementation can be changed by editing
the security properties file, which is the
java.security
file in the lib/security
directory of the JDK or JRE.
One of the types of properties you can set in
java.security
is of the following form:
policy.provider=PolicyClassName
PolicyClassName
must specify the fully
qualified name of the desired Policy
implementation
class. The default security properties file entry for this property
is the following:
policy.provider=sun.security.provider.PolicyFile
To customize, you can change the property value to specify another class, as in
policy.provider=com.mycom.MyPolicy
The policy configuration file(s) for a JDK or JRE installation specifies what permissions (which types of system resource accesses) are granted to code from a specified code source, and executed as a specified principal.
For an applet (or an application running under a security manager) to be allowed to perform secured actions (such as reading or writing a file), the applet (or application) must be granted permission for that particular action. In the Policy reference implementation, that permission must be granted by a grant entry in a policy configuration file. See below and the "Java Security Architecture Specification" for more information. (The only exception is that code always automatically has permission to read files from its same (URL) location, and subdirectories of that location; it does not need explicit permission to do so.)
A policy configuration file essentially contains a list of entries. It may contain a "keystore" entry, and contains zero or more "grant" entries.
A keystore is a database of private keys and their associated digital certificates such as X.509 certificate chains authenticating the corresponding public keys. The keytool utility (for Solaris/Linux) (for Windows) is used to create and administer keystores. The keystore specified in a policy configuration file is used to look up the public keys of the signers specified in the grant entries of the file. A keystore entry must appear in a policy configuration file if any grant entries specify signer aliases, or if any grant entries specify principal aliases (see below).
At this time, there can be only one
keystore
/keystorePasswordURL
entry
in the policy file (other entries following the first one are
ignored). This entry can appear anywhere outside the file's grant
entries. It has the following syntax:
keystore "some_keystore_url", "keystore_type", "keystore_provider"; keystorePasswordURL "some_password_url";
some_keystore_url
specifies the URL location of the
keystore, some_password_url
specifies the URL location
of the keystore password, keystore_type
specifies the
keystore type, and keystore_provider
specifies the
keystore provider. Note that the input stream from
some_keystore_url
is passed to the
KeyStore.load
method. If NONE
is
specified as the URL, then a null stream is passed to the
KeyStore.load
method. NONE
should be
specified if the KeyStore
is not file-based, for
example, if it resides on a hardware token device.
The URL is relative to the policy file location. Thus if the policy file is specified in the security properties file as:
policy.url.1=http://foo.bar.com/fum/some.policyand that policy file has an entry:
keystore ".keystore";then the keystore will be loaded from:
http://foo.bar.com/fum/.keystoreThe URL can also be absolute.
A keystore type defines the storage and data format of the keystore information, and the algorithms used to protect private keys in the keystore and the integrity of the keystore itself. The default type supported by Sun Microsystems is a proprietary keystore type named "JKS". Thus, if the keystore type is "JKS", it does not need to be specified in the keystore entry.
Code being executed is always considered to come from a
particular "code source" (represented by an object of type
CodeSource
). The code source includes not only the
location (URL) where the code originated from, but also a reference
to the certificate(s) containing the public key(s) corresponding to
the private key(s) used to sign the code. Certificates in a code
source are referenced by symbolic alias names from the user's
keystore. Code is also considered to be executed as a particular
principal (represented by an object of type
Principal
), or group of principals.
Each grant entry includes one or more "permission
entries" preceded by optional codeBase
,
signedBy
, and principal name/value pairs that specify
which code you want to grant the permissions. The basic format of a
grant entry is the following:
grant signedBy "signer_names", codeBase "URL", principal principal_class_name "principal_name", principal principal_class_name "principal_name", ... { permission permission_class_name "target_name", "action", signedBy "signer_names"; permission permission_class_name "target_name", "action", signedBy "signer_names"; ... };All non-italicized items above must appear as is (although case doesn't matter and some are optional, as noted below). Italicized items represent variable values.
A grant entry must begin with the word grant
.
