How to Implement a Provider for the JavaTM Cryptography Extension

in the JavaTM 2 SDK, Standard Edition, v 1.4



Introduction
Who Should Read This Document
Related Documentation
A Note on Terminology

What's New in JCE in the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4

Engine Classes and Corresponding SPI Classes

Steps to Implement and Integrate a Provider
Step 1: Write your Service Implementation Code
Step 2: Give your Provider a Name
Step 3: Write your "Master Class," a subclass of Provider
Step 4: Compile your Code
Step 5: Prepare for Testing
Step 6: Write and Compile Test Programs
Step 7: Run your Test Programs
Step 8: Apply for U.S. Government Export Approval If Required
Step 9: Document your Provider and its Supported Services
Step 10: Make Your Provider Software and Documentation Available to Clients

How a Provider Can Do Self-Integrity Checking

Further Implementation Details and Requirements
Algorithm Aliases
Service Interdependencies
Default Initializations
Diffie-Hellman Interfaces and their Required Implementations
Algorithm Parameter Specification Classes
Key Specification Classes Required by Key Factories
Secret-Key Generation
Ensuring Exportablity

Appendix A: The "SunJCE" Provider's Master Class

Appendix B: The "EMProvider" Provider's Master Class

Appendix C: The java.security Master Properties File

Introduction

The JavaTM Cryptography Extension (JCE) provides a framework and implementations for encryption, key generation and key agreement, and Message Authentication Code (MAC) algorithms. Support for encryption includes symmetric, asymmetric, block, and stream ciphers. The software also supports secure streams and sealed objects.

JCE was previously an optional package (extension) to the JavaTM 2 SDK, Standard Edition (Java 2 SDK), versions 1.2.x and 1.3.x. JCE has now been integrated into the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4.

JCE is based on the same design principles found elsewhere in the Java Cryptography Architecture framework utilized by all the cryptography-related security components of the Java 2 platform: implementation independence and, whenever possible, algorithm independence. It uses the same "provider" architecture, which uses the notion of a Cryptographic Service Provider, or "provider" for short. This term refers to a package (or a set of packages) that supply a concrete implementation of a subset of the cryptography aspects of the Java Security API.

JCE extends the list of cryptographic services of which a provider can supply implementations. A provider could, for example, contain an implementation of one or more digital signature algorithms and one or more cipher algorithms.

A program wishing to use cryptography functionality may simply request a particular type of object (such as a Cipher object) implementing a particular algorithm (such as DES) and get an implementation from one of the installed providers. If an implementation from a particular provider is desired, the program can request that provider by name, along with the algorithm desired.

Each Java 2 SDK installation has one or more provider packages installed. Each provider package supplies implementations of cryptographic services defined in one or more security components of the Java 2 SDK (including JCE).

Clients may configure their runtimes with different providers, and specify a preference order for each of them. The preference order is the order in which providers are searched for requested algorithms when no particular provider is requested.

The Java 2 SDK, v 1.4 release comes standard with a JCE provider named "SunJCE", which comes pre-installed and registered and which supplies the following cryptographic services:

New providers may be added statically or dynamically. Clients may also query which providers are currently installed.

The different implementations may have different characteristics. Some may be software-based, while others may be hardware-based. Some may be platform-independent, while others may be platform-specific. Some provider source code may be available for review and evaluation, while some may not.

Who Should Read This Document

Programmers that only need to use the Java Security API to access existing cryptography algorithms and other services do not need to read this document.

This document is intended for developers of cryptographic service providers. It documents what you need to do in order to integrate your provider into Java Security so that your algorithms and other services can be found when Java Security API clients request them.

Only providers signed by a trusted entity can be plugged into the JCE framework.

Related Documentation

This document assumes you have already read the following documents:

It also discusses various classes and interfaces in the Java Security API. The complete reference documentation for the relevant Security API packages can be found in these packages:

A Note on Terminology

The JCE within the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4 includes two software components:

Throughout this document, the term "JCE" by itself refers to the JCE framework in the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4. Whenever the JCE provider supplied with the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4 is mentioned, it will be referred to explicitly as the "SunJCE" provider.

What's New in JCE in the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4

These are the differences between JCE 1.2.1 and the JCE in the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4 that affect providers:

JCE Is Now in Java 2 SDK

JCE was previously an optional package (extension) to the JavaTM 2 SDK, Standard Edition (Java 2 SDK), versions 1.2.x and 1.3.x. JCE has now been integrated into the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4. The SunJCE provider is also included and is automatically registered in the java.security security properties file included with the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4.

Strong Cryptography Is the Default, Unlimited Is Available

Due to import control restrictions, the jurisdiction policy files shipped with the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4 allow "strong" but limited cryptography to be used. An "unlimited" version of these files indicating no restrictions on cryptographic strengths is available for those living in eligible countries (which is most countries). You can download this version and replace the strong cryptography versions supplied with the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4 with the unlimited ones. See

http://java.sun.com/products/jce/index-14.html
for information indicating where to go to download the unlimited version.

The jurisdiction policy files have been relocated to

<java-home>\lib\security         [Windows]
<java-home>/lib/security         [Solaris]
where <java-home> refers to the directory where the runtime software is installed, which is the top-level directory of the JavaTM 2 Runtime Environment (JRE) or the jre directory in the JavaTM 2 SDK (Java 2 SDK) software. They have been moved to this standard location so that it is easy to replace the strong cryptography versions that come with the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4 with the unlimited ones.

Provider Authentication of JCE Framework No Longer Required

In JCE 1.2.1, providers needed to include code to authenticate the JCE framework to assure themselves of the integrity and authenticity of the JCE that they plugged into. Now that JCE is integrated into the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4, this is no longer necessary.

JCE 1.2.1 providers which follow the guidance in How to Implement a Provider for the Java Cryptography Extension 1.2.1 will continue to work with the JCE framework in the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4.

However, a provider whose framework authentication code locates the JCE framework via protection domain instead of following the recommendations in the aforementioned JCE 1.2.1 JCE provider document will not work in the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4. Now that JCE has been integrated into the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4, the JCE framework has a null code source just like any other class in the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4. You can either modify your provider to follow the recommended approach for authenticating the framework, or put in a conditional so that the framework authentication code is only executed when the provider is being run with JCE 1.2.1.


Engine Classes and Corresponding SPI Classes

An "engine class" defines a cryptographic service in an abstract fashion (without a concrete implementation).

A cryptographic service is always associated with a particular algorithm, and it either provides cryptographic operations (like those for ciphers or key agreement protocols), or generates or supplies the cryptographic material (keys or parameters) required for cryptographic operations. For example, two of the engine classes are the Cipher and KeyAgreement classes. The Cipher class provides access to the functionality of an encryption algorithm (such as DES), and the KeyAgreement class provides access to the functionality of a key agreement protocol (such as Diffie-Hellman).

The Java Cryptography Architecture encompasses the classes of the J2SE Java Security package related to cryptography, including the engine classes. Users of the API request and utilize instances of the engine classes to carry out corresponding operations.

JCE was previously an optional package (extension) to the JavaTM 2 SDK, Standard Edition (Java 2 SDK), versions 1.2.x and 1.3.x. JCE has now been integrated into the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4.

JCE defines the following engine classes:

An engine class provides the interface to the functionality of a specific type of cryptographic service (independent of a particular cryptographic algorithm). It defines "Application Programming Interface" (API) methods that allow applications to access the specific type of cryptographic service it provides. The actual implementations (from one or more providers) are those for specific algorithms. The Cipher engine class, for example, provides access to the functionality of a cipher algorithm. The actual implementation supplied in a CipherSpi subclass (see next paragraph) would be that for a specific kind of encryption algorithm, such as DES or Triple DES.

The application interfaces supplied by an engine class are implemented in terms of a Service Provider Interface (SPI). That is, for each engine class, there is a corresponding abstract SPI class, which defines the Service Provider Interface methods that cryptographic service providers must implement.

An instance of an engine class, the "API object", encapsulates (as a private field) an instance of the corresponding SPI class, the "SPI object". All API methods of an API object are declared final, and their implementations invoke the corresponding SPI methods of the encapsulated SPI object. An instance of an engine class (and of its corresponding SPI class) is created by a call to the getInstance factory method of the engine class.

The name of each SPI class is the same as that of the corresponding engine class, followed by Spi. For example, the SPI class corresponding to the Cipher engine class is the CipherSpi class.

Each SPI class is abstract. To supply the implementation of a particular type of service, for a specific algorithm, a provider must subclass the corresponding SPI class and provide implementations for all the abstract methods.

Another example of an engine class is the KeyAgreement class, which provides access to a key agreement (key exchange) algorithm. Its implementations, in KeyAgreementSpi subclasses, may be those of various key agreement algorithms such as Diffie-Hellman.

As a final example, the SecretKeyFactory engine class supports the conversion from opaque secret keys to transparent key specifications, and vice versa. (See Key Specification Classes Required by Key Factories.) The actual implementation supplied in a SecretKeyFactorySpi subclass would be that for a specific type of secret keys, e.g., DES keys.


