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* DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
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*
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* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
* version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
* accompanied this code).
*
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package com.sun.security.jgss;
import javax.security.auth.Subject;
import org.ietf.jgss.GSSName;
import org.ietf.jgss.GSSCredential;
GSS-API Utilities for using in conjunction with Sun Microsystem's
implementation of Java GSS-API.
/**
* GSS-API Utilities for using in conjunction with Sun Microsystem's
* implementation of Java GSS-API.
*/
public class GSSUtil {
Use this method to convert a GSSName and GSSCredential into a
Subject. Typically this would be done by a server that wants to
impersonate a client thread at the Java level by setting a client
Subject in the current access control context. If the server is merely
interested in using a principal based policy in its local JVM, then
it only needs to provide the GSSName of the client.
The elements from the GSSName are placed in the principals set of this
Subject and those from the GSSCredential are placed in the private
credentials set of the Subject. Any Kerberos specific elements that
are added to the subject will be instances of the standard Kerberos
implementation classes defined in javax.security.auth.kerberos.
Params: - principals – a GSSName containing one or more mechanism specific
representations of the same entity. These mechanism specific
representations will be populated in the returned Subject's principal
set.
- credentials – a GSSCredential containing one or more mechanism
specific credentials for the same entity. These mechanism specific
credentials will be populated in the returned Subject's private
credential set. Passing in a value of null will imply that the private
credential set should be left empty.
Returns: a Subject with the entries that contain elements from the
given GSSName and GSSCredential.
/**
* Use this method to convert a GSSName and GSSCredential into a
* Subject. Typically this would be done by a server that wants to
* impersonate a client thread at the Java level by setting a client
* Subject in the current access control context. If the server is merely
* interested in using a principal based policy in its local JVM, then
* it only needs to provide the GSSName of the client.
*
* The elements from the GSSName are placed in the principals set of this
* Subject and those from the GSSCredential are placed in the private
* credentials set of the Subject. Any Kerberos specific elements that
* are added to the subject will be instances of the standard Kerberos
* implementation classes defined in javax.security.auth.kerberos.
*
* @return a Subject with the entries that contain elements from the
* given GSSName and GSSCredential.
*
* @param principals a GSSName containing one or more mechanism specific
* representations of the same entity. These mechanism specific
* representations will be populated in the returned Subject's principal
* set.
*
* @param credentials a GSSCredential containing one or more mechanism
* specific credentials for the same entity. These mechanism specific
* credentials will be populated in the returned Subject's private
* credential set. Passing in a value of null will imply that the private
* credential set should be left empty.
*/
public static Subject createSubject(GSSName principals,
GSSCredential credentials) {
return sun.security.jgss.GSSUtil.getSubject(principals,
credentials);
}
}