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package sun.security.x509;

import java.io.IOException;
import java.util.Locale;

import sun.security.util.*;

This class implements the DNSName as required by the GeneralNames ASN.1 object.

[RFC5280] When the subjectAltName extension contains a domain name system label, the domain name MUST be stored in the dNSName (an IA5String). The name MUST be in the "preferred name syntax", as specified by Section 3.5 of [RFC1034] and as modified by Section 2.1 of [RFC1123]. Note that while uppercase and lowercase letters are allowed in domain names, no significance is attached to the case. In addition, while the string " " is a legal domain name, subjectAltName extensions with a dNSName of " " MUST NOT be used. Finally, the use of the DNS representation for Internet mail addresses (subscriber.example.com instead of subscriber@example.com) MUST NOT be used; such identities are to be encoded as rfc822Name.

Author:Amit Kapoor, Hemma Prafullchandra
/** * This class implements the DNSName as required by the GeneralNames * ASN.1 object. * <p> * [RFC5280] When the subjectAltName extension contains a domain name system * label, the domain name MUST be stored in the dNSName (an IA5String). * The name MUST be in the "preferred name syntax", as specified by * Section 3.5 of [RFC1034] and as modified by Section 2.1 of * [RFC1123]. Note that while uppercase and lowercase letters are * allowed in domain names, no significance is attached to the case. In * addition, while the string " " is a legal domain name, subjectAltName * extensions with a dNSName of " " MUST NOT be used. Finally, the use * of the DNS representation for Internet mail addresses * (subscriber.example.com instead of subscriber@example.com) MUST NOT * be used; such identities are to be encoded as rfc822Name. * <p> * @author Amit Kapoor * @author Hemma Prafullchandra */
public class DNSName implements GeneralNameInterface { private String name; private static final String alphaDigits = "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789";
Create the DNSName object from the passed encoded Der value.
Params:
  • derValue – the encoded DER DNSName.
Throws:
/** * Create the DNSName object from the passed encoded Der value. * * @param derValue the encoded DER DNSName. * @exception IOException on error. */
public DNSName(DerValue derValue) throws IOException { name = derValue.getIA5String(); }
Create the DNSName object with the specified name.
Params:
  • name – the DNSName.
Throws:
  • IOException – if the name is not a valid DNSName subjectAltName
/** * Create the DNSName object with the specified name. * * @param name the DNSName. * @throws IOException if the name is not a valid DNSName subjectAltName */
public DNSName(String name) throws IOException { if (name == null || name.length() == 0) throw new IOException("DNSName must not be null or empty"); if (name.contains(" ")) throw new IOException("DNSName with blank components is not permitted"); if (name.startsWith(".") || name.endsWith(".")) throw new IOException("DNSName may not begin or end with a ."); /* * Name will consist of label components separated by "." * startIndex is the index of the first character of a component * endIndex is the index of the last character of a component plus 1 */ for (int endIndex,startIndex = 0; startIndex < name.length(); startIndex = endIndex+1) { endIndex = name.indexOf('.', startIndex); if (endIndex < 0) { endIndex = name.length(); } if (endIndex - startIndex < 1) throw new IOException("DNSName with empty components are not permitted"); // RFC 1123: DNSName components must begin with a letter or digit if (alphaDigits.indexOf(name.charAt(startIndex)) < 0) throw new IOException("DNSName components must begin with a letter or digit"); //nonStartIndex: index for characters in the component beyond the first one for (int nonStartIndex=startIndex+1; nonStartIndex < endIndex; nonStartIndex++) { char x = name.charAt(nonStartIndex); if ((alphaDigits).indexOf(x) < 0 && x != '-') throw new IOException("DNSName components must consist of letters, digits, and hyphens"); } } this.name = name; }
Return the type of the GeneralName.
/** * Return the type of the GeneralName. */
public int getType() { return (GeneralNameInterface.NAME_DNS); }
Return the actual name value of the GeneralName.
/** * Return the actual name value of the GeneralName. */
public String getName() { return name; }
Encode the DNSName into the DerOutputStream.
Params:
  • out – the DER stream to encode the DNSName to.
Throws:
/** * Encode the DNSName into the DerOutputStream. * * @param out the DER stream to encode the DNSName to. * @exception IOException on encoding errors. */
public void encode(DerOutputStream out) throws IOException { out.putIA5String(name); }
Convert the name into user readable string.
/** * Convert the name into user readable string. */
public String toString() { return ("DNSName: " + name); }
Compares this name with another, for equality.
Returns:true iff the names are equivalent according to RFC5280.
/** * Compares this name with another, for equality. * * @return true iff the names are equivalent * according to RFC5280. */
public boolean equals(Object obj) { if (this == obj) return true; if (!(obj instanceof DNSName)) return false; DNSName other = (DNSName)obj; // RFC5280 mandates that these names are // not case-sensitive return name.equalsIgnoreCase(other.name); }
Returns the hash code value for this object.
Returns:a hash code value for this object.
/** * Returns the hash code value for this object. * * @return a hash code value for this object. */
public int hashCode() { return name.toUpperCase(Locale.ENGLISH).hashCode(); }
Return type of constraint inputName places on this name:
  • NAME_DIFF_TYPE = -1: input name is different type from name (i.e. does not constrain).
  • NAME_MATCH = 0: input name matches name.
  • NAME_NARROWS = 1: input name narrows name (is lower in the naming subtree)
  • NAME_WIDENS = 2: input name widens name (is higher in the naming subtree)
  • NAME_SAME_TYPE = 3: input name does not match or narrow name, but is same type.
. These results are used in checking NameConstraints during certification path verification.