Steps to Implement and Integrate a Provider

The steps required in order to implement a provider and integrate it into JCE are the following:

Step 1: Write your Service Implementation Code
Step 2: Give your Provider a Name
Step 3: Write your "Master Class," a subclass of Provider
Step 4: Compile your Code
Step 5: Prepare for Testing
Step 5a: Get a Code-Signing Certificate
Step 5b: Place Your Provider in a JAR File
Step 5c: Sign Your Provider
Step 5d: Install the Provider
Step 5e: Set Provider Permissions
Step 6: Write and Compile Test Programs
Step 7: Run your Test Programs
Step 8: Apply for U.S. Government Export Approval If Required
Step 9: Document your Provider and its Supported Services
Step 10: Make Your Provider Software and Documentation Available to Clients

Step 1: Write your Service Implementation Code

The first thing you need to do is write the code supplying algorithm-specific implementations of the cryptographic services you want to support.

Note that your provider may supply implementations of cryptographic services defined in one or more of the security components of the Java 2 SDK v 1.4, including JCE.

In JCE in the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4 (as in the previous JCE 1.2.1 release), you can supply cipher, key agreement and MAC algorithms, as well as secret-key factories, secret-key generation services, and exemption mechanism implementations.

For cryptographic services not defined in JCE (e.g., signatures and message digests), please refer to Java Cryptography Architecture API Specification and Reference.

For each cryptographic service in the Java 2 SDK (including JCE ones), you need to create a subclass of the appropriate SPI class. JCE defines the following engine classes: CipherSpi, KeyAgreementSpi, KeyGeneratorSpi, MacSpi, SecretKeyFactorySpi, and ExemptionMechanismSpi. (See Engine Classes and Corresponding SPI Classes in this document for information on the JCE and other cryptographic classes in the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4.)

In your subclass, you need to:

  1. Supply implementations for the abstract methods, whose names usually begin with engine. See Further Implementation Details and Requirements for additional information.

  2. Ensure there is a public constructor without any arguments. Here's why: When one of your services is requested, Java Security looks up the subclass implementing that service, as specified by a property in your "master class" (see Step 3). Java Security then creates the Class object associated with your subclass, and creates an instance of your subclass by calling the newInstance method on that Class object. newInstance requires your subclass to have a public constructor without any parameters.

    A default constructor without arguments will automatically be generated if your subclass doesn't have any constructors. But if your subclass defines any constructors, you must explicitly define a public constructor without arguments.

Additional JCE Provider Requirements and Recommendations

When instantiating a provider's implementation (class) of a JCE service, the JCE framework will determine the provider's codebase (JAR file) and verify its signature. In this way, JCE authenticates the provider and ensures that only providers signed by a trusted entity can be plugged into JCE. Thus, one requirement for JCE providers is that they must be signed, as described in later steps.

In addition, each provider should perform self-integrity checking to ensure that the JAR file containing its code has not been manipulated in an attempt to invoke provider methods directly rather than through JCE. For further information, see How a Provider Can Do Self-Integrity Checking.

In order for provider classes to become unusable if instantiated by an application directly, bypassing JCE, providers should implement the following:

  • All SPI implementation classes in a provider package should be declared final (so that they cannot be subclassed), and their (SPI) implementation methods should be declared protected.
  • All crypto-related helper classes in a provider package should have package-private scope, so that they cannot be accessed from outside the provider package.

For providers that may be exported outside the U.S., CipherSpi implementations must include an implementation of the engineGetKeySize method which, given a Key, returns the key size. If there are restrictions on available cryptographic strength specified in jurisdiction policy files, each Cipher initialization method calls engineGetKeySize and then compares the result with the maximum allowable key size for the particular location and circumstances of the applet or application being run. If the key size is too large, the initialization method throws an exception.

Additional optional features that providers may implement are

  • the engineWrap and engineUnwrap methods of CipherSpi. Wrapping a key enables secure transfer of the key from one place to another. Information about wrapping and unwrapping keys is provided in the Wrapping and Unwrapping Keys section of the Java Cryptography Extension (JCE) Reference Guide.

  • one or more exemption mechanisms. An exemption mechanism is something such as key recovery, key escrow, or key weakening which, if implemented and enforced, may enable reduced cryptographic restrictions for an application (or applet) that uses it. For information on the requirements for apps that utilize exemption mechanisms, see How to Make Applications "Exempt" from Cryptographic Restrictions in the Java Cryptography Extension (JCE) Reference Guide.

Step 2: Give your Provider a Name

Decide on a name for your provider. This is the name to be used by client applications to refer to your provider.

Step 3: Write your "Master Class", a subclass of Provider

The third step is to create a subclass of the java.security.Provider class.

Your subclass should be a final class, and its constructor should

For further master class property setting examples, see Appendix A to view the current SunJCE.java source file. This shows how the SunJCE class constructor sets all the properties for the "SunJCE" provider.

As mentioned above, in the case of a Cipher property, algName may actually represent a transformation. A transformation is a string that describes the operation (or set of operations) to be performed by a Cipher object on some given input. A transformation always includes the name of a cryptographic algorithm (e.g., DES), and may be followed by a mode and a padding scheme.

A transformation is of the form:

(In the latter case, provider-specific default values for the mode and padding scheme are used). For example, the following is a valid transformation:

    Cipher c = Cipher.getInstance("DES/CBC/PKCS5Padding");

When requesting a block cipher in stream cipher mode (e.g., DES in CFB or OFB mode), a client may optionally specify the number of bits to be processed at a time, by appending this number to the mode name as shown in the following sample transformations:

    Cipher c1 = Cipher.getInstance("DES/CFB8/NoPadding");
    Cipher c2 = Cipher.getInstance("DES/OFB32/PKCS5Padding");

If a number does not follow a stream cipher mode, a provider-specific default is used. (For example, the "SunJCE" provider uses a default of 64 bits.)

A provider may supply a separate class for each combination of algorithm/mode/padding. Alternatively, a provider may decide to provide more generic classes representing sub-transformations corresponding to algorithm or algorithm/mode or algorithm//padding (note the double slashes); in this case the requested mode and/or padding are set automatically by the getInstance methods of Cipher, which invoke the engineSetMode and engineSetPadding methods of the provider's subclass of CipherSpi.

That is, a Cipher property in a provider master class may have one of the formats shown in the table below.

Cipher Property Format Description
Cipher.algName A provider's subclass of CipherSpi implements algName with pluggable mode and padding
Cipher.algName/mode A provider's subclass of CipherSpi implements algName in the specified mode, with pluggable padding
Cipher.algName//padding A provider's subclass of CipherSpi implements algName with the specified padding, with pluggable mode
Cipher.algName/mode/padding A provider's subclass of CipherSpi implements algName with the specified mode and padding

(See Appendix A of the Java Cryptography Extension (JCE) Reference Guide for the standard algorithm names, modes, and padding schemes that should be used.)

For example, a provider may supply a subclass of CipherSpi that implements DES/ECB/PKCS5Padding, one that implements DES/CBC/PKCS5Padding, one that implements DES/CFB/PKCS5Padding, and yet another one that implements DES/OFB/PKCS5Padding. That provider would have the following Cipher properties in its master class:

Another provider may implement a class for each of the above modes (i.e., one class for ECB, one for CBC, one for CFB, and one for OFB), one class for PKCS5Padding, and a generic DES class that subclasses from CipherSpi. That provider would have the following Cipher properties in its master class:

The getInstance factory method of the Cipher engine class follows these rules in order to instantiate a provider's implementation of CipherSpi for a transformation of the form "algorithm":

  1. Check if the provider has registered a subclass of CipherSpi for the specified "algorithm".

    If the answer is YES, instantiate this class, for whose mode and padding scheme default values (as supplied by the provider) are used.

    If the answer is NO, throw a NoSuchAlgorithmException exception.

The getInstance factory method of the Cipher engine class follows these rules in order to instantiate a provider's implementation of CipherSpi for a transformation of the form "algorithm/mode/padding":

  1. Check if the provider has registered a subclass of CipherSpi for the specified "algorithm/mode/padding" transformation.

    If the answer is YES, instantiate it.

    If the answer is NO, go to the next step.

  2. Check if the provider has registered a subclass of CipherSpi for the sub-transformation "algorithm/mode".

    If the answer is YES, instantiate it, and call engineSetPadding(padding) on the new instance.

    If the answer is NO, go to the next step.

  3. Check if the provider has registered a subclass of CipherSpi for the sub-transformation "algorithm//padding" (note the double slashes).

    If the answer is YES, instantiate it, and call engineSetMode(mode) on the new instance.

    If the answer is NO, go to the next step.

  4. Check if the provider has registered a subclass of CipherSpi for the sub-transformation "algorithm".

    If the answer is YES, instantiate it, and call engineSetMode(mode) and engineSetPadding(padding) on the new instance.

    If the answer is NO, throw a NoSuchAlgorithmException exception.

Step 4: Compile your Code

After you have created your implementation code (Step 1), given your provider a name (Step 2), and created the master class (Step 3), use the Java compiler to compile your files.

Step 5: Prepare for Testing

Step 5a: Get a Code-Signing Certificate

The next step is to request a code-signing certificate so that you can use it to sign your provider prior to testing. The certificate will be good for both testing and production. It will be valid for 5 years.

Below are the steps you should use to get a code-signing certificate. For more information on the keytool tool, see keytool (for Solaris) (for Microsoft Windows).

  1. Use keytool to generate a DSA keypair.
      keytool -genkey -alias <alias> -keyalg DSA -keysize 1024
        -dname "cn=<Company Name>,ou=Java Software Code Signing, 
        o=Sun Microsystems Inc" 
        -keystore <keystore file name>
        -storepass <keystore password>
    

    (Note: This must be typed as a single line. Multiple lines and indentation are used in the examples so that they are legible.)

