/* * Copyright (c) 1996, 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER. * * This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it * under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as * published by the Free Software Foundation. Oracle designates this * particular file as subject to the "Classpath" exception as provided * by Oracle in the LICENSE file that accompanied this code. * * This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT * 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). * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version * 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. * * Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA * or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any * questions. */ package java.security.acl; import java.util.Enumeration; import java.security.Principal; /** * Interface representing an Access Control List (ACL). An Access * Control List is a data structure used to guard access to * resources.<p> * * An ACL can be thought of as a data structure with multiple ACL * entries. Each ACL entry, of interface type AclEntry, contains a * set of permissions associated with a particular principal. (A * principal represents an entity such as an individual user or a * group). Additionally, each ACL entry is specified as being either * positive or negative. If positive, the permissions are to be * granted to the associated principal. If negative, the permissions * are to be denied.<p> * * The ACL Entries in each ACL observe the following rules:<p> * * <ul> <li>Each principal can have at most one positive ACL entry and * one negative entry; that is, multiple positive or negative ACL * entries are not allowed for any principal. Each entry specifies * the set of permissions that are to be granted (if positive) or * denied (if negative). <p> * * <li>If there is no entry for a particular principal, then the * principal is considered to have a null (empty) permission set.<p> * * <li>If there is a positive entry that grants a principal a * particular permission, and a negative entry that denies the * principal the same permission, the result is as though the * permission was never granted or denied. <p> * * <li>Individual permissions always override permissions of the * group(s) to which the individual belongs. That is, individual * negative permissions (specific denial of permissions) override the * groups' positive permissions. And individual positive permissions * override the groups' negative permissions.<p> * * </ul> * * The {@code java.security.acl } package provides the * interfaces to the ACL and related data structures (ACL entries, * groups, permissions, etc.), and the {@code sun.security.acl } * classes provide a default implementation of the interfaces. For * example, {@code java.security.acl.Acl } provides the * interface to an ACL and the {@code sun.security.acl.AclImpl } * class provides the default implementation of the interface.<p> * * The {@code java.security.acl.Acl } interface extends the * {@code java.security.acl.Owner } interface. The Owner * interface is used to maintain a list of owners for each ACL. Only * owners are allowed to modify an ACL. For example, only an owner can * call the ACL's {@code addEntry} method to add a new ACL entry * to the ACL. * * @see java.security.acl.AclEntry * @see java.security.acl.Owner * @see java.security.acl.Acl#getPermissions * * @author Satish Dharmaraj */ public interface Acl extends Owner { /** * Sets the name of this ACL. * * @param caller the principal invoking this method. It must be an * owner of this ACL. * * @param name the name to be given to this ACL. * * @exception NotOwnerException if the caller principal * is not an owner of this ACL. * * @see #getName */ public void setName(Principal caller, String name) throws NotOwnerException; /** * Returns the name of this ACL. * * @return the name of this ACL. * * @see #setName */ public String getName(); /** * Adds an ACL entry to this ACL. An entry associates a principal * (e.g., an individual or a group) with a set of * permissions. Each principal can have at most one positive ACL * entry (specifying permissions to be granted to the principal) * and one negative ACL entry (specifying permissions to be * denied). If there is already an ACL entry of the same type * (negative or positive) already in the ACL, false is returned. * * @param caller the principal invoking this method. It must be an * owner of this ACL. * * @param entry the ACL entry to be added to this ACL. * * @return true on success, false if an entry of the same type * (positive or negative) for the same principal is already * present in this ACL. * * @exception NotOwnerException if the caller principal * is not an owner of this ACL. */ public boolean addEntry(Principal caller, AclEntry entry) throws NotOwnerException; /** * Removes an ACL entry from this ACL. * * @param caller the principal invoking this method. It must be an * owner of this ACL. * * @param entry the ACL entry to be removed from this ACL. * * @return true on success, false if the entry is not part of this ACL. * * @exception NotOwnerException if the caller principal is not * an owner of this Acl. */ public boolean removeEntry(Principal caller, AclEntry entry) throws NotOwnerException; /** * Returns an enumeration for the set of allowed permissions for the * specified principal (representing an entity such as an individual or * a group). This set of allowed permissions is calculated as * follows:<p> * * <ul> * * <li>If there is no entry in this Access Control List for the * specified principal, an empty permission set is returned.<p> * * <li>Otherwise, the principal's group permission sets are determined. * (A principal can belong to one or more groups, where a group is a * group of principals, represented by the Group interface.) * The group positive permission set is the union of all * the positive permissions of each group that the principal belongs to. * The group negative permission set is the union of all * the negative permissions of each group that the principal belongs to. * If there is a specific permission that occurs in both * the positive permission set and the negative permission set, * it is removed from both.<p> * * The individual positive and negative permission sets are also * determined. The positive permission set contains the permissions * specified in the positive ACL entry (if any) for the principal. * Similarly, the negative permission set contains the permissions * specified in the negative ACL entry (if any) for the principal. * The individual positive (or negative) permission set is considered * to be null if there is not a positive (negative) ACL entry for the * principal in this ACL.<p> * * The set of permissions granted to the principal is then calculated * using the simple rule that individual permissions always override * the group permissions. That is, the principal's individual negative * permission set (specific denial of permissions) overrides the group * positive permission set, and the principal's individual positive * permission set overrides the group negative permission set. * * </ul> * * @param user the principal whose permission set is to be returned. * * @return the permission set specifying the permissions the principal * is allowed. */ public Enumeration<Permission> getPermissions(Principal user); /** * Returns an enumeration of the entries in this ACL. Each element in * the enumeration is of type AclEntry. * * @return an enumeration of the entries in this ACL. */ public Enumeration<AclEntry> entries(); /** * Checks whether or not the specified principal has the specified * permission. If it does, true is returned, otherwise false is returned. * * More specifically, this method checks whether the passed permission * is a member of the allowed permission set of the specified principal. * The allowed permission set is determined by the same algorithm as is * used by the {@code getPermissions} method. * * @param principal the principal, assumed to be a valid authenticated * Principal. * * @param permission the permission to be checked for. * * @return true if the principal has the specified permission, false * otherwise. * * @see #getPermissions */ public boolean checkPermission(Principal principal, Permission permission); /** * Returns a string representation of the * ACL contents. * * @return a string representation of the ACL contents. */ public String toString(); }