SignedBy
, Principal
, and
CodeBase
FieldsThe signedBy
, codeBase
, and
principal
values are optional, and the order of these
fields does not matter.
A signedBy
value indicates the alias for a
certificate stored in the keystore. The public key within that
certificate is used to verify the digital signature on the code;
you grant the permission(s) to code signed by the private key
corresponding to the public key in the keystore entry specified by
the alias.
The signedBy
value can be a comma-separated list of
multiple aliases. An example is "Adam,Eve,Charles", which means
"signed by Adam and Eve and Charles"; the relationship is AND, not
OR. To be more exact, a statement like "Code signed by Adam" means
"Code in a class file contained in a JAR which is signed using the
private key corresponding to the public key certificate in the
keystore whose entry is aliased by Adam".
The signedBy
field is optional in that, if it is
omitted, it signifies "any signer". It doesn't matter whether the
code is signed or not or by whom.
A principal value specifies a
class_name
/principal_name
pair which must
be present within the executing thread's principal set. The
principal set is associated with the executing code by way of a
Subject.
The principal_class_name
may be set to the wildcard
value, *, which allows it to match any Principal
class. In addition, the principal_name
may also be set
to the wildcard value, *, allowing it to match any
Principal
name. When setting the
principal_class_name
or principal_name
to
*, do not surround the * with quotes. Also, if you specify a
wildcard principal class, you must also specify a wildcard
principal name.
The principal field is optional in that, if it is omitted, it signifies "any principals".
Note on KeyStore Alias Replacement:
If the principal class_name/principal_name pair is specified as
a single quoted string, it is treated as a keystore alias. The
keystore is consulted and queried (via the alias) for an X509
Certificate. If one is found, the principal class_name is
automatically treated as
javax.security.auth.x500.X500Principal
, and the
principal_name
is automatically treated as the subject
distinguished name from the certificate. If an X509 Certificate
mapping is not found, the entire grant entry is ignored.
A codeBase
value indicates the code source
location; you grant the permission(s) to code from that location.
An empty codeBase
entry signifies "any code"; it
doesn't matter where the code originates from.
Note: a codeBase
value is a URL and thus
should always utilize slashes (never backslashes) as the directory
separator, even when the code source is actually on a Windows
system. Thus, if the source location for code on a Windows system
is actually C:\somepath\api\
, then the policy
codeBase
entry should look like:
grant codeBase "file:/C:/somepath/api/" { ... };The exact meaning of a
codeBase
value depends on the
characters at the end. A codeBase
with a trailing "/"
matches all class files (not JAR files) in the specified directory.
A codeBase
with a trailing "/*" matches all files
(both class and JAR files) contained in that directory. A
codeBase
with a trailing "/-" matches all files (both
class and JAR files) in the directory and recursively all files in
subdirectories contained in that directory. The following table
illustrates the different cases.
Codebase URL of Downloaded Code | Codebase URL in Policy | Match? |
---|---|---|
java.sun.com/people/gong/ | java.sun.com/people/gong | Y |
java.sun.com/people/gong/ | java.sun.com/people/gong/ | Y |
java.sun.com/people/gong/ | java.sun.com/people/gong/* | Y |
java.sun.com/people/gong/ | java.sun.com/people/gong/- | Y |
java.sun.com/people/gong/appl.jar | java.sun.com/people/gong/ | N |
java.sun.com/people/gong/appl.jar | java.sun.com/people/gong/- | Y |
java.sun.com/people/gong/appl.jar | java.sun.com/people/gong/* | Y |
java.sun.com/people/gong/appl.jar | java.sun.com/people/- | Y |
java.sun.com/people/gong/appl.jar | java.sun.com/people/* | N |
java.sun.com/people/gong/ | java.sun.com/people/- | Y |
java.sun.com/people/gong/ | java.sun.com/people/* | N |
A permission entry must begin with the word
permission
. The word
permission_class_name
in the template above
would actually be a specific permission type, such as
java.io.FilePermission
or
java.lang.RuntimePermission
.
