Quick Tour of Controlling Applications |
A security manager is not automatically installed when an application is running. In the next step, you'll see how to apply the same security policy to an application found on the local file system as to downloaded applets. First let's demonstrate that a security manager is by default not installed for an application, and thus the application has full access to resources (as was always the case in JDK 1.1).
Create a file named
GetProps.java
on your computer by either copying or downloading theGetProps.java
source code.The examples in this lesson assume you put
GetProps.java
in theC:\Test
directory if you're using a Windows system or the~/test
directory on Solaris (that is, thetest
directory in your home directory).If you don't yet have such a directory, create it now.
As you can see if you examine the source file, this program tries to get (read) the values of various properties, whose names are
"os.name"
,"java.version"
,"user.home"
, and"java.home"
.Now compile and run
GetProps.java
.You should see output like the following:
C:\TEST>java GetProps About to get os.name property value The name of your operating system is: Windows 95 About to get java.version property value The version of the JVM you are running is: 1.2 About to get user.home property value Your user home directory is: C:\WINDOWS About to get user.name property value Your user name is: susanj About to get java.home property value Your JDK installation directory is: C:\JDK1.2As you can see, the application was allowed to access all the property values.
Quick Tour of Controlling Applications |