    This will generate a DSA keypair (a public key and an associated private key) and store it in an entry in the specified keystore. The public key is stored in a self-signed certificate. The keystore entry can subsequently be accessed using the specified alias.

    The option values in angle brackets ("<" and ">") represent the actual values that must be supplied. For example, <alias> must be replaced with whatever alias name you wish to be used to refer to the newly-generated keystore entry in the future, and <keystore file name> must be replaced with the name of the keystore to be used. Note: Do not surround actual values with angle brackets. For example, if you want your alias to be myTestAlias, specify the -alias option as follows:

        -alias myTestAlias
    

    If you specify a keystore that doesn't yet exist, it will be created.

    Note: If command lines you type are not allowed to be as long as the keytool -genkey command you want to execute (for example, if you are typing to a Microsoft Windows DOS prompt), you can create and execute a plain-text batch file containing the command. That is, create a new text file that contains nothing but the full keytool -genkey command. (Remember to type it all on one line.) Save the file with a .bat extension. Then in your DOS window, type the file name (with its path, if necessary). This will cause the command in the batch file to be executed.

  2. Use keytool to generate a certificate signing request.
    keytool -certreq -alias <alias> -sigalg DSA 
            -file <csr file name> 
            -keystore <keystore file name> 
            -storepass <keystore password>
    
    Here, <alias> is the alias for the DSA keypair entry created in the previous step. This command generates a Certificate Signing Request (CSR), using the PKCS#10 format. It stores the CSR in the file whose name is specified in <csr file name>.

  3. Send the CSR, contact information, and other required documentation to the JCE Code Signing Certification Authority.

    Send, via email, the CSR and contact information (see below) to javasoft-cert-request@sun.com. Put the following in the Subject line of your email message:

      Request a Certificate for Signing a JCE Provider
    

    Put the contact information in the body of the message and send the CSR file as a plain text attachment to the message. If your mail tool has an option for specifying the encoding format to be used for attachments, select the "MIME" option. Note: The CSR file is just a plain text file, in Base 64 encoding. Only the first and last lines are human-readable.

    Include the following contact information in the body of your message:

    Company Name
    Street Address (Not a post office box)
    City
    State/Province
    Country
    Company Telephone Number
    Company Fax Number
    Requester Name
    Requester Telephone Number
    Requester Email Address
    Brief description of your company (size, 
        line of business, etc.)
    

    All of the above information is required.

    After the JCE Code Signing Certification Authority has received your email message, it will send you a request number, also via email. After receiving this request number, print, fill out, and mail the appropriate Certification Form to the address specified below. The form you need to send depends on your location (inside or outside the U.S.).

    In all cases, the form should be mailed to the address below and you should include the request number on the form so that your hardcopy mailing can be matched to your email message containing the CSR and contact information. The form should be mailed to:

    Corporate Export
    Attn: Encryption export
    4120 Network Circle MS: usca12-204
    Santa Clara, CA  95054
    
    After the JCE Code Signing Certification Authority has received both your email message and the required form, it will authenticate you, the requester. Then it will create and sign a code-signing certificate valid for 5 years. It will send you an email message containing two plain-text file attachments: one file containing this code-signing certificate and another file containing its own CA certificate, which authenticates its public key.

  4. Use keytool to import the certificates received from the CA.

    Once you have received the two certificates from the JCE Code Signing Certification Authority, you can use keytool to import them into your keystore.

    First import the CA's certificate as a "trusted certificate":

    keytool -import -alias <alias for the CA cert> 
            -file <CA cert file name> 
            -keystore <keystore file name> 
            -storepass <keystore password>
    
    Then import the code-signing certificate:
    keytool -import -alias <alias> 
            -file <code-signing cert file name>
            -keystore <keystore file name> 
            -storepass <keystore password>
    
    Here, <alias> is the same alias as that which you created in step 1 where you generated a DSA keypair. This command replaces the self-signed certificate in the keystore entry specified by <alias> with the one signed by the JCE Code Signing Certification Authority.

Now that you have in your keystore a certificate from an entity trusted by JCE (the JCE Code Signing Certification Authority), you can place your provider code in a JAR file (Step 5b) and then use that certificate to sign the JAR file (Step 5c).

Step 5b: Place Your Provider in a JAR File

Place your provider code in a JAR file, in preparation for signing it in the next step. For more information on the jar tool, see jar (for Solaris) (for Microsoft Windows).

jar cvf <JAR file name> <list of classes, separated by spaces>

This command creates a JAR file with the specified name containing the specified classes.

Step 5c: Sign Your Provider

Sign the JAR file created in the previous step with the code-signing certificate obtained in Step 5a. For more information on the jarsigner tool, see jarsigner (for Solaris) (for Microsoft Windows).

jarsigner -keystore <keystore file name> 
          -storepass <keystore password>
          <JAR file name> <alias>

Here, <alias> is the alias into the keystore for the entry containing the code-signing certificate received from the JCE Code Signing Certification Authority (the same alias as that specified in the commands in Step 5a).

You can test verification of the signature via the following:

jarsigner -verify <JAR file name> 

The text "jar verified" will be displayed if the verification was successful.

Step 5d: Install the Provider

In order to prepare for testing your provider, you must install it in the same manner as will be done by clients wishing to use it. The installation enables Java Security to find your algorithm implementations when clients request them.

Installing a provider is done in two steps: installing the provider package classes, and configuring the provider.

Installing the Provider Classes

The first thing you must do is make your classes available so that they can be found when requested. You ship your provider classes as a JAR (Java ARchive) file. There are a two possible ways to install provider classes:
  • Install the JAR file containing the provider classes as an "installed" or "bundled" extension.
  • Place the JAR file containing the provider classes in your CLASSPATH.

The provider JAR file will be considered an installed extension if it is placed in the standard place for the JAR files of an installed extension:

<java-home>/lib/ext         [Solaris]
<java-home>\lib\ext         [Windows]

Here <java-home> refers to the directory where the runtime software is installed, which is the top-level directory of the JavaTM 2 Runtime Environment (JRE) or the jre directory in the JavaTM 2 SDK (Java 2 SDK) software. For example, if you have the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4 installed on Solaris in a directory named /home/user1/J2SDK1.4.0, or on Microsoft Windows in a directory named C:\J2SDK1.4.0, then you need to install the JAR file in the following directory:

/home/user1/J2SDK1.4.0/jre/lib/ext    [Solaris]
C:\J2SDK1.4.0\jre\lib\ext             [Windows]

Similarly, if you have the JRE, v 1.4 installed on Solaris in a directory named /home/user1/j2re1.4.0, or on Microsoft Windows in a directory named C:\j2re1.4.0, you need to install the JAR file in the following directory:

/home/user1/j2re1.4.0/lib/ext         [Solaris]
C:\j2re1.4.0\lib\ext                  [Windows]

For more information on "installed" extensions, see Installed Extensions.

For more information on "bundled" extensions, see Bundled Extensions.

Configuring the Provider

The next step is to add the provider to your list of approved providers. This is done statically by editing the security properties file

<java-home>/lib/security/java.security     [Solaris]
<java-home>\lib\security\java.security     [Windows]

Here <java-home> refers to the directory where the JRE was installed. For example, if you have the Java 2 SDK v 1.4 installed on Solaris in a directory named /home/user1/J2SDK1.4.0, or on Microsoft indows in a directory named C:\J2SDK1.4.0, then you need to edit the following file:

/home/user1/J2SDK1.4.0/jre/lib/security/java.security  [Solaris]
C:\J2SDK1.4.0\jre\lib\security\java.security           [Windows]

Similarly, if you have the Java 2 Runtime Environment, v 1.4 installed on Solaris in a directory named /home/user1/j2re1.4.0, or on Windows in a directory named C:\j2re1.4.0, then you need to edit this file:

/home/user1/j2re1.4.0/lib/security/java.security       [Solaris]
C:\j2re1.4.0\lib\security\java.security                [Windows]

For each provider, this file should have a statement of the following form:

    security.provider.n=masterClassName

This declares a provider, and specifies its preference order n. The preference order is the order in which providers are searched for requested algorithms when no specific provider is requested. The order is 1-based; 1 is the most preferred, followed by 2, and so on.

masterClassName must specify the fully qualified name of the provider's "master class", which you implemented in Step 3. This class is always a subclass of the Provider class.

The Java 2 SDK, v 1.4 comes standard with a provider named "SUN", which is automatically configured as a static provider in the java.security properties file, as follows:

security.provider.1=sun.security.provider.Sun

(The "SUN" provider's master class is the Sun class in the sun.security.provider package.)

The JCE provider "SunJCE" and other security-related providers shipped with the Java 2 platform are also automatically configured as static providers.

To utilize another JCE provider, add a line registering the alternate provider, giving it whatever preference order you prefer (and making corresponding adjustments to the other providers' orders, if needed).

Suppose that your master class is the CryptoX class in the com.cryptox.provider package, and that you would like to make your provider the second preferred provider. To do so, add the following line to the java.security file below the line for the "SUN" provider, and increment the preference order numbers for all other providers whose numbers were greater than or equal to 2 before your addition:

    security.provider.2=com.cryptox.provider.CryptoX
Note: Providers may also be registered dynamically. To do so, a program (such as your test program, to be written in Step 6) can call either the addProvider or insertProviderAt method in the Security class. This type of registration is not persistent and can only be done by code which is granted the following permission:
java.security.SecurityPermission "insertProvider.{name}"
where {name} is replaced by the actual provider name. For example, if the provider name is "MyJCE" and if the provider's code is in the myjce_provider.jar file in the /localWork directory, then here is a sample policy file grant statement granting that permission:
grant codeBase "file:/localWork/myjce_provider.jar" {
  permission java.security.SecurityPermission
      "insertProvider.MyJCE";
};

Step 5e: Set Provider Permissions

Whenever JCE providers are not installed extensions, permissions must be granted for when applets or applications using JCE are run while a security manager is installed. There is typically a security manager installed whenever an applet is running, and a security manager may be installed for an application either via code in the application itself or via a command-line argument. Permissions do not need to be granted to installed extensions, since the default system policy file grants all permissions to installed extensions.