The "action
" is required for many permission
types, such as java.io.FilePermission
(where it
specifies what type of file access is permitted). It is not
required for categories such as
java.lang.RuntimePermission
where it is not
necessary--you either have the permission specified by the
"target_name
" value following the
permission_class_name
or you don't.
The signedBy
name/value pair for a permission entry
is optional. If present, it indicates a signed permission. That is,
the permission class itself must be signed by the given alias(es)
in order for the permission to be granted. For example, suppose you
have the following grant entry:
grant { permission Foo "foobar", signedBy "FooSoft"; };
Then this permission of type Foo is granted if the
Foo.class
permission was placed in a JAR file and the
JAR file was signed by the private key corresponding to the public
key in the certificate specified by the "FooSoft" alias, or if
Foo.class
is a system class, since system classes are
not subject to policy restrictions.
Items that appear in a permission entry must appear in the
specified order (permission
,
permission_class_name, "target_name",
"action", and signedBy
"signer_names").
An entry is terminated with a semicolon.
Case is unimportant for the identifiers
(permission
, signedBy
,
codeBase
, etc.) but is significant for the
permission_class_name or for any string that is passed in as
a value.
Note: When you are specifying a
java.io.FilePermission
, the
"target_name
" is a file path. On Windows
systems, whenever you directly specify a file path in a string (but
not in a codeBase URL), you need to include two backslashes for
each actual single backslash in the path, as in
grant { permission java.io.FilePermission "C:\\users\\cathy\\foo.bat", "read"; };The reason this is necessary is because the strings are processed by a tokenizer (
java.io.StreamTokenizer
), which allows
"\
" to be used as an escape string (for example,
"\n
" to indicate a new line) and which thus requires
two backslashes to indicate a single backslash. After the tokenizer
has processed the above file path string, converting double
backslashes to single backslashes, the end result is
"C:\users\cathy\foo.bat"
An example of two entries in a policy configuration file is
// If the code is signed by "Duke", grant it read/write access to all // files in /tmp: grant signedBy "Duke" { permission java.io.FilePermission "/tmp/*", "read,write"; }; // Grant everyone the following permission: grant { permission java.util.PropertyPermission "java.vendor", "read"; };
The contents of another sample policy configuration file appear below.
grant signedBy "sysadmin", codeBase "file:/home/sysadmin/*" { permission java.security.SecurityPermission "Security.insertProvider.*"; permission java.security.SecurityPermission "Security.removeProvider.*"; permission java.security.SecurityPermission "Security.setProperty.*"; };This specifies that only code that satisfies the following conditions can call methods in the Security class to add or remove providers or to set Security properties:
/home/sysadmin/
" directory on the local file
system.Either component of the code source (or both) may be missing. An
example where codeBase
is missing is:
grant signedBy "sysadmin" { permission java.security.SecurityPermission "Security.insertProvider.*"; permission java.security.SecurityPermission "Security.removeProvider.*"; };If this policy is in effect, code that comes in a JAR File signed by "sysadmin" can add/remove providers, regardless of where the JAR File originated from.
An example without a signer is:
grant codeBase "file:/home/sysadmin/-" { permission java.security.SecurityPermission "Security.insertProvider.*"; permission java.security.SecurityPermission "Security.removeProvider.*"; };In this case, code that comes from anywhere beneath the "
/home/sysadmin/
" directory on the local filesystem
can add/remove providers. The code does not need to be signed.
An example where neither codeBase
nor
signedBy
is included is:
grant { permission java.security.SecurityPermission "Security.insertProvider.*"; permission java.security.SecurityPermission "Security.removeProvider.*"; };Here, with both code source components missing, any code (regardless of where it originated from, or whether or not it is signed, or who signed it) can add/remove providers.
The following represents a principal-based entry.
grant principal javax.security.auth.x500.X500Principal "cn=Alice" { permission java.io.FilePermission "/home/Alice", "read, write"; };This permits any code executing as the X500Principal, "
cn=Alice
", permission to read and write to
"/home/Alice
".
