Java™ Platform
Standard Ed. 8
compact1, compact2, compact3
javax.net.ssl

Class HandshakeCompletedEvent

  • All Implemented Interfaces:
    Serializable


    public class HandshakeCompletedEvent
    extends EventObject
    This event indicates that an SSL handshake completed on a given SSL connection. All of the core information about that handshake's result is captured through an "SSLSession" object. As a convenience, this event class provides direct access to some important session attributes.

    The source of this event is the SSLSocket on which handshaking just completed.

    Since:
    1.4
    See Also:
    SSLSocket, HandshakeCompletedListener, SSLSession, Serialized Form
    • Constructor Detail

      • HandshakeCompletedEvent

        public HandshakeCompletedEvent(SSLSocket sock,
                                       SSLSession s)
        Constructs a new HandshakeCompletedEvent.
        Parameters:
        sock - the SSLSocket acting as the source of the event
        s - the SSLSession this event is associated with
    • Method Detail

      • getSession

        public SSLSession getSession()
        Returns the session that triggered this event.
        Returns:
        the SSLSession for this handshake
      • getCipherSuite

        public String getCipherSuite()
        Returns the cipher suite in use by the session which was produced by the handshake. (This is a convenience method for getting the ciphersuite from the SSLsession.)
        Returns:
        the name of the cipher suite negotiated during this session.
      • getLocalCertificates

        public Certificate[] getLocalCertificates()
        Returns the certificate(s) that were sent to the peer during handshaking. Note: This method is useful only when using certificate-based cipher suites. When multiple certificates are available for use in a handshake, the implementation chooses what it considers the "best" certificate chain available, and transmits that to the other side. This method allows the caller to know which certificate chain was actually used.
        Returns:
        an ordered array of certificates, with the local certificate first followed by any certificate authorities. If no certificates were sent, then null is returned.
        See Also:
        getLocalPrincipal()
      • getPeerCertificates

        public Certificate[] getPeerCertificates()
                                          throws SSLPeerUnverifiedException
        Returns the identity of the peer which was established as part of defining the session. Note: This method can be used only when using certificate-based cipher suites; using it with non-certificate-based cipher suites, such as Kerberos, will throw an SSLPeerUnverifiedException.
        Returns:
        an ordered array of the peer certificates, with the peer's own certificate first followed by any certificate authorities.
        Throws:
        SSLPeerUnverifiedException - if the peer is not verified.
        See Also:
        getPeerPrincipal()
      • getPeerCertificateChain

        public X509Certificate[] getPeerCertificateChain()
                                                  throws SSLPeerUnverifiedException
        Returns the identity of the peer which was identified as part of defining the session. Note: This method can be used only when using certificate-based cipher suites; using it with non-certificate-based cipher suites, such as Kerberos, will throw an SSLPeerUnverifiedException.

        Note: this method exists for compatibility with previous releases. New applications should use getPeerCertificates() instead.

        Returns:
        an ordered array of peer X.509 certificates, with the peer's own certificate first followed by any certificate authorities. (The certificates are in the original JSSE X509Certificate format).
        Throws:
        SSLPeerUnverifiedException - if the peer is not verified.
        See Also:
        getPeerPrincipal()
      • getLocalPrincipal

        public Principal getLocalPrincipal()
        Returns the principal that was sent to the peer during handshaking.
        Returns:
        the principal sent to the peer. Returns an X500Principal of the end-entity certificate for X509-based cipher suites, and KerberosPrincipal for Kerberos cipher suites. If no principal was sent, then null is returned.
        Since:
        1.5
        See Also:
        getLocalCertificates(), getPeerPrincipal()
      • getSocket

        public SSLSocket getSocket()
        Returns the socket which is the source of this event. (This is a convenience function, to let applications write code without type casts.)
        Returns:
        the socket on which the connection was made.
Java™ Platform
Standard Ed. 8

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For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
Copyright © 1993, 2022, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Use is subject to license terms. Also see the documentation redistribution policy.

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