Whenever a client does not install your provider as an installed extension, your provider may need the following permissions granted to it in the client environment:

  • java.lang.RuntimePermission to get class protection domains. The provider may need to get its own protection domain in the process of doing self-integrity checking.
  • java.security.SecurityPermission to set provider properties.

To ensure your provider works when a security manager is installed and the provider is not an installed extension, you need to test such an installation and execution environment. In addition, prior to testing you need to grant appropriate permissions to your provider and to any other providers it uses. For example, a sample statement granting permissions to a provider whose name is "MyJCE" and whose code is in myjce_provider.jar appears below. Such a statement could appear in a policy file. In this example, the myjce_provider.jar file is assumed to be in the /localWork directory.

grant codeBase "file:/localWork/myjce_provider.jar" {
  permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "getProtectionDomain";
  permission java.security.SecurityPermission
      "putProviderProperty.MyJCE";
};

Step 6: Write and Compile your Test Programs

Write and compile one or more test programs that test your provider's incorporation into the Security API as well as the correctness of its algorithm(s). Create any supporting files needed, such as those for test data to be encrypted.

The first tests your program should perform are ones to ensure that your provider is found, and that its name, version number, and additional information is as expected. To do so, you could write code like the following, substituting your provider name for MyPro:

    import java.security.*;

    Provider p = Security.getProvider("MyPro");
    
    System.out.println("MyPro provider name is " + p.getName());
    System.out.println("MyPro provider version # is " + p.getVersion());
    System.out.println("MyPro provider info is " + p.getInfo());

Next, you should ensure that your services are found. For instance, if you implemented the DES encryption algorithm, you could check to ensure it's found when requested by using the following code (again substituting your provider name for "MyPro"):

    Cipher c = Cipher.getInstance("DES", "MyPro");

    System.out.println("My Cipher algorithm name is " + c.getAlgorithm());

If you don't specify a provider name in the call to getInstance, all registered providers will be searched, in preference order (see Configuring the Provider), until one implementing the algorithm is found.

If your provider implements an exemption mechanism, you should write a test applet or application that uses the exemption mechanism. Such an applet/application also needs to be signed, and needs to have a "permission policy file" bundled with it. See How to Make Applications "Exempt" from Cryptographic Restrictions in the Java Cryptography Extension (JCE) Reference Guide for complete information on creating and testing such an application.

Step 7: Run your Test Programs

Run your test program(s). Debug your code and continue testing as needed. If the Java Security API cannot seem to find one of your algorithms, review the steps above and ensure they are all completed.

Be sure to include testing of your programs using different installation options (e.g. making the provider an installed extension or placing it on the class path) and execution environments (with or without a security manager running). Installation options are discussed in Step 5d. In particular, you need to ensure your provider works when a security manager is installed and the provider is not an installed extension -- and thus the provider must have permissions granted to it; therefore, you need to test such an installation and execution environment, after granting required permissions to your provider and to any other providers it uses, as described in Step 5e.

If you find during testing that your code needs modification, make the changes, recompile (Step 4), place the updated provider code in a JAR file (Step 5b), sign the JAR file (Step 5c), re-install the provider (Step 5d), if needed fix or add to the permissions (Step 5e), and then re-test your programs. Repeat these steps as needed.

Step 8: Apply for U.S. Government Export Approval If Required

All U.S. vendors whose providers may be exported outside the U.S. should apply to the Bureau of Export Administration in the U.S. Department of Commerce for export approval. Please consult your export counsel for more information.

Note: If your provider calls Cipher.getInstance() and the returned Cipher object needs to perform strong cryptography regardless of what cryptographic strength is allowed by the user's downloaded jurisdiction policy files, you should include a copy of the cryptoPerms permission policy file which you intend to bundle in the JAR file for your provider and which specifies an appropriate permission for the required cryptographic strength. The necessity for this file is just like the requirement that applets and applications "exempt" from cryptographic restrictions must include a cryptoPerms permission policy file in their JAR file. For more information on the creation and inclusion of such a file, see How to Make Applications "Exempt" from Cryptographic Restrictions in the Java Cryptography Extension (JCE) Reference Guide.

Here are two URLs that may be useful:

Step 9: Document your Provider and its Supported Services

The next step is to write documentation for your clients. At the minimum, you need to specify: In addition, your documentation should specify anything else of interest to clients, such as any default algorithm parameters.

MACs

For each MAC algorithm, tell whether or not your implementation is cloneable. This is not technically necessary, but it may save clients some time and coding by telling them whether or not intermediate "message authentication codes" (MACs) may be possible through cloning. Clients who do not know whether or not a MAC implementation is cloneable can find out by attempting to clone the Mac object and catching the potential exception, as illustrated by the following example:

try {
    // try and clone it
    /* compute the MAC for i1 */
    mac.update(i1); 
    byte[] i1Mac = mac.clone().doFinal();

    /* compute the MAC for i1 and i2 */
    mac.update(i2); 
    byte[] i12Mac = mac.clone().doFinal(); 

    /* compute the MAC for i1, i2 and i3 */
    mac.update(i3); 
    byte[] i123Mac = mac.doFinal();
} catch (CloneNotSupportedException cnse) {
  // have to use an approach not involving cloning
}
where

Key Pair Generators

For a key pair generator algorithm, in case the client does not explicitly initialize the key pair generator (via a call to an initialize method), each provider must supply and document a default initialization. For example, the Diffie-Hellman key pair generator supplied by the "SunJCE" provider uses a default prime modulus size (keysize) of 1024 bits.

Key Factories

A provider should document all the key specifications supported by its (secret-)key factory.

Algorithm Parameter Generators

In case the client does not explicitly initialize the algorithm parameter generator (via a call to an init method in the AlgorithmParameterGenerator engine class), each provider must supply and document a default initialization. For example, the "SunJCE" provider uses a default prime modulus size (keysize) of 1024 bits for the generation of Diffie-Hellman parameters.

Step 10: Make your Provider Software and Documentation Available to Clients

The final step is to make your provider software and documentation available to your customers.

How a Provider Can Do Self-Integrity Checking

Each provider should do self-integrity checking to ensure that the JAR file containing its code has not been tampered with, for example in an attempt to invoke provider methods directly rather than through JCE. Providers that provide implementations for JCE services must be digitally signed and should be signed with a certificate issued by "trusted" Certification Authorities. Currently, the following two Certification Authorities are considered "trusted": Please refer to Step 5b for detailed information on how to get a code-signing certificate from Sun Microsystems' JCE Code Signing CA and the certificate of that CA.

After getting the signing certificate from above Certification Authority, provider packages should embed within themselves the bytes for its own signing certificate, for example in an array like the bytesOfProviderCert array referred to in the Identifying Each of the Signers and Determining If One is Trusted section below. At runtime, the embedded certificate will be used in determining whether or not the provider code is authentic.

The basic approach a provider can use to check its own integrity is:

  1. Determine the URL of the JAR file containing the provider code, and

  2. Verify the JAR file's digital signatures to ensure that at least one signer of each entry of the JAR file is trusted.

Each of these steps is described in the following sections:

Finding the Provider JAR File: Basics
Determining the Provider's JAR File URL
Creating a JarFile Referring to the JAR File
Verifying the Provider JAR File: Basics
Verification Setup
JAR File Signature Check
Verifying Signatures
Ensuring Signers Are Trusted
Getting the List of Certificates
Identifying Each of the Signers and Determining If One is Trusted
Notes on the Sample Code

Note: The sample code MyJCE.java is a complete code example that implements these steps. You can download this code for your reference. The Notes on the Sample Code section traces how these concepts are implemented in the sample code.

IMPORTANT NOTE:

In JCE 1.2.1, providers needed to include code to authenticate the JCE framework to assure themselves of the integrity and authenticity of the JCE that they plugged into. Now that JCE is integrated into the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4, this is no longer necessary.

One implication is that a provider written just for JCE 1.2.1 will not work in the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4 because the provider's JCE framework authentication check will not work; the JCE framework code is no longer where the provider expects it to be. If you want your provider to work only with the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4, it should not have code to authenticate the JCE framework. On the other hand, if you want your provider to work both with JCE 1.2.1 and with the JCE in the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4, then add a conditional statement. This way the provider code to authenticate the JCE framework is executed only when the provider is run with JCE 1.2.1. The following is sample code:

Class cipherCls = Class.forName("javax.crypto.Cipher");
CodeSource cs = 
    cipherCls.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource();
if (cs != null) {
    // Authenticate JCE framework
    . . .
}

Finding the Provider JAR File: Basics

Determining the Provider's JAR File URL

The URL for the provider's JAR file can be obtained by determining the provider's CodeSource and then calling the getLocation method on the CodeSource.

