JavaTM 2 Platform
Standard Ed. 5.0

javax.security.sasl
Interface SaslClientFactory


public interface SaslClientFactory

An interface for creating instances of SaslClient. A class that implements this interface must be thread-safe and handle multiple simultaneous requests. It must also have a public constructor that accepts no argument.

This interface is not normally accessed directly by a client, which will use the Sasl static methods instead. However, a particular environment may provide and install a new or different SaslClientFactory.

Since:
1.5
See Also:
SaslClient, Sasl

Method Summary
 SaslClient createSaslClient(String[] mechanisms, String authorizationId, String protocol, String serverName, Map<String,?> props, CallbackHandler cbh)
          Creates a SaslClient using the parameters supplied.
 String[] getMechanismNames(Map<String,?> props)
          Returns an array of names of mechanisms that match the specified mechanism selection policies.
 

Method Detail

createSaslClient

SaslClient createSaslClient(String[] mechanisms,
                            String authorizationId,
                            String protocol,
                            String serverName,
                            Map<String,?> props,
                            CallbackHandler cbh)
                            throws SaslException
Creates a SaslClient using the parameters supplied.

Parameters:
mechanisms - The non-null list of mechanism names to try. Each is the IANA-registered name of a SASL mechanism. (e.g. "GSSAPI", "CRAM-MD5").
authorizationId - The possibly null protocol-dependent identification to be used for authorization. If null or empty, the server derives an authorization ID from the client's authentication credentials. When the SASL authentication completes successfully, the specified entity is granted access.
protocol - The non-null string name of the protocol for which the authentication is being performed (e.g., "ldap").
serverName - The non-null fully qualified host name of the server to authenticate to.
props - The possibly null set of properties used to select the SASL mechanism and to configure the authentication exchange of the selected mechanism. See the Sasl class for a list of standard properties. Other, possibly mechanism-specific, properties can be included. Properties not relevant to the selected mechanism are ignored.
cbh - The possibly null callback handler to used by the SASL mechanisms to get further information from the application/library to complete the authentication. For example, a SASL mechanism might require the authentication ID, password and realm from the caller. The authentication ID is requested by using a NameCallback. The password is requested by using a PasswordCallback. The realm is requested by using a RealmChoiceCallback if there is a list of realms to choose from, and by using a RealmCallback if the realm must be entered.
Returns:
A possibly null SaslClient created using the parameters supplied. If null, this factory cannot produce a SaslClient using the parameters supplied.
Throws:
SaslException - If cannot create a SaslClient because of an error.

getMechanismNames

String[] getMechanismNames(Map<String,?> props)
Returns an array of names of mechanisms that match the specified mechanism selection policies.

Parameters:
props - The possibly null set of properties used to specify the security policy of the SASL mechanisms. For example, if props contains the Sasl.POLICY_NOPLAINTEXT property with the value "true", then the factory must not return any SASL mechanisms that are susceptible to simple plain passive attacks. See the Sasl class for a complete list of policy properties. Non-policy related properties, if present in props, are ignored.
Returns:
A non-null array containing a IANA-registered SASL mechanism names.

JavaTM 2 Platform
Standard Ed. 5.0

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For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java 2 SDK SE Developer Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.

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