When I run an unsigned Java applet in a web browser, it is allowed to do some things and not others. There has got to be a file somewhere that defines this. I think it will probably look something like the list here [ http://www.coderanch.com/t/460650/Websphere/java-security-AccessControlException-Access-denied ] and contain entries like the following:
permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "getClassLoader";
permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "setFactory";
permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "accessClassInPackage.sun.misc";
permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "accessClassInPackage.sun.beans.infos";
permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "accessDeclaredMembers";
permission java.net.SocketPermission "*", "accept, resolve, connect";
permission java.util.PropertyPermission "*", "read, write";
permission java.security.SecurityPermission "printIdentity";
permission java.lang.reflect.ReflectPermission "suppressAccessChecks";
permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "modifyThread";
permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "modifyThreadGroup";
permission java.security.SecurityPermission "getProperty.ssl.SocketFactory.provider";
permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "createClassLoader";
permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "getProtectionDomain";
Here is a list of more entries that it might possibly contain: http://download.java.net/jdk8/docs/technotes/guides/security/permissions.html
Here is an informal attempt at listing the restrictions (made by multiple users through trial-and-error, it seems): Restrictions on what an unsigned Java applet can do?
This page [ http://docs.oracle.com/javase/1.3/docs/guide/security/PolicyFiles.html ] seems to imply that the only two files that are relevant are ${java.home}\lib\security\java.policy
and ${user.home}\.java.policy
. I have a default installation, where I don't have the latter file, and only the former. That file contains only
permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "stopThread";
as well as various PropertyPermission
s such as
permission java.util.PropertyPermission "java.version", "read";
This is how I know that there has got to be an additional default policy file for unsigned applets: I made an applet which starts a new thread, and with the default java.policy
file above, it fails with the following error: java.security.AccessControlException: access denied ("java.lang.RuntimePermission" "modifyThreadGroup")
, indicating that nothing has granted it the "modifyThreadGroup"
permission. However, when I run it in a browser, it creates the thread successfully.
So the question is: when I run an applet in a browser, where is the policy file which contains this permission "modifyThreadGroup"
? I've searched for it in the JRE directory, but there doesn't seem to be one. Maybe it's not done through a file. Then what grants the applet the "modifyThreadGroup"
permission (and others)?
EDIT
Here is the stack trace for the exception that I see:
java.security.AccessControlException: access denied ("java.lang.RuntimePermission" "modifyThreadGroup")
at java.security.AccessControlContext.checkPermission(AccessControlContext.java:366)
at java.security.AccessController.checkPermission(AccessController.java:555)
at java.lang.SecurityManager.checkPermission(SecurityManager.java:549)
at sun.applet.AppletSecurity.checkAccess(AppletSecurity.java:252)
at java.lang.ThreadGroup.checkAccess(ThreadGroup.java:315)
at java.lang.Thread.init(Thread.java:376)
at java.lang.Thread.<init>(Thread.java:446)
at LITSApplet.init(LITSApplet.java:30)
at sun.applet.AppletPanel.run(AppletPanel.java:434)
at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:722)