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public interface CallbackHandler
 An application implements a CallbackHandler and passes
 it to underlying security services so that they may interact with
 the application to retrieve specific authentication data,
 such as usernames and passwords, or to display certain information,
 such as error and warning messages.
 
 
CallbackHandlers are implemented in an application-dependent fashion. For example, implementations for an application with a graphical user interface (GUI) may pop up windows to prompt for requested information or to display error messages. An implementation may also choose to obtain requested information from an alternate source without asking the end user.
 Underlying security services make requests for different types
 of information by passing individual Callbacks to the
 CallbackHandler.  The CallbackHandler
 implementation decides how to retrieve and display information
 depending on the Callbacks passed to it.  For example,
 if the underlying service needs a username and password to
 authenticate a user, it uses a NameCallback and
 PasswordCallback.  The CallbackHandler
 can then choose to prompt for a username and password serially,
 or to prompt for both in a single window.
 
 A default CallbackHandler class implementation
 may be specified in the auth.login.defaultCallbackHandler
 security property.  The security property can be set
 in the Java security properties file located in the file named
 <JAVA_HOME>/lib/security/java.security, where <JAVA_HOME>
 refers to the directory where the JDK was installed.
 
 If the security property is set to the fully qualified name of a
 CallbackHandler implementation class,
 then a LoginContext will load the specified
 CallbackHandler and pass it to the underlying LoginModules.
 The LoginContext only loads the default handler
 if it was not provided one.
 
All default handler implementations must provide a public zero-argument constructor.
| Method Summary | |
|---|---|
|  void | handle(Callback[] callbacks)Retrieve or display the information requested in the provided Callbacks. | 
| Method Detail | 
|---|
void handle(Callback[] callbacks)
            throws IOException,
                   UnsupportedCallbackException
Retrieve or display the information requested in the provided Callbacks.
 The handle method implementation checks the
 instance(s) of the Callback object(s) passed in
 to retrieve or display the requested information.
 The following example is provided to help demonstrate what an
 handle method implementation might look like.
 This example code is for guidance only.  Many details,
 including proper error handling, are left out for simplicity.
 
 public void handle(Callback[] callbacks)
 throws IOException, UnsupportedCallbackException {
         for (int i = 0; i < callbacks.length; i++) {
            if (callbacks[i] instanceof TextOutputCallback) {
 
                // display the message according to the specified type
                TextOutputCallback toc = (TextOutputCallback)callbacks[i];
                switch (toc.getMessageType()) {
                case TextOutputCallback.INFORMATION:
                    System.out.println(toc.getMessage());
                    break;
                case TextOutputCallback.ERROR:
                    System.out.println("ERROR: " + toc.getMessage());
                    break;
                case TextOutputCallback.WARNING:
                    System.out.println("WARNING: " + toc.getMessage());
                    break;
                default:
                    throw new IOException("Unsupported message type: " +
                                        toc.getMessageType());
                }
            } else if (callbacks[i] instanceof NameCallback) {
 
                // prompt the user for a username
                NameCallback nc = (NameCallback)callbacks[i];
 
                // ignore the provided defaultName
                System.err.print(nc.getPrompt());
                System.err.flush();
                nc.setName((new BufferedReader
                        (new InputStreamReader(System.in))).readLine());
            } else if (callbacks[i] instanceof PasswordCallback) {
 
                // prompt the user for sensitive information
                PasswordCallback pc = (PasswordCallback)callbacks[i];
                System.err.print(pc.getPrompt());
                System.err.flush();
                pc.setPassword(readPassword(System.in));
 
            } else {
                throw new UnsupportedCallbackException
                        (callbacks[i], "Unrecognized Callback");
            }
         }
 }
  
 // Reads user password from given input stream.
 private char[] readPassword(InputStream in) throws IOException {
    // insert code to read a user password from the input stream 
 }
 
callbacks - an array of Callback objects provided
                by an underlying security service which contains
                the information requested to be retrieved or displayed.
IOException - if an input or output error occurs. 
UnsupportedCallbackException - if the implementation of this
                method does not support one or more of the Callbacks
                specified in the callbacks parameter.| 
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Copyright 2004 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. Use is subject to license terms. Also see the documentation redistribution policy.