URL providerURL = (URL) AccessController.doPrivileged(
                            new PrivilegedAction) {
    public Object run() {
        CodeSource cs = MyJCE.class.getProtectionDomain().
                                    getCodeSource();
        return cs.getLocation();
    }
});

Creating a JarFile Referring to the JAR File

Once you have the URL for the provider's JAR file, you can create a java.util.jar.JarFile referring to the JAR file. This instance is needed in the step for verifying the Provider JAR file.

To create the JAR file, first open a connection to the specified URL by calling its openConnection method. Since the URL is a JAR URL, the type is java.net.JarURLConnection. Here's the basic code:

// Prep the url with the appropriate protocol.
jarURL = 
    url.getProtocol().equalsIgnoreCase("jar") ?
    url : 
    new URL("jar:" + url.toString() + "!/");
// Retrieve the jar file using JarURLConnection
JarFile jf = (JarFile) AccessController.doPrivileged(
	                 new PrivilegedExceptionAction() {
    public Object run() throws Exception { 
        JarURLConnection conn = 
              (JarURLConnection) jarURL.openConnection();
        ...   
Now that you have a JarURLConnection, you can call its getJarFile method to get the JAR file:
// Always get a fresh copy, so we don't have to
// worry about the stale file handle when the
// cached jar is closed by some other application.
conn.setUseCaches(false);
jf = conn.getJarFile();

Verifying the Provider JAR File: Basics

Once you have determined the URL for your provider JAR file and you have created a JarFile referring to the JAR file, as shown in the steps above, you can then verify the file.

The basic approach is:

  1. Ensure that at least one of each entry's signer's certificates is equal to the provider's own code signing certificate.

  2. Go through all the entries in the JAR file and ensure the signature on each one verifies correctly.

  3. Ensure that at least one of each entry's signer's certificates can be traced back to a trusted Certification Authority.

Sample code for each of these steps is presented and described in the following sections:

Verification Setup
JAR File Signature Check
Verifying Signatures
Ensuring Signers Are Trusted
Getting the List of Certificates
Identifying Each of the Signers and Determining If One is Trusted

Verification Setup

Our approach is to define a class JarVerifier to handle the retrieval of a JAR file from a given URL and verify whether the JAR file is signed with the specified certificate.

The constructor of JarVerifier takes the provider URL as a parameter which will be used to retrieve the JAR file later.

The actual jar verification is implemented in the verify method which takes the provider code signing certificate as a parameter.

public void verify(X509Certificate targetCert) 
	 throws IOException {
    // variable 'jarFile' is a JarFile object created
    // from the provider's Jar URL.
    ...
    Vector entriesVec = new Vector();
Basically the verify method will go through the JAR file entries twice: the first time checking the signature on each entry and the second time verifying the signer is trusted.

Note: In our code snippets the jarFile variable is the JarFile object of the provider's jar file.

JAR File Signature Check

An authentic provider JAR file is signed. So the JAR file has been tampered with if it isn't signed:

// Ensure the jar file is signed.
Manifest man = jarFile.getManifest();
if (man == null) {
    throw new SecurityException("The provider is not signed");
}

Verifying Signatures

The next step is to go through all the entries in the JAR file and ensure the signature on each one verifies correctly. One possible way to verify the signature on a JAR file entry is to simply read the file. If a JAR file is signed, the read method itself automatically performs the signature verification. Here is sample code:

// Ensure all the entries' signatures verify correctly
byte[] buffer = new byte[8192];
Enumeration entries = jarFile.entries();
	
while (entries.hasMoreElements()) {
    JarEntry je = (JarEntry) entries.nextElement();

    // Skip directories.
    if (je.isDirectory()) continue;
    entriesVec.addElement(je);
    InputStream is = jarFile.getInputStream(je);

    // Read in each jar entry. A security exception will
    // be thrown if a signature/digest check fails.
    int n;
    while ((n = is.read(buffer, 0, buffer.length)) != -1) {
        // Don't care
    }
    is.close();
}

Ensuring Signers Are Trusted

The code in the previous section verified the signatures of all the provider JAR file entries. The fact that they all verify correctly is a requirement, but it is not sufficient to verify the authenticity of the JAR file. A final requirement is that the signatures were generated by the same entity as the one that developed this provider. To test that the signatures are trusted, we can again go through each entry in the JAR file (this time using the entriesVec built in the previous step), and for each entry that must be signed (that is, each entry that is not a directory and that is not in the META-INF directory):

  1. Get the list of signer certificates for the entry.
  2. Identify each of the certificate chains and determine whether any of the certificate chains are trusted. At least one of the certificate chains must be trusted.
The loop setup is the following:
Enumeration e = entriesVec.elements();
while (e.hasMoreElements()) {
    JarEntry je = (JarEntry) e.nextElement();
    ...
}

Getting the List of Certificates

The certificates for the signers of a JAR file entry JarEntry can be obtained simply by calling the JarEntry getCertificates method:

Certificate[] certs = je.getCertificates();

Adding this line of code to the previous loop setup code, and adding code to ignore directories and files in the META-INF directory gives us:

while (e.hasMoreElements()) {
    JarEntry je = (JarEntry) e.nextElement();

    // Every file must be signed except files in META-INF.
    Certificate[] certs = je.getCertificates();
    if ((certs == null) || (certs.length == 0)) {
        if (!je.getName().startsWith("META-INF"))
            throw new SecurityException("The provider " +
                                        "has unsigned " +
                                        "class files.");
        } else {
            // Check whether the file is signed by the expected
            // signer. The jar may be signed by multiple signers.
            // See if one of the signers is 'targetCert'.
            ...
        }
   ...

Identifying Each of the Signers and Determining If One is Trusted

The certificate array returned by the JarEntry getCertificates method contains one or more certificate chains. There is one chain per signer of the entry. Each chain contains one or more certificates. Each certificate in a chain authenticates the public key in the previous certificate.

The first certificate in a chain is the signer's certificate which contains the public key corresponding to the private key actually used to sign the entry. Each subsequent certificate is a certificate for the issuer of the previous certificate. Since the self-integrity check is based on whether the JAR file is signed with the provider's signing cert, the trust decision will be made upon only the first certificate, the signer's certificate.

We need to go through the array of certificate chains and check each chain and the associated signers until we find a trusted entity. For each JAR file entry, at least one of the signers must be trusted. A signer is considered "trusted" if and only if its certificate is equals to the embedded provider signing certificate.

The following sample code loops through all the certificate chains, compares the first certificate in a chain to the embedded provider signing certificate, and only returns true if a match is found.

int startIndex = 0;
X509Certificate[] certChain;
boolean signedAsExpected = false;
		
while ((certChain = getAChain(certs, startIndex)) != null) {
    if (certChain[0].equals(targetCert)) {
        // Stop since one trusted signer is found.
        signedAsExpected = true;
        break;
    }
    // Proceed to the next chain.
    startIndex += certChain.length;
}
		
if (!signedAsExpected) {
    throw new SecurityException("The provider " +
                                "is not signed by a " +
                                "trusted signer");
}
The getAChain method is defined as follows:
/**
 * Extracts ONE certificate chain from the specified certificate array
 * which may contain multiple certificate chains, starting from index
 * 'startIndex'.
*/
private static X509Certificate[] getAChain(Certificate[] certs,
					   int startIndex) {	
    if (startIndex > certs.length - 1)
        return null;
	
    int i;
    // Keep going until the next certificate is not the 
    // issuer of this certificate.
    for (i = startIndex; i < certs.length - 1; i++) {
        if (!((X509Certificate)certs[i + 1]).getSubjectDN().
               equals(((X509Certificate)certs[i]).getIssuerDN())) {
            break;
        }
    }

    // Construct and return the found certificate chain.
    int certChainSize = (i-startIndex) + 1;
    X509Certificate[] ret = new X509Certificate[certChainSize];
    for (int j = 0; j < certChainSize; j++ ) {
        ret[j] = (X509Certificate) certs[startIndex + j];
    }
    return ret;
}

Notes on the Sample Code

The sample code, MyJCE.java, is a sample provider which has a method selfIntegrityChecking which performs self-integrity checking. It first determines the URL of its own provider JAR file and then verifies that the provider JAR file is signed with the embedded code-signing certificate.

Note: The method selfIntegrityChecking should be called by all the constructors of its cryptographic engine classes to ensure that its integrity is not compromised.

Provider MyJCE performs self-integrity checking in the following steps:

  1. Determine the URL to access the provider JAR file using its own class, MyJCE.class.

  2. Instantiate a JarVerifier object with the provider URL in Step 1.

  3. Create a X509Certificate object from the embedded byte array bytesOfProviderCert.

  4. Call the JarVerifier.verify method to verify all entries in the provider JAR file are signed and are signed with the same certificate instantiated in Step 3.
Note: The class JarVerifier will retrieve the JAR file from the given URL, make sure the JAR file is signed, all entries have valid signatures, and that entries are signed with the specified X509Certificate.

A security exception is thrown by JarVerifier.verify in several cases:

The MyJCE.java sample code is comprised of the code snippets shown above. In addition, it includes error handling, sample code signing certificate bytes, and code for instantiating a X509Certificate object from the embedded sample code signing certificate bytes.

Regarding the use of AccessController.doPrivileged, please see API For Privileged Blocks for information on the use of doPrivileged.

Further Implementation Details and Requirements

Algorithm Aliases

For many cryptographic algorithms, there is a single official "standard name." The standard names defined by JCE in the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4 are listed in Appendix A of the Java Cryptography Extension (JCE) Reference Guide.

