Class WildcardPermission
java.lang.Object
org.apache.shiro.authz.permission.WildcardPermission
- All Implemented Interfaces:
Serializable,Permission
- Direct Known Subclasses:
DomainPermission
A
WildcardPermission is a very flexible permission construct supporting multiple levels of
permission matching. However, most people will probably follow some standard conventions as explained below.
Simple Usage
In the simplest form,WildcardPermission can be used as a simple permission string. You could grant a
user an "editNewsletter" permission and then check to see if the user has the editNewsletter
permission by calling
subject.isPermitted("editNewsletter")
This is (mostly) equivalent to
subject.isPermitted( new WildcardPermission("editNewsletter") )
but more on that later.
The simple permission string may work for simple applications, but it requires you to have permissions like
"viewNewsletter", "deleteNewsletter",
"createNewsletter", etc. You can also grant a user "*" permissions
using the wildcard character (giving this class its name), which means they have all permissions. But
using this approach there's no way to just say a user has "all newsletter permissions".
For this reason, WildcardPermission supports multiple levels of permissioning.
Multiple Levels
WildcardPermission also supports the concept of multiple levels. For example, you could restructure the previous simple example by granting a user the permission"newsletter:edit".
The colon in this example is a special character used by the WildcardPermission that delimits the
next token in the permission.
In this example, the first token is the domain that is being operated on
and the second token is the action being performed. Each level can contain multiple values. So you
could simply grant a user the permission "newsletter:view,edit,create" which gives them
access to perform view, edit, and create actions in the newsletter
domain. Then you could check to see if the user has the "newsletter:create"
permission by calling
subject.isPermitted("newsletter:create")
(which would return true).
In addition to granting multiple permissions via a single string, you can grant all permission for a particular
level. So if you wanted to grant a user all actions in the newsletter domain, you could simply give
them "newsletter:*". Now, any permission check for "newsletter:XXX"
will return true. It is also possible to use the wildcard token at the domain level (or both): so you
could grant a user the "view" action across all domains "*:view".
Instance-level Access Control
Another common usage of theWildcardPermission is to model instance-level Access Control Lists.
In this scenario you use three tokens - the first is the domain, the second is the action, and
the third is the instance you are acting on.
So for example you could grant a user "newsletter:edit:12,13,18". In this example, assume
that the third token is the system's ID of the newsletter. That would allow the user to edit newsletters
12, 13, and 18. This is an extremely powerful way to express permissions,
since you can now say things like "newsletter:*:13" (grant a user all actions for newsletter
13), "newsletter:view,create,edit:*" (allow the user to
view, create, or edit any newsletter), or
"newsletter:*:* (allow the user to perform any action on any newsletter).
To perform checks against these instance-level permissions, the application should include the instance ID in the
permission check like so:
subject.isPermitted( "newsletter:edit:13" )
There is no limit to the number of tokens that can be used, so it is up to your imagination in terms of ways that
this could be used in your application. However, the Shiro team likes to standardize some common usages shown
above to help people get started and provide consistency in the Shiro community.- Since:
- 0.9
- See Also:
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Field Summary
Fields -
Constructor Summary
ConstructorsModifierConstructorDescriptionprotectedDefault no-arg constructor for subclasses only - end-user developers instantiating Permission instances must provide a wildcard string at a minimum, since Permission instances are immutable once instantiated.WildcardPermission(String wildcardString) WildcardPermission(String wildcardString, boolean caseSensitive) -
Method Summary
Modifier and TypeMethodDescriptionbooleangetParts()inthashCode()booleanReturnstrueif this current instance implies all the functionality and/or resource access described by the specifiedPermissionargument,falseotherwise.protected voidprotected voidprotected voidSets the pre-split String parts of thisWildcardPermission.toString()
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Field Details
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WILDCARD_TOKEN
- See Also:
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PART_DIVIDER_TOKEN
- See Also:
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SUBPART_DIVIDER_TOKEN
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DEFAULT_CASE_SENSITIVE
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Constructor Details
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WildcardPermission
protected WildcardPermission()Default no-arg constructor for subclasses only - end-user developers instantiating Permission instances must provide a wildcard string at a minimum, since Permission instances are immutable once instantiated. Note that the WildcardPermission class is very robust and typically subclasses are not necessary unless you wish to create type-safe Permission objects that would be used in your application, such as perhaps aUserPermission,SystemPermission,PrinterPermission, etc. If you want such type-safe permission usage, consider subclassing theDomainPermissionclass for your needs. -
WildcardPermission
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WildcardPermission
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Method Details
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setParts
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setParts
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getParts
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setParts
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implies
Description copied from interface:PermissionReturnstrueif this current instance implies all the functionality and/or resource access described by the specifiedPermissionargument,falseotherwise.That is, this current instance must be exactly equal to or a superset of the functionality and/or resource access described by the given
Permissionargument. Yet another way of saying this would be:If "permission1 implies permission2", i.e.
permission1.implies(permission2), then any Subject grantedpermission1would have ability greater than or equal to that defined bypermission2.- Specified by:
impliesin interfacePermission- Parameters:
p- the permission to check for behavior/functionality comparison.- Returns:
trueif this current instance implies all the functionality and/or resource access described by the specifiedPermissionargument,falseotherwise.
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toString
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equals
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hashCode
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