- All Implemented Interfaces:
Cloneable
,CertPathChecker
- Direct Known Subclasses:
PKIXRevocationChecker
X509Certificate
.
A concrete implementation of the PKIXCertPathChecker
class
can be created to extend the PKIX certification path validation algorithm.
For example, an implementation may check for and process a critical private
extension of each certificate in a certification path.
Instances of PKIXCertPathChecker
are passed as parameters
using the setCertPathCheckers
or addCertPathChecker
methods
of the PKIXParameters
and PKIXBuilderParameters
class. Each of the PKIXCertPathChecker
s check
methods will be called, in turn, for each certificate processed by a PKIX
CertPathValidator
or CertPathBuilder
implementation.
A PKIXCertPathChecker
may be called multiple times on
successive certificates in a certification path. Concrete subclasses
are expected to maintain any internal state that may be necessary to
check successive certificates. The init
method is used
to initialize the internal state of the checker so that the certificates
of a new certification path may be checked. A stateful implementation
must override the clone
method if necessary in
order to allow a PKIX CertPathBuilder
to efficiently
backtrack and try other paths. In these situations, the
CertPathBuilder
is able to restore prior path validation
states by restoring the cloned PKIXCertPathChecker
s.
The order in which the certificates are presented to the
PKIXCertPathChecker
may be either in the forward direction
(from target to most-trusted CA) or in the reverse direction (from
most-trusted CA to target). A PKIXCertPathChecker
implementation
must support reverse checking (the ability to perform its checks when
it is presented with certificates in the reverse direction) and may
support forward checking (the ability to perform its checks when it is
presented with certificates in the forward direction). The
isForwardCheckingSupported
method
indicates whether forward checking is supported.
Additional input parameters required for executing the check may be specified through constructors of concrete implementations of this class.
Concurrent Access
Unless otherwise specified, the methods defined in this class are not thread-safe. Multiple threads that need to access a single object concurrently should synchronize amongst themselves and provide the necessary locking. Multiple threads each manipulating separate objects need not synchronize.
- Since:
- 1.4
- See Also:
-
Constructor Summary
-
Method Summary
Modifier and TypeMethodDescriptionvoid
check
(Certificate cert) Performs the check(s) on the specified certificate using its internal state.abstract void
check
(Certificate cert, Collection<String> unresolvedCritExts) Performs the check(s) on the specified certificate using its internal state and removes any critical extensions that it processes from the specified collection of OID strings that represent the unresolved critical extensions.clone()
Returns a clone of this object.Returns an immutableSet
of X.509 certificate extensions that thisPKIXCertPathChecker
supports (i.e. recognizes, is able to process), ornull
if no extensions are supported.abstract void
init
(boolean forward) Initializes the internal state of thisPKIXCertPathChecker
.abstract boolean
Indicates if forward checking is supported.
-
Constructor Details
-
PKIXCertPathChecker
protected PKIXCertPathChecker()Default constructor.
-
-
Method Details
-
init
Initializes the internal state of thisPKIXCertPathChecker
.The
forward
flag specifies the order that certificates will be passed to thecheck
method (forward or reverse). APKIXCertPathChecker
must support reverse checking and may support forward checking.- Specified by:
init
in interfaceCertPathChecker
- Parameters:
forward
- the order that certificates are presented to thecheck
method. Iftrue
, certificates are presented from target to most-trusted CA (forward); iffalse
, from most-trusted CA to target (reverse).- Throws:
CertPathValidatorException
- if thisPKIXCertPathChecker
is unable to check certificates in the specified order; it should never be thrown if the forward flag is false since reverse checking must be supported
-
isForwardCheckingSupported
public abstract boolean isForwardCheckingSupported()Indicates if forward checking is supported. Forward checking refers to the ability of thePKIXCertPathChecker
to perform its checks when certificates are presented to thecheck
method in the forward direction (from target to most-trusted CA).- Specified by:
isForwardCheckingSupported
in interfaceCertPathChecker
- Returns:
true
if forward checking is supported,false
otherwise
-
getSupportedExtensions
Returns an immutableSet
of X.509 certificate extensions that thisPKIXCertPathChecker
supports (i.e. recognizes, is able to process), ornull
if no extensions are supported.Each element of the set is a
String
representing the Object Identifier (OID) of the X.509 extension that is supported. The OID is represented by a set of nonnegative integers separated by periods.All X.509 certificate extensions that a
PKIXCertPathChecker
might possibly be able to process should be included in the set.- Returns:
- an immutable
Set
of X.509 extension OIDs (inString
format) supported by thisPKIXCertPathChecker
, ornull
if no extensions are supported
-
check
public abstract void check(Certificate cert, Collection<String> unresolvedCritExts) throws CertPathValidatorException Performs the check(s) on the specified certificate using its internal state and removes any critical extensions that it processes from the specified collection of OID strings that represent the unresolved critical extensions. The certificates are presented in the order specified by theinit
method.- Parameters:
cert
- theCertificate
to be checkedunresolvedCritExts
- aCollection
of OID strings representing the current set of unresolved critical extensions- Throws:
CertPathValidatorException
- if the specified certificate does not pass the check
-
check
Performs the check(s) on the specified certificate using its internal state. The certificates are presented in the order specified by theinit
method.This implementation calls
check(cert, java.util.Collections.<String>emptySet())
.- Specified by:
check
in interfaceCertPathChecker
- Parameters:
cert
- theCertificate
to be checked- Throws:
CertPathValidatorException
- if the specified certificate does not pass the check
-
clone
-