/* * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one * or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file * distributed with this work for additional information * regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file * to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the * "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance * with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, * software distributed under the License is distributed on an * "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY * KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the * specific language governing permissions and limitations * under the License. */ package org.apache.shiro.authz.permission; import org.apache.shiro.authz.Permission; /** * A {@code PermisisonResolver} resolves a String value and converts it into a * {@link org.apache.shiro.authz.Permission Permission} instance. * <p/> * The default {@link WildcardPermissionResolver} should be * suitable for most purposes, which constructs {@link WildcardPermission} objects. * However, any resolver may be configured if an application wishes to use different * {@link org.apache.shiro.authz.Permission} implementations. * <p/> * A {@code PermissionResolver} is used by many Shiro components such as annotations, property file * configuration, URL configuration, etc. It is useful whenever a String representation of a permission is specified * and that String needs to be converted to a Permission instance before executing a security check. * <p/> * Shiro chooses to support {@link WildcardPermission Wildcardpermission}s by default in almost all components and * we do that in the form of the {@link WildcardPermissionResolver WildcardPermissionResolver}. One of the nice * things about {@code WildcardPermission}s being supported by default is that it makes it very easy to * store complex permissions in the database - and also makes it very easy to represent permissions in JSP files, * annotations, etc., where a simple string representation is useful. * <p/> * Although this happens to be the Shiro default, you are of course free to provide custom * String-to-Permission conversion by providing Shiro components any instance of this interface. * * @see org.apache.shiro.authz.ModularRealmAuthorizer#setPermissionResolver(PermissionResolver) ModularRealmAuthorizer.setPermissionResolver * @see org.apache.shiro.realm.AuthorizingRealm#setPermissionResolver(PermissionResolver) AuthorizingRealm.setPermissionResolver * @see PermissionResolverAware PermissionResolverAware * @since 0.9 */ public interface PermissionResolver { /** * Resolves a Permission based on the given String representation. * * @param permissionString the String representation of a permission. * @return A Permission object that can be used internally to determine a subject's permissions. * @throws InvalidPermissionStringException * if the permission string is not valid for this resolver. */ Permission resolvePermission(String permissionString); }