1361 lines
		
	
	
		
			56 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
		
		
			
		
	
	
			1361 lines
		
	
	
		
			56 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
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								#
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								# This is the "master security properties file".
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								#
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								# An alternate java.security properties file may be specified
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								# from the command line via the system property
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								#
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								#    -Djava.security.properties=<URL>
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								#
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								# This properties file appends to the master security properties file.
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								# If both properties files specify values for the same key, the value
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								# from the command-line properties file is selected, as it is the last
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								# one loaded.
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								#
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								# Also, if you specify
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								#
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								#    -Djava.security.properties==<URL> (2 equals),
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								#
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								# then that properties file completely overrides the master security
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								# properties file.
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								#
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								# To disable the ability to specify an additional properties file from
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								# the command line, set the key security.overridePropertiesFile
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								# to false in the master security properties file. It is set to true
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								# by default.
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								#
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								# If this properties file fails to load, the JDK implementation will throw
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								# an unspecified error when initializing the java.security.Security class.
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								# In this file, various security properties are set for use by
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								# java.security classes. This is where users can statically register
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								# Cryptography Package Providers ("providers" for short). The term
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								# "provider" refers to a package or set of packages that supply a
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								# concrete implementation of a subset of the cryptography aspects of
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								# the Java Security API. A provider may, for example, implement one or
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								# more digital signature algorithms or message digest algorithms.
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								#
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								# Each provider must implement a subclass of the Provider class.
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								# To register a provider in this master security properties file,
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								# specify the provider and priority in the format
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								#
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								#    security.provider.<n>=<provName | className>
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								#
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								# This declares a provider, and specifies its preference
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								# order n. The preference order is the order in which providers are
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								# searched for requested algorithms (when no specific provider is
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								# requested). The order is 1-based; 1 is the most preferred, followed
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								# by 2, and so on.
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								#
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								# <provName> must specify the name of the Provider as passed to its super
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								# class java.security.Provider constructor. This is for providers loaded
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								# through the ServiceLoader mechanism.
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								#
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								# <className> must specify the subclass of the Provider class whose
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								# constructor sets the values of various properties that are required
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								# for the Java Security API to look up the algorithms or other
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								# facilities implemented by the provider. This is for providers loaded
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								# through classpath.
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								#
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								# Note: Providers can be dynamically registered instead by calls to
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								# either the addProvider or insertProviderAt method in the Security
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								# class.
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								#
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								# List of providers and their preference orders (see above):
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								#
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								security.provider.1=SUN
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								security.provider.2=SunRsaSign
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								security.provider.3=SunEC
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								security.provider.4=SunJSSE
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								security.provider.5=SunJCE
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								security.provider.6=SunJGSS
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								security.provider.7=SunSASL
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								security.provider.8=XMLDSig
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								security.provider.9=SunPCSC
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								security.provider.10=JdkLDAP
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								security.provider.11=JdkSASL
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								security.provider.12=SunMSCAPI
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								security.provider.13=SunPKCS11
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								#
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								# A list of preferred providers for specific algorithms. These providers will
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								# be searched for matching algorithms before the list of registered providers.
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								# Entries containing errors (parsing, etc) will be ignored. Use the
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								# -Djava.security.debug=jca property to debug these errors.
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								#
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								# The property is a comma-separated list of serviceType.algorithm:provider
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								# entries. The serviceType (example: "MessageