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Java Source | 1997-05-20 | 5.4 KB | 148 lines |
- /*
- * @(#)Certificate.java 1.14 97/01/29
- *
- * Copyright (c) 1995, 1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- *
- * This software is the confidential and proprietary information of Sun
- * Microsystems, Inc. ("Confidential Information"). You shall not
- * disclose such Confidential Information and shall use it only in
- * accordance with the terms of the license agreement you entered into
- * with Sun.
- *
- * SUN MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES ABOUT THE SUITABILITY OF THE
- * SOFTWARE, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE
- * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
- * PURPOSE, OR NON-INFRINGEMENT. SUN SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES
- * SUFFERED BY LICENSEE AS A RESULT OF USING, MODIFYING OR DISTRIBUTING
- * THIS SOFTWARE OR ITS DERIVATIVES.
- *
- * CopyrightVersion 1.1_beta
- *
- */
-
- package java.security;
-
- import java.io.*;
- import java.util.Date;
-
- /**
- * <p>This is an interface of abstract methods for managing an
- * identity certificate. An identity certificate is a guarantee by a
- * principal that a public key is that of another principal. (A
- * principal represents an entity such as an individual user or a
- * group.)
- *
- * <p>In particular, this interface is intended to be a common
- * abstraction for constructs that have different formats but
- * important common uses. For example, different types of
- * certificates, such as X.509 certificates and PGP certificates,
- * share general certificate functionality (the need to encode and
- * decode certificates) and some types of information, such as a
- * public key, the principal whose key it is, and the guarantor
- * guaranteeing that the public key is that of the specified
- * principal. So an implementation of X.509 certificates and an
- * implementation of PGP certificates can both utilize the Certificate
- * interface, even though their formats and additional types and
- * amounts of information stored are different.
- *
- * <p><b>Important</b>: This interface is useful for cataloging and
- * grouping objects sharing certain common uses. It does not have any
- * semantics of its own. In particular, a Certificate object does not
- * make any statement as to the <i>validity</i> of the binding. It is
- * the duty of the application implementing this interface to verify
- * the certificate and satisfy itself of its validity.
- *
- * @version 1.14 01/29/97
- * @author Benjamin Renaud
- */
- public interface Certificate {
-
- /**
- * Returns the guarantor of the certificate, that is, the principal
- * guaranteeing that the public key associated with this certificate
- * is that of the principal associated with this certificate. For X.509
- * certificates, the guarantor will typically be a Certificate Authority
- * (such as the United States Postal Service or Verisign, Inc.).
- *
- * @return the guarantor which guaranteed the principal-key
- * binding.
- */
- public abstract Principal getGuarantor();
-
- /**
- * Returns the principal of the principal-key pair being guaranteed by
- * the guarantor.
- *
- * @return the principal to which this certificate is bound.
- */
- public abstract Principal getPrincipal();
-
- /**
- * Returns the key of the principal-key pair being guaranteed by
- * the guarantor.
- *
- * @return the public key that this certificate certifies belongs
- * to a particular principal.
- */
- public abstract PublicKey getPublicKey();
-
- /**
- * Encodes the certificate to an output stream in a format that can
- * be decoded by the <code>decode</code> method.
- *
- * @param stream the output stream to which to encode the
- * certificate.
- *
- * @exception KeyException if the certificate is not
- * properly initialized, or data is missing, etc.
- *
- * @exception IOException if a stream exception occurs while
- * trying to output the encoded certificate to the output stream.
- *
- * @see #decode
- * @see #getFormat
- */
- public abstract void encode(OutputStream stream)
- throws KeyException, IOException;
-
- /**
- * Decodes a certificate from an input stream. The format should be
- * that returned by <code>getFormat</code> and produced by
- * <code>encode</code>.
- *
- * @param stream the input stream from which to fetch the data
- * being decoded.
- *
- * @exception KeyException if the certificate is not properly initialized,
- * or data is missing, etc.
- *
- * @exception IOException if an exception occurs while trying to input
- * the encoded certificate from the input stream.
- *
- * @see #encode
- * @see #getFormat
- */
- public abstract void decode(InputStream stream)
- throws KeyException, IOException;
-
-
- /**
- * Returns the name of the coding format. This is used as a hint to find
- * an appropriate parser. It could be "X.509", "PGP", etc. This is
- * the format produced and understood by the <code>encode</code>
- * and <code>decode</code> methods.
- *
- * @return the name of the coding format.
- */
- public abstract String getFormat();
-
- /**
- * Returns a string that represents the contents of the certificate.
- *
- * @param detailed whether or not to give detailed information
- * about the certificate.
- */
- public String toString(boolean detailed);
- }
-
-