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package javax.security.cert;
Certificate Expired Exception. This is thrown whenever the current Date
or the specified Date
is after the notAfter
date/time specified in the validity period of the certificate. Note: The classes in the package javax.security.cert
exist for compatibility with earlier versions of the Java Secure Sockets Extension (JSSE). New applications should instead use the standard Java SE certificate classes located in java.security.cert
.
Author: Hemma Prafullchandra Since: 1.4
/**
* Certificate Expired Exception. This is thrown whenever the current
* {@code Date} or the specified {@code Date} is after the
* {@code notAfter} date/time specified in the validity period
* of the certificate.
*
* <p><em>Note: The classes in the package {@code javax.security.cert}
* exist for compatibility with earlier versions of the
* Java Secure Sockets Extension (JSSE). New applications should instead
* use the standard Java SE certificate classes located in
* {@code java.security.cert}.</em></p>
*
* @since 1.4
* @author Hemma Prafullchandra
*/
public class CertificateExpiredException extends CertificateException {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 5091601212177261883L;
Constructs a CertificateExpiredException with no detail message. A
detail message is a String that describes this particular
exception.
/**
* Constructs a CertificateExpiredException with no detail message. A
* detail message is a String that describes this particular
* exception.
*/
public CertificateExpiredException() {
super();
}
Constructs a CertificateExpiredException with the specified detail
message. A detail message is a String that describes this
particular exception.
Params: - message – the detail message.
/**
* Constructs a CertificateExpiredException with the specified detail
* message. A detail message is a String that describes this
* particular exception.
*
* @param message the detail message.
*/
public CertificateExpiredException(String message) {
super(message);
}
}