/*
* @(#)GSSUtil.java 1.10 05/11/17
*
* Copyright 2006 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
* SUN PROPRIETARY/CONFIDENTIAL. Use is subject to license terms.
*/
package com.sun.security.jgss;
import javax.security.auth.Subject;
import org.ietf.jgss.GSSName;
import org.ietf.jgss.GSSCredential;
/**
* GSS-API Utilities for using in conjunction with Sun Microsystem's
* implementation of Java GSS-API.
*/
public class GSSUtil {
/**
* Use this method to convert a GSSName and GSSCredential into a
* Subject. Typically this would be done by a server that wants to
* impersonate a client thread at the Java level by setting a client
* Subject in the current access control context. If the server is merely
* interested in using a principal based policy in its local JVM, then
* it only needs to provide the GSSName of the client.
*
* The elements from the GSSName are placed in the principals set of this
* Subject and those from the GSSCredential are placed in the private
* credentials set of the Subject. Any Kerberos specific elements that
* are added to the subject will be instances of the standard Kerberos
* implementation classes defined in javax.security.auth.kerberos.
*
* @return a Subject with the entries that contain elements from the
* given GSSName and GSSCredential.
*
* @param principals a GSSName containing one or more mechanism specific
* representations of the same entity. These mechanism specific
* representations will be populated in the returned Subject's principal
* set.
*
* @param credentials a GSSCredential containing one or more mechanism
* specific credentials for the same entity. These mechanism specific
* credentials will be populated in the returned Subject's private
* credential set. Passing in a value of null will imply that the private
* credential set should be left empty.
*/
public static Subject createSubject(GSSName principals,
GSSCredential credentials) {
return sun.security.jgss.GSSUtil.getSubject(principals,
credentials);
}
}
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