javax.xml.bind
Class JAXBPermission
- java.lang.Object
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- java.security.Permission
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- java.security.BasicPermission
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- javax.xml.bind.JAXBPermission
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- All Implemented Interfaces:
- Serializable, Guard
public final class JAXBPermission extends BasicPermission
This class is for JAXB permissions. AJAXBPermission
contains a name (also referred to as a "target name") but no actions list; you either have the named permission or you don't.The target name is the name of the JAXB permission (see below).
The following table lists all the possible
JAXBPermission
target names, and for each provides a description of what the permission allows and a discussion of the risks of granting code the permission.Permission Target Name What the Permission Allows Risks of Allowing this Permission setDatatypeConverter Allows the code to set VM-wide DatatypeConverterInterface
viathe setDatatypeConverter method
that all the methods onDatatypeConverter
uses.Malicious code can set DatatypeConverterInterface
, which has VM-wide singleton semantics, before a genuine JAXB implementation sets one. This allows malicious code to gain access to objects that it may otherwise not have access to, such asFrame.getFrames()
that belongs to another application running in the same JVM.- Since:
- JAXB 2.2
- See Also:
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BasicPermission
,Permission
,Permissions
,PermissionCollection
,SecurityManager
, Serialized Form
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Constructor Summary
Constructors Constructor and Description JAXBPermission(String name)
Creates a new JAXBPermission with the specified name.
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Method Summary
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Methods inherited from class java.security.BasicPermission
equals, getActions, hashCode, implies, newPermissionCollection
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Methods inherited from class java.security.Permission
checkGuard, getName, toString
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Constructor Detail
JAXBPermission
public JAXBPermission(String name)
Creates a new JAXBPermission with the specified name.- Parameters:
-
name
- The name of the JAXBPermission. As of 2.2 only "setDatatypeConverter" is defined.
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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.
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