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Trail: Security in JDK 1.2
Lesson: Quick Tour of Controlling Applications

See the Policy File Effects

Now that you have added the required policy entry to the mypolicy policy file, you should be able to successfully read the specified properties when you execute the GetProps application with a security manager, as shown in the following figure.

As noted at the end of the Quick Tour of Controlling Applets(in the Java Security 1.2 trail) lesson, whenever you run an applet, or an application with a security manager, the policy files that are loaded and used by default are the ones specified in the "security properties file", which is located at

  Windows:
    java.home\lib\security\java.security 
  UNIX:
    java.home/lib/security/java.security
Note that java.home indicates the directory into which the JRE was installed.

There are two possible ways you can have the mypolicy file be considered as part of the overall policy, in addition to the policy files specified in the security properties file. You can either specify the additional policy file in a property passed to the runtime system, as described in Approach 1, or add a line in the security properties file specifying the additional policy file, as discussed in Approach 2.

Approach 1

You can use a -Djava.security.policy interpreter command line argument to specify a policy file that should be used in addition to the ones specified in the security properties file.

Make sure that you are in the directory containing GetProps.class and mypolicy. Then you can run the GetProps application and pass the mypolicy policy file to the interpreter by typing the following command on one line:

java -Djava.security.manager
     -Djava.security.policy=mypolicy GetProps
(Recall that -Djava.security.manager is required in order to run an application with a security manager, as shown in the See How to Restrict Applications step.)

The program should report the values of the "user.home" and "java.home" properties.

If the application still reports an error, something is wrong in the policy file. Use the Policy Tool to check the policy entry you just created in the Set up the Policy File to Grant the Required Permissions step. Then fix any typos or other errors.

Approach 2

You can specify a number of URLs in policy.url.n properties in the security properties file, and all the designated policy files will get loaded. So one way to have your mypolicy file's policy entries considered by the java interpreter is to add an entry specifying that policy file in the security properties file.

You created such an entry in the last part of the Quick Tour of Controlling Applets(in the Java Security 1.2 trail) lesson. If your security properties file still has that entry, you're ready to run the application. Otherwise you need to add the entry. To do so, open the security properties file in an editor suitable for editing an ASCII text file. Then add the following line after the line containing policy.url.2:

If you're on a Windows system, add
policy.url.3=file:/C:/Test/mypolicy

If you're on a UNIX system, add

policy.url.3=file:${user.home}/test/mypolicy
On a UNIX system you can alternatively explicitly specify your home directory, as in
policy.url.3=file:/home/susanj/test/mypolicy

Run the Application

Now you should be able to successfully run the following.
java -Djava.security.manager GetProps

As with approach 1, if you still get a security exception, something is wrong in the policy file. Use the Policy Tool to check the policy entry you just created in the Set up the Policy File to Grant the Required Permissions step. Then fix any typos or other errors.


Important: Before continuing, you may want to delete the line you just added in the security properties file (or comment it out), since you probably do not want the mypolicy file included when you are not running the tutorial lessons.

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