Java Security Manager - What does it check?

RubyDosa picture RubyDosa · Mar 4, 2011 · Viewed 16.4k times · Source

This article about Java security says:

Code in the Java library consults the Security Manager whenever a dangerous operation is about to be attempted.

So, what does this exactly mean? Say, if I've implemented my own securitymanager and enabled it for the whole JVM. Now, does the java runtime consults my securitymanager for each and every java call(like System.out.println() etc) or it consults only for dangerous api calls like System.exit() ,file operations etc?

edit: let me clarify my question,

I'm not questioning the possiblities of the securitymanager. I'm just asking if the security checks are done for the dangerous api's alone or it is done for each and every method call. Which inturn causes a huge performance degradation in case of applications with large amounts of code.

Answer

dogbane picture dogbane · Mar 4, 2011

It will only consult the SecurityManager if the code says so. It won't do it for every single operation.

For example in Runtime.exit, you see that the SecurityManager is consulted:

public void exit(int status) {
SecurityManager security = System.getSecurityManager();
if (security != null) {
    security.checkExit(status);
}
Shutdown.exit(status);
}

Similarly, in File, you will see that most methods consult the SecurityManager. Example:

public boolean canWrite() {
SecurityManager security = System.getSecurityManager();
if (security != null) {
    security.checkWrite(path);
}
return fs.checkAccess(this, FileSystem.ACCESS_WRITE);
}

If you are writing a method which might be "dangerous" then you should also consult the SecurityManager.