The following represents a principal-based entry with a wildcard value.
grant principal javax.security.auth.x500.X500Principal * { permission java.io.FilePermission "/tmp", "read, write"; };This permits any code executing as an X500Principal (regardless of the distinguished name), permission to read and write to "
/tmp
".
The following example shows a grant statement with both codesource and principal information.
grant codebase "http://www.games.com", signedBy "Duke", principal javax.security.auth.x500.X500Principal "cn=Alice" { permission java.io.FilePermission "/tmp/games", "read, write"; };This allows code downloaded from "
www.games.com
",
signed by "Duke
", and executed by
"cn=Alice
", permission to read and write into the
"/tmp/games
" directory.
The following example shows a grant statement with KeyStore alias replacement:
keystore "http://foo.bar.com/blah/.keystore"; grant principal "alice" { permission java.io.FilePermission "/tmp/games", "read, write"; };"
alice
" will be replaced by
javax.security.auth.x500.X500Principal "cn=Alice"assuming the X.509 certificate associated with the keystore alias,
alice
, has a subject distinguished name of
"cn=Alice
". This allows code executed by the
X500Principal "cn=Alice
" permission to read and write
into the "/tmp/games
" directory.
Property expansion is similar to expanding variables in a shell. That is, when a string like
${some.property}appears in a policy file, or in the security properties file, it will be expanded to the value of the system property. For example,
permission java.io.FilePermission "${user.home}", "read";will expand "
${user.home}
" to use the value of the
"user.home" system property. If that property's value is
"/home/cathy
", then the above is equivalent to
permission java.io.FilePermission "/home/cathy", "read";In order to assist in platform-independent policy files, you can also use the special notation of "
${/}
", which is a
shortcut for "${file.separator}
". This allows things
like
permission java.io.FilePermission "${user.home}${/}*", "read";If the value of the "
user.home
" property is
/home/cathy
, and you are on Solaris/Linux, the above
gets converted to:
permission java.io.FilePermission "/home/cathy/*", "read";If on the other hand the "
user.home
" value is
C:\users\cathy
and you are on a Windows system, the
above gets converted to:
permission java.io.FilePermission "C:\users\cathy\*", "read";Also, as a special case, if you expand a property in a codebase, such as
grant codeBase "file:${java.home}/lib/ext/"then any file.separator characters will be automatically converted to
/
's. Thus on a Windows system, the above would get
converted to
grant codeBase "file:C:/jdk1.4/jre/lib/ext/"even if "
java.home
" is set to
C:\jdk1.4\jre
. Thus you don't need to use
${/}
in codebase strings (and you shouldn't).
Property expansion takes place anywhere a double quoted string
is allowed in the policy file. This includes the
"signer_names
", "URL
",
"target_name
", and "action
"
fields.
Whether or not property expansion is allowed is controlled by
the value of the "policy.expandProperties
" property in
the security properties file. If the value of this property is true
(the default), expansion is allowed.
Note: You can't use nested properties; they will not work. For example,
"${user.${foo}}"doesn't work, even if the "
foo
" property is set to
"home
". The reason is the property parser doesn't
recognize nested properties; it simply looks for the first
"${
", and then keeps looking until it finds the first
"}
" and tries to interpret the result (in this case,
"${user.$foo}
") as a property, but fails if there is
no such property.
Note: If a property can't be expanded in a grant entry,
permission entry, or keystore entry, that entry is ignored. For
example, if the system property "foo
" is not defined
and you have:
grant codeBase "${foo}" { permission ...; permission ...; };then all the permissions in this grant entry are ignored. If you have
grant { permission Foo "${foo}"; permission Bar "barTarget"; };then only the "
permission Foo...
" entry is ignored.