For example, DiffieHellman is the standard name for the Diffie-Hellman key agreement algorithm defined in PKCS #3.

JCE uses the same aliasing scheme for algorithm names as the rest of the security products in the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4. That scheme enables clients to use aliases when referring to algorithms, rather than their standard names. For example, the "SunJCE" provider's master class (SunJCE.java) defines the alias "DH" for the key agreement whose standard name is DiffieHellman. Thus, the following statements are equivalent:

    KeyAgreement ka = KeyAgreement.getInstance("DiffieHellman", "SunJCE");

    KeyAgreement ka = KeyAgreement.getInstance("DH", "SunJCE");
Aliases can be defined in your "master class" (see Step 3). To define an alias, create a property named
    Alg.Alias.engineClassName.aliasName

where engineClassName is either Cipher, KeyAgreement, KeyGenerator, Mac, SecretKeyFactory, or ExemptionMechanism, and aliasName is your alias name. For all but ExemptionMechanism, the value of the property must be the standard algorithm name for the algorithm being aliased. For ExemptionMechanism, the value is the exemption mechanism name (KeyRecovery, KeyEscrow, or KeyWeakening).

As an example, the "SunJCE" provider defines the alias "DH" for the key agreement algorithm whose standard name is "DiffieHellman" by setting a property named Alg.Alias.KeyAgreement.DH to have the value DiffieHellman via the following:

    put("Alg.Alias.KeyAgreement.DH", "DiffieHellman");

Currently, aliases defined by the "SunJCE" provider are available to all clients, no matter which provider clients request. For example, if you create a provider named "MyPro" that implements the Diffie-Hellman algorithm, then even if you don't define any aliases for it, the "DH" alias defined by "SunJCE" can be used to refer to your provider's Diffie-Hellman implementation as follows:

    KeyAgreement ka = KeyAgreement.getInstance("DH", "MyPro");

Service Interdependencies

Some algorithms require the use of other types of algorithms. For example, a PBE algorithm usually needs to use a message digest algorithm in order to transform a password into a key.

If you are implementing one type of algorithm that requires another, you can do one of the following:

  1. Provide your own implementations for both.

  2. Let your implementation of one algorithm use an instance of the other type of algorithm, as supplied by the default "SUN" provider that is included with every Java 2 Platform installation. For example, if you are implementing a PBE algorithm that requires a message digest algorithm, you can obtain an instance of a class implementing the MD5 message digest algorithm by calling
        MessageDigest.getInstance("MD5", "SUN")
    

  3. Let your implementation of one algorithm use an instance of the other type of algorithm, as supplied by another specific provider. This is only appropriate if you are sure that all clients who will use your provider will also have the other provider installed.

  4. Let your implementation of one algorithm use an instance of the other type of algorithm, as supplied by another (unspecified) provider. That is, you can request an algorithm by name, but without specifying any particular provider, as in
        MessageDigest.getInstance("MD5")
    
    This is only appropriate if you are sure that there will be at least one implementation of the requested algorithm (in this case, MD5) installed on each Java platform where your provider will be used.

Default Initializations

In case the client does not explicitly initialize a key pair generator or an algorithm parameter generator, each provider of such a service must supply (and document) a default initialization. For example, the "SunJCE" provider uses a default modulus size (keysize) of 1024 bits for the generation of Diffie-Hellman parameters.

Diffie-Hellman Interfaces and their Required Implementations

JCE contains the following interfaces (in the javax.crypto.interfaces package) for the convenience of programmers implementing Diffie-Hellman services: The following sections discuss requirements for implementations of these interfaces.

DHPrivateKey and DHPublicKey Implementations

If you implement a Diffie-Hellman key pair generator or key factory, you need to create classes implementing the DHPrivateKey and DHPublicKey interfaces.

If you implement a Diffie-Hellman key pair generator, your generateKeyPair method (in your KeyPairGeneratorSpi subclass) will return instances of your implementations of those interfaces.

If you implement a Diffie-Hellman key factory, your engineGeneratePrivate method (in your KeyFactorySpi subclass) will return an instance of your DHPrivateKey implementation, and your engineGeneratePublic method will return an instance of your DHPublicKey implementation.

Also, your engineGetKeySpec and engineTranslateKey methods will expect the passed-in key to be an instance of a DHPrivateKey or DHPublicKey implementation. The getParams method provided by the interface implementations is useful for obtaining and extracting the parameters from the keys. You can then use the parameters, for example, as parameters to the DHParameterSpec constructor called to create a parameter specification from parameter values used to initialize a KeyPairGenerator object for Diffie-Hellman.

If you implement the Diffie-Hellman key agreement algorithm, your engineInit method (in your KeyAgreementSpi subclass) will expect to be passed a DHPrivateKey and your engineDoPhase method will expect to be passed a DHPublicKey.

Note: The DHPublicKey and DHPrivateKey interfaces define a very generic, provider-independent interface to Diffie-Hellman public and private keys, respectively. The engineGetKeySpec and engineTranslateKey methods (in your KeyFactorySpi subclass) could additionally check if the passed-in key is actually an instance of their provider's own implementation of DHPrivateKey or DHPublicKey, e.g., to take advantage of provider-specific implementation details. The same is true for the Diffie-Hellman algorithm engineInit and engineDoPhase methods (in your KeyAgreementSpi subclass).

To see what methods need to be implemented by classes that implement the DHPublicKey and DHPrivateKey interfaces, first note the following interface signatures:

In the javax.crypto.interfaces package:

public interface DHPrivateKey extends DHKey, 
                                 java.security.PrivateKey

public interface DHPublicKey extends DHKey, 
                                 java.security.PublicKey

public interface DHKey

In the java.security package:

public interface PrivateKey extends Key

public interface PublicKey extends Key

public interface Key extends java.io.Serializable
To implement the DHPrivateKey and DHPublicKey interfaces, you must implement the methods they define as well as those defined by interfaces they extend, directly or indirectly.

Thus, for private keys, you need to supply a class that implements:

  • the getX method from the DHPrivateKey interface.
  • the getParams method from the javax.crypto.interfaces.DHKey interface, since DHPrivateKey extends DHKey.
  • the getAlgorithm, getEncoded, and getFormat methods from the java.security.Key interface, since DHPrivateKey extends java.security.PrivateKey, and PrivateKey extends Key.
Similarly, for public Diffie-Hellman keys, you need to supply a class that implements:
  • the getY method from the DHPublicKey interface.
  • the getParams method from the javax.crypto.interfaces.DHKey interface, since DHPublicKey extends DHKey.
  • the getAlgorithm, getEncoded, and getFormat methods from the java.security.Key interface, since DHPublicKey extends java.security.PublicKey, and PublicKey extends Key.

Algorithm Parameter Specification Classes

An algorithm parameter specification is a transparent representation of the sets of parameters used with an algorithm.

A transparent representation of parameters means that you can access each value individually, through one of the "get" methods defined in the corresponding specification class (e.g., DHParameterSpec defines getP, getG, and getL methods, to access the p, g, and l parameters, respectively).

This is contrasted with an opaque representation, as supplied by the AlgorithmParameters engine class, in which you have no direct access to the key material values; you can only get the name of the algorithm associated with the parameter set (via getAlgorithm) and some kind of encoding for the parameter set (via getEncoded).

If you supply an AlgorithmParametersSpi, AlgorithmParameterGeneratorSpi, or KeyPairGeneratorSpi implementation, you must utilize the AlgorithmParameterSpec interface, since each of those classes contain methods that take an AlgorithmParameterSpec parameter. Such methods need to determine which actual implementation of that interface has been passed in, and act accordingly.

JCE contains a number of AlgorithmParameterSpec implementations for the most frequently used cipher and key agreement algorithm parameters. If you are operating on algorithm parameters that should be for a different type of algorithm not provided by JCE, you will need to supply your own AlgorithmParameterSpec implementation appropriate for that type of algorithm.

JCE defines the following algorithm parameter specification classes in the javax.crypto.spec package:

The IvParameterSpec Class

This class (which implements the AlgorithmParameterSpec interface) specifies the initialization vector (IV) used with a cipher in feedback mode.

Method in IvParameterSpec
Method Description
byte[] getIV() Returns the initialization vector (IV).

The PBEParameterSpec Class

This class (which implements the AlgorithmParameterSpec interface) specifies the set of parameters used with a password-based encryption (PBE) algorithm.

Methods in PBEParameterSpec
Method Description
int getIterationCount() Returns the iteration count.
byte[] getSalt() Returns the salt.

The RC2ParameterSpec Class

This class (which implements the AlgorithmParameterSpec interface) specifies the set of parameters used with the RC2 algorithm.

Methods in RC2ParameterSpec
Method Description
boolean equals(Object obj) Tests for equality between the specified object and this object.
int getEffectiveKeyBits() Returns the effective key size in bits.
byte[] getIV() Returns the IV or null if this parameter set does not contain an IV.
int hashCode() Calculates a hash code value for the object.

The RC5ParameterSpec Class

This class (which implements the AlgorithmParameterSpec interface) specifies the set of parameters used with the RC5 algorithm.

Methods in RC5ParameterSpec
Method Description
boolean equals(Object obj) Tests for equality between the specified object and this object.
byte[] getIV() Returns the IV or null if this parameter set does not contain an IV.
int getRounds() Returns the number of rounds.
int getVersion() Returns the version.
int getWordSize() Returns the word size in bits.
int hashCode() Calculates a hash code value for the object.

