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I am writing a small library, and in which I need to access several different type of files. While the access method itself is different for each kind of file format, they seem to have a lot in common, and I put an interface in the class hierarchy, in which I wrote a method that should connect to the data source.

However, since the data source might be protected by password and/or user permission, sometimes it need authentication to retrieve the data. My questions are:

  1. It is a good idea to throw an exception when authentication is required?

    Since I want to expose the implementation as little as possible, I only want to tell the user what happened. But authentication might need many different things (username, password, etc.), so could I pack them into one exception and throw it out? Or, maybe there is a better way without resorting to exceptions, since "Authentication required" is not really the exceptional behavior that exception usually used to handle.

  2. What exception to throw when authentication is required?

    Now suppose I decided to use exception to handle this. Which exception should I throw? The several AuthenticationExceptions shipped with Java API does not seem to fit this requirement since they all seem to be very case specific, e.g., used in the naming service. I am not sure if SecurityException is the way to go, but if this is improper, I still really do not want to throw my own exception, since that will impede other people to understand my code and what is going on behind the API.

Thanks for any input! This is somewhat lengthy or maybe too verbose, so any edits that would improve the question is extremely welcomed.

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  • So how is your API right now?Do you have something like e.g. openFile(String name, String userName, String password); and the caller does not know if for a specific file the call should be openFile(name,null,null); or openFile(name,administrator,"1234"); ?
    – Cratylus
    Sep 29, 2011 at 20:00
  • @user384706: Now I just overloaded the methods, and provided one version with just a file's address, one with a password and one with both user name and password. All three will throw exceptions on failure, and the first and second just call the third method to achieve the result. Thanks for commenting!
    – zw324
    Sep 30, 2011 at 0:30

2 Answers 2

5

AuthenticationException

I would go for throwing AuthenticationException with the message either if the login is needed and username or password wrong if the pass is not good.

It is a best practice to do not disclose whether login exists. And sometimes in HTTP it is common to hide unauthorized access with a not found. So if the credentials do not allow to connect it is like the connection does not exist.

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  • 1
    +1 for the sage advice about authentication & disclosure! thanks! Sep 29, 2011 at 21:15
  • 2
    I wouldn't use the class in a role of generic "authorization exception" event. The class belongs to very specialized javax.naming package. The javadoc says: This exception is thrown when an authentication error occurs while accessing the naming or directory service..
    – user07
    Nov 19, 2022 at 1:47
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Since it's your own API, you might create your own Exception to go with it, which can carry the details... There's no requirement or benefit to using the Java exception that "sounds closest to" your exception.

I personally find that peppering my code with try/catch blocks is... tedious and unsightly. So I try to make API's that don't require it.

In your case, maybe you could provide queries so your API clients could preflight the actions, and their usage might look something like:

Thing t = new Thing(...);
if(t.needsAuth())
{
  boolean ok = t.doPassword("abc123");
  if(!ok)
    log("wrong password");
}
boolean did= t.doIt();
if(!did)
  log("sorry: " + t.getProblem());
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