And finally, if you have
keystore "${foo}";then the keystore entry is ignored.
grant { permission java.io.FilePermission "C:\\users\\cathy\\foo.bat", "read"; };This is because the strings are processed by a tokenizer (
java.io.StreamTokenizer
), which allows
"\
" to be used as an escape string (e.g.,
"\n
" to indicate a new line) and which thus requires
two backslashes to indicate a single backslash. After the tokenizer
has processed the above file path string, converting double
backslashes to single backslashes, the end result is
"C:\users\cathy\foo.bat"Expansion of a property in a string takes place after the tokenizer has processed the string. Thus if you have the string
"${user.home}\\foo.bat"then first the tokenizer processes the string, converting the double backslashes to a single backslash, and the result is
"${user.home}\foo.bat"Then the
${user.home}
property is expanded and the end
result is
"C:\users\cathy\foo.bat"assuming the "
user.home
" value is
C:\users\cathy
. Of course, for platform independence,
it would be better if the string was initially specified without
any explicit slashes, i.e., using the ${/}
property
instead, as in
"${user.home}${/}foo.bat"
${{protocol:protocol_data}}If such a string occurs in a permission name, then the value in protocol determines the exact type of expansion that should occur, and protocol_data is used to help perform the expansion. protocol_data may be empty, in which case the above string should simply take the form:
${{protocol}}
There are two protocols supported in the default policy file implementation:
${{self}}
The protocol, self
, denotes a replacement of
the entire string, ${{self}}
, with one or more
principal class/name pairs. The exact replacement performed depends
upon the contents of the grant clause to which the permission
belongs.
If the grant clause does not contain any principal information,
the permission will be ignored (permissions containing
${{self}}
in their target names are only valid in the
context of a principal-based grant clause). For example,
BarPermission
will always be ignored in the following
grant clause:
grant codebase "www.foo.com", signedby "duke" { permission BarPermission "... ${{self}} ..."; };If the grant clause contains principal information,
${{self}}
will be replaced with that same principal
information. For example, ${{self}}
in
BarPermission
will be replaced with
javax.security.auth.x500.X500Principal
"cn=Duke"
in the following grant clause:
grant principal javax.security.auth.x500.X500Principal "cn=Duke" { permission BarPermission "... ${{self}} ..."; };If there is a comma-separated list of principals in the grant clause, then
${{self}}
will be replaced by the same
comma-separated list or principals. In the case where both the
principal class and name are wildcarded in the grant clause,
${{self}}
is replaced with all the principals
associated with the Subject
in the current
AccessControlContext
.
The following example describes a scenario involving both
self
and KeyStore
alias replacement
together:
keystore "http://foo.bar.com/blah/.keystore"; grant principal "duke" { permission BarPermission "... ${{self}} ..."; };In the above example, "
duke
" will first be expanded
into javax.security.auth.x500.X500Principal
"cn=Duke"
assuming the X.509 certificate associated with
the KeyStore
alias, "duke
", has a subject
distinguished name of "cn=Duke
". Next,
${{self}}
will be replaced with the same principal
information that was just expanded in the grant clause:
javax.security.auth.x500.X500Principal
"cn=Duke"
.${{alias:alias_name}}
The protocol, alias
, denotes a
java.security.KeyStore alias substitution. The
KeyStore
used is the one specified in the KeyStore
entry. alias_name
represents an alias into the KeyStore
.
${{alias:alias_name}}
is replaced with
javax.security.auth.x500.X500Principal "DN"
,
where DN
represents the subject distinguished
name of the certificate belonging to
alias_name
. For example:
keystore "http://foo.bar.com/blah/.keystore"; grant codebase "www.foo.com" { permission BarPermission "... ${{alias:duke}} ..."; };In the above example the X.509 certificate associated with the alias,
duke
, is retrieved from the
KeyStore
,
foo.bar.com/blah/.keystore
. Assuming duke's
certificate specifies "o=dukeOrg, cn=duke
" as the
subject distinguished name, then ${{alias:duke}}
is
replaced with javax.security.auth.x500.X500Principal
"o=dukeOrg, cn=duke"
.
The permission entry is ignored under the following error conditions:
alias_name
is not providedalias_name
can not be
retrieved