The DHParameterSpec Class

This class (which implements the AlgorithmParameterSpec interface) specifies the set of parameters used with the Diffie-Hellman algorithm.

Methods in DHParameterSpec
Method Description
BigInteger getG() Returns the base generator g.
int getL() Returns the size in bits, l, of the random exponent (private value).
BigInteger getP() Returns the prime modulus p.

Many types of Diffie-Hellman services will find this class useful; for example, it is used by the Diffie-Hellman key agreement, key pair generator, algorithm parameter generator, and algorithm parameters classes implemented by the "SunJCE" provider. As a specific example, an algorithm parameters implementation must include an implementation for the getParameterSpec method, which returns an AlgorithmParameterSpec. The Diffie-Hellman algorithm parameters implementation supplied by "SunJCE" returns an instance of the DHParameterSpec class.

Key Specification Classes Required by Key Factories

Key specifications are transparent representations of the key material that constitutes a key. JCE defines the following key specification classes in the javax.crypto.spec package: DHPrivateKeySpec, DHPublicKeySpec, DESKeySpec, DESedeKeySpec, PBEKeySpec, and SecretKeySpec.

The DHPrivateKeySpec Class

This class (which implements the KeySpec interface) specifies a Diffie-Hellman private key with its associated parameters.

Methods in DHPrivateKeySpec
Method Description
BigInteger getG() Returns the base generator g.
BigInteger getP() Returns the prime modulus p.
BigInteger getX() Returns the private value x.

The DHPublicKeySpec Class

This class (which implements the KeySpec interface) specifies a Diffie-Hellman public key with its associated parameters.

Methods in DHPublicKeySpec
Method Description
BigInteger getG() Returns the base generator g.
BigInteger getP() Returns the prime modulus p.
BigInteger getY() Returns the public value y.

The DESKeySpec Class

This class (which implements the KeySpec interface) specifies a DES key.

Methods in DESKeySpec
Method Description
byte[] getKey() Returns the DES key bytes.
static boolean isParityAdjusted(byte[] key, int offset) Checks if the given DES key material is parity-adjusted.
static boolean isWeak(byte[] key, int offset) Checks if the given DES key material is weak or semi-weak.

The DESedeKeySpec Class

This class (which implements the KeySpec interface) specifies a DES-EDE (Triple DES) key.

Methods in DESedeKeySpec
Method Description
byte[] getKey() Returns the DES-EDE key.
static boolean isParityAdjusted(byte[] key, int offset) Checks if the given DES-EDE key is parity-adjusted.

The PBEKeySpec Class

This class implements the KeySpec interface. A user-chosen password can be used with password-based encryption (PBE); the password can be viewed as a type of raw key material. An encryption mechanism that uses this class can derive a cryptographic key from the raw key material.

Methods in PBEKeySpec
Method Description
void clearPassword Clears the internal copy of the password.
int getIterationCount Returns the iteration count or 0 if not specified.
int getKeyLength Returns the to-be-derived key length or 0 if not specified.
char[] getPassword Returns a copy of the password.
byte[] getSalt Returns a copy of the salt or null if not specified.

The SecretKeySpec Class

This class implements the KeySpec interface. Since it also implements the SecretKey interface, it can be used to construct a SecretKey object in a provider-independent fashion, i.e., without having to go through a provider-based SecretKeyFactory.

Methods in SecretKeySpec
Method Description
boolean equals (Object obj) Indicates whether some other object is "equal to" this one.
String getAlgorithm() Returns the name of the algorithm associated with this secret key.
byte[] getEncoded() Returns the key material of this secret key.
String getFormat() Returns the name of the encoding format for this secret key.
int hashCode() Calculates a hash code value for the object.

Secret-Key Generation

If you provide a secret-key generator (subclass of javax.crypto.KeyGeneratorSpi) for a particular secret-key algorithm, you may return the generated secret-key object (which must be an instance of javax.crypto.SecretKey, see engineGenerateKey) in one of the following ways:

Ensuring Exportability

A key feature of JCE is the exportability of the JCE framework and of the provider cryptography implementations if certain conditions are met.

Due to import control restrictions by the governments of a few countries, the jurisdiction policy files shipped with the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4 from Sun Microsystems specify that "strong" but limited cryptography may be used. An "unlimited" version of these files indicating no restrictions on cryptographic strengths is available for those living in eligible countries (which is most countries). But only the "strong" version can be imported into those countries whose governments mandate restrictions. The JCE framework will enforce the restrictions specified in the installed jurisdiction policy files.

As noted elsewhere, you can write just one version of your provider software, implementing cryptography of maximum strength. It is up to JCE, not your provider, to enforce any jurisdiction policy file-mandated restrictions regarding the cryptographic algorithms and maximum cryptographic strengths available to applets/applications in different locations.

The conditions that must be met by your provider in order to enable it to be plugged into JCE in the Java 2 SDK, v 1.4 are the following:


Appendix A: The "SunJCE" Provider's Master Class

Below is an edited version of the SunJCE.java file, which contains a class named SunJCE that is the master class for the provider named "SunJCE".

As with all master classes, this class is a subclass of Provider. It specifies the class names and package locations of all the cryptographic service implementations supplied by the "SunJCE" provider. This information is used by the getInstance methods of the engine classes to look up the various algorithms and other services when they are requested.

This code is supplied as an example of a provider master class.

/*
 * Copyright 2002 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
 * SUN PROPRIETARY/CONFIDENTIAL. Use is subject to license terms.
 */

package com.sun.crypto.provider;

import java.security.AccessController;
import java.security.Provider;
. . .

/**
 * The "SunJCE" Cryptographic Service Provider.
 *
 * @author Jan Luehe
 * @author Sharon Liu
 *
 * @version 1.42, 01/08/01
 */

/**
 * Defines the "SunJCE" provider.
 *
 * Supported algorithms and their names:
 *
 * - DES (ECB, CBC, CFB, OFB, PCBC)
 *
 * - DES-EDE (ECB, CBC, CFB, OFB, PCBC)
 *
 * - Password-based Encryption (PBE)
 *
 * - Blowfish
 *
 * - Diffie-Hellman Key Agreement
 *
 * - HMAC-MD5, HMAC-SHA1
 *
 * - PKCS5Padding
 */

public final class SunJCE extends Provider {

    private static String info = "SunJCE Provider " + 
    "(implements DES, Triple DES, Blowfish, PBE, Diffie-Hellman, HMAC-MD5, "
    + "HMAC-SHA1)";

    public SunJCE() {
	/* We are the "SunJCE" provider */
	super("SunJCE", 1.4, info);

        AccessController.doPrivileged(new java.security.PrivilegedAction() {
            public Object run() {

		/*
		 * Cipher engines 
		 */
		put("Cipher.DES", "com.sun.crypto.provider.DESCipher");

		put("Cipher.DESede", "com.sun.crypto.provider.DESedeCipher");
		put("Alg.Alias.Cipher.TripleDES", "DESede");

		put("Cipher.PBEWithMD5AndDES",
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.PBEWithMD5AndDESCipher");
		put("Cipher.PBEWithMD5AndTripleDES",
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.PBEWithMD5AndTripleDESCipher");

		put("Cipher.Blowfish",
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.BlowfishCipher");

		/*
		 *  Key(pair) Generator engines 
		 */
		put("KeyGenerator.DES", 
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.DESKeyGenerator");

		put("KeyGenerator.DESede", 
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.DESedeKeyGenerator");
		put("Alg.Alias.KeyGenerator.TripleDES", "DESede");

		put("KeyGenerator.Blowfish", 
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.BlowfishKeyGenerator");

		put("KeyGenerator.HmacMD5", 
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.HmacMD5KeyGenerator");

		put("KeyGenerator.HmacSHA1", 
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.HmacSHA1KeyGenerator");

		put("KeyPairGenerator.DiffieHellman", 
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.DHKeyPairGenerator");
		put("Alg.Alias.KeyPairGenerator.DH", "DiffieHellman");

		/*
		 * Algorithm parameter generation engines
		 */
		put("AlgorithmParameterGenerator.DiffieHellman",
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.DHParameterGenerator");
		put("Alg.Alias.AlgorithmParameterGenerator.DH",
		    "DiffieHellman");

		/* 
		 * Key Agreement engines 
		 */
		put("KeyAgreement.DiffieHellman",
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.DHKeyAgreement");
		put("Alg.Alias.KeyAgreement.DH", "DiffieHellman");

		/* 
		 * Algorithm Parameter engines 
		 */
		put("AlgorithmParameters.DiffieHellman",
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.DHParameters");
		put("Alg.Alias.AlgorithmParameters.DH", "DiffieHellman");

		put("AlgorithmParameters.DES",
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.DESParameters");

		put("AlgorithmParameters.DESede",
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.DESedeParameters");
		put("Alg.Alias.AlgorithmParameters.TripleDES", "DESede");

		put("AlgorithmParameters.PBE",
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.PBEParameters");
		put("Alg.Alias.AlgorithmParameters.PBEWithMD5AndDES", "PBE");

		put("AlgorithmParameters.Blowfish",
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.BlowfishParameters");

		/*
		 * Key factories
		 */
		put("KeyFactory.DiffieHellman",
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.DHKeyFactory");
		put("Alg.Alias.KeyFactory.DH", "DiffieHellman");

		/*
		 * Secret-key factories
		 */
		put("SecretKeyFactory.DES", 
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.DESKeyFactory");

		put("SecretKeyFactory.DESede",
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.DESedeKeyFactory");
		put("Alg.Alias.SecretKeyFactory.TripleDES", "DESede");

		put("SecretKeyFactory.PBEWithMD5AndDES",
		    "com.sun.crypto.provider.PBEKeyFactory");

		/*
		 * MAC
		 */
		put("Mac.HmacMD5", "com.sun.crypto.provider.HmacMD5");
		put("Mac.HmacSHA1", "com.sun.crypto.provider.HmacSHA1");

		/*
		 * KeyStore
		 */
		put("KeyStore.JCEKS", "com.sun.crypto.provider.JceKeyStore");

		return null;
	    }
	});
    }

}


Appendix B: The "EMProvider" Provider's Master Class

Below is an example of an EMProvider.java file, which contains a class named EMProvider that is the master class for the provider named "EMProvider".