RFC5280: DNS name restrictions are expressed as host.example.com. Any DNS name that can be constructed by simply adding zero or more labels to the left-hand side of the name satisfies the name constraint. For example, www.host.example.com would satisfy the constraint but host1.example.com would not.

draft-ietf-pkix-new-part1-00.txt: DNSName restrictions are expressed as foo.bar.com. Any DNSName that can be constructed by simply adding to the left hand side of the name satisfies the name constraint. For example, www.foo.bar.com would satisfy the constraint but foo1.bar.com would not.

RFC1034: By convention, domain names can be stored with arbitrary case, but domain name comparisons for all present domain functions are done in a case-insensitive manner, assuming an ASCII character set, and a high order zero bit.

Params:
  • inputName – to be checked for being constrained
Throws:
@returnsconstraint type above
/** * Return type of constraint inputName places on this name:<ul> * <li>NAME_DIFF_TYPE = -1: input name is different type from name (i.e. does not constrain). * <li>NAME_MATCH = 0: input name matches name. * <li>NAME_NARROWS = 1: input name narrows name (is lower in the naming subtree) * <li>NAME_WIDENS = 2: input name widens name (is higher in the naming subtree) * <li>NAME_SAME_TYPE = 3: input name does not match or narrow name, but is same type. * </ul>. These results are used in checking NameConstraints during * certification path verification. * <p> * RFC5280: DNS name restrictions are expressed as host.example.com. * Any DNS name that can be constructed by simply adding zero or more * labels to the left-hand side of the name satisfies the name constraint. * For example, www.host.example.com would satisfy the constraint but * host1.example.com would not. * <p> * draft-ietf-pkix-new-part1-00.txt: DNSName restrictions are expressed as foo.bar.com. * Any DNSName that * can be constructed by simply adding to the left hand side of the name * satisfies the name constraint. For example, www.foo.bar.com would * satisfy the constraint but foo1.bar.com would not. * <p> * RFC1034: By convention, domain names can be stored with arbitrary case, but * domain name comparisons for all present domain functions are done in a * case-insensitive manner, assuming an ASCII character set, and a high * order zero bit. * <p> * @param inputName to be checked for being constrained * @returns constraint type above * @throws UnsupportedOperationException if name is not exact match, but narrowing and widening are * not supported for this name type. */
public int constrains(GeneralNameInterface inputName) throws UnsupportedOperationException { int constraintType; if (inputName == null) constraintType = NAME_DIFF_TYPE; else if (inputName.getType() != NAME_DNS) constraintType = NAME_DIFF_TYPE; else { String inName = (((DNSName)inputName).getName()).toLowerCase(Locale.ENGLISH); String thisName = name.toLowerCase(Locale.ENGLISH); if (inName.equals(thisName)) constraintType = NAME_MATCH; else if (thisName.endsWith(inName)) { int inNdx = thisName.lastIndexOf(inName); if (thisName.charAt(inNdx-1) == '.' ) constraintType = NAME_WIDENS; else constraintType = NAME_SAME_TYPE; } else if (inName.endsWith(thisName)) { int ndx = inName.lastIndexOf(thisName); if (inName.charAt(ndx-1) == '.' ) constraintType = NAME_NARROWS; else constraintType = NAME_SAME_TYPE; } else { constraintType = NAME_SAME_TYPE; } } return constraintType; }
Return subtree depth of this name for purposes of determining NameConstraints minimum and maximum bounds and for calculating path lengths in name subtrees.
Throws:
@returnsdistance of name from root
/** * Return subtree depth of this name for purposes of determining * NameConstraints minimum and maximum bounds and for calculating * path lengths in name subtrees. * * @returns distance of name from root * @throws UnsupportedOperationException if not supported for this name type */
public int subtreeDepth() throws UnsupportedOperationException { // subtree depth is always at least 1 int sum = 1; // count dots for (int i = name.indexOf('.'); i >= 0; i = name.indexOf('.', i + 1)) { ++sum; } return sum; } }