As with all master classes, this class is a subclass of Provider. It specifies the class names and package locations of all the cryptographic service implementations supplied by the "EMProvider" provider. This information is used by the getInstance methods of the engine classes to look up the various algorithms and other services when they are requested.

This code is supplied as an example of a master class for a provider that implements an exemption mechanism. It is included in addition to the Appendix A showing the master class for the "SunJCE" provider because the "SunJCE" provider does not include any exemption mechanism implementations. Note: A provider can implement both cryptographic services and exemption mechanism services.

package com.abc.crypto.provider;

import java.security.AccessController;
import java.security.Provider;

/**
 * The "EMProvider" Cryptographic Service Provider.
 *
 * @version 1.00, 03/15/2000
 */

/**
 * Defines the "EMProvider" provider.
 *
 * Supported algorithm(s) and their name(s):
 *
 * - Key Recovery
 */

public final class EMProvider extends Provider {

    private static String info = "EMProvider Exemption Mechanism Provider " + 
    "(implements KeyRecovery)";

    public EMProvider() {
        /* We are the "EMProvider" provider */
        super("EMProvider", 1.2, info);

        AccessController.doPrivileged(new java.security.PrivilegedAction() {
            public Object run() {

                /* 
                 * Algorithm Parameter engines 
                 */
                put("AlgorithmParameters.KeyRecovery",
                    "com.abc.crypto.provider.KeyRecoveryParameters");
                put("Alg.Alias.AlgorithmParameters.KR", "KeyRecovery");

                /*
                 * ExemptionMechanism
                 */
                put("ExemptionMechanism.KeyRecovery", 
                    "com.abc.crypto.provider.KeyRecovery");
                put("Alg.Alias.ExemptionMechanism.KR", "KeyRecovery");

                return null;
            }
        });
    }
}

Appendix C: The java.security Properties File

Below is a copy of the java.security file that appears in every JRE installation. This file appears at
<java-home>/lib/security/java.security         [Solaris]
<java-home>\lib\security\java.security         [Windows]
Here <java-home> refers to the directory where the JRE was installed. Thus, if you have the Java 2 SDK v 1.4 installed on Solaris in a directory named /home/user1/J2SDK1.4.0, or on Microsoft Windows in a directory named C:\J2SDK1.4.0, then the file would be
/home/user1/J2SDK1.4.0/jre/lib/security/java.security  [Solaris]
C:\J2SDK1.4.0\jre\lib\security\java.security           [Windows]
Similarly, if you have Java 2 Runtime Environment v 1.4 installed on Solaris in a directory named /home/user1/j2re1.4.0, or on Windows in a directory named C:\j2re1.4.0, then the file would be
/home/user1/j2re1.4.0/lib/security/java.security       [Solaris]
C:\j2re1.4.0\lib\security\java.security                [Windows]
See Step 5d for an example of adding information about your provider to this file.
#
# This is the "master security properties file".
#
# In this file, various security properties are set for use by
# java.security classes. This is where users can statically register
# Cryptography Package Providers ("providers" for short). The term
# "provider" refers to a package or set of packages that supply a
# concrete implementation of a subset of the cryptography aspects of
# the Java Security API. A provider may, for example, implement one or
# more digital signature algorithms or message digest algorithms.
#
# Each provider must implement a subclass of the Provider class.
# To register a provider in this master security properties file,
# specify the Provider subclass name and priority in the format
#
#    security.provider.<n>=<className>
#
# This declares a provider, and specifies its preference
# order n. The preference order is the order in which providers are
# searched for requested algorithms (when no specific provider is
# requested). The order is 1-based; 1 is the most preferred, followed
# by 2, and so on.
#
# <className> must specify the subclass of the Provider class whose
# constructor sets the values of various properties that are required
# for the Java Security API to look up the algorithms or other
# facilities implemented by the provider.
#
# There must be at least one provider specification in java.security.
# There is a default provider that comes standard with the JDK. It
# is called the "SUN" provider, and its Provider subclass
# named Sun appears in the sun.security.provider package. Thus, the
# "SUN" provider is registered via the following:
#
#    security.provider.1=sun.security.provider.Sun
#
# (The number 1 is used for the default provider.)
#
# Note: Statically registered Provider subclasses are instantiated
# when the system is initialized. Providers can be dynamically
# registered instead by calls to either the addProvider or
# insertProviderAt method in the Security class.

#
# List of providers and their preference orders (see above):
#
security.provider.1=sun.security.provider.Sun
security.provider.2=com.sun.net.ssl.internal.ssl.Provider
security.provider.3=com.sun.rsajca.Provider
security.provider.4=com.sun.crypto.provider.SunJCE
security.provider.5=sun.security.jgss.SunProvider

#
# Select the source of seed data for SecureRandom. By default an
# attempt is made to use the entropy gathering device specified by 
# the securerandom.source property. If an exception occurs when
# accessing the URL then the traditional system/thread activity 
# algorithm is used.
#
securerandom.source=file:/dev/random
#
# The entropy gathering device is described as a URL and can 
# also be specified with the property "java.security.egd". For example,
#   -Djava.security.egd=file:/dev/urandom
# Specifying this property will override the securerandom.source setting.

#
# Class to instantiate as the javax.security.auth.login.Configuration
# provider.
#
login.configuration.provider=com.sun.security.auth.login.ConfigFile

#
# Default login configuration file
#
#login.config.url.1=file:${user.home}/.java.login.config

#
# Class to instantiate as the system Policy. This is the name of the class
# that will be used as the Policy object.
#
policy.provider=sun.security.provider.PolicyFile

# The default is to have a single system-wide policy file,
# and a policy file in the user's home directory.
policy.url.1=file:${java.home}/lib/security/java.policy
policy.url.2=file:${user.home}/.java.policy

# whether or not we expand properties in the policy file
# if this is set to false, properties (${...}) will not be expanded in policy
# files.
policy.expandProperties=true

# whether or not we allow an extra policy to be passed on the command line
# with -Djava.security.policy=somefile. Comment out this line to disable
# this feature.
policy.allowSystemProperty=true

# whether or not we look into the IdentityScope for trusted Identities
# when encountering a 1.1 signed JAR file. If the identity is found
# and is trusted, we grant it AllPermission.
policy.ignoreIdentityScope=false

#
# Default keystore type.
#
keystore.type=jks

#
# Class to instantiate as the system scope:
#
system.scope=sun.security.provider.IdentityDatabase

#
# List of comma-separated packages that start with or equal this string
# will cause a security exception to be thrown when
# passed to checkPackageAccess unless the
# corresponding RuntimePermission ("accessClassInPackage."+package) has
# been granted.
package.access=sun.

#
# List of comma-separated packages that start with or equal this string
# will cause a security exception to be thrown when
# passed to checkPackageDefinition unless the
# corresponding RuntimePermission ("defineClassInPackage."+package) has
# been granted.
#
# by default, no packages are restricted for definition, and none of
# the class loaders supplied with the JDK call checkPackageDefinition.
#
#package.definition=

#
# Determines whether this properties file can be appended to
# or overridden on the command line via -Djava.security.properties
#
security.overridePropertiesFile=true

#
# Determines the default key and trust manager factory algorithms for 
# the javax.net.ssl package.
#
ssl.KeyManagerFactory.algorithm=SunX509
ssl.TrustManagerFactory.algorithm=SunX509

#
# Determines the default SSLSocketFactory and SSLServerSocketFactory
# provider implementations for the javax.net.ssl package.  If, due to
# export and/or import regulations, the providers are not allowed to be
# replaced, changing these values will produce non-functional
# SocketFactory or ServerSocketFactory implementations.
#
#ssl.SocketFactory.provider=
#ssl.ServerSocketFactory.provider=

#
# The Java-level namelookup cache policy for successful lookups:
#
# any negative value: caching forever
# any positive value: the number of seconds to cache an address for
# zero: do not cache
#
# default value is forever (FOREVER). For security reasons, this
# caching is made forever when a security manager is set.
#
# NOTE: Setting this value to anything other than the default value 
#       can have serious security implications. Do not set it unless 
#       you are sure you are not exposed to DNS spoofing attack.
#
#networkaddress.cache.ttl=-1 

# The Java-level namelookup cache policy for failed lookups:
#
# any negative value: cache forever
# any positive value: the number of seconds to cache negative lookup results
# zero: do not cache
#
# In some Microsoft Windows networking environments that employ
# the WINS name service in addition to DNS, name service lookups
# that fail may take a noticeably long time to return (approx. 5 seconds).
# For this reason the default caching policy is to maintain these
# results for 10 seconds. 
#
#
networkaddress.cache.negative.ttl=10


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Please send comments to: java-security@java.sun.com.
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Last modified: 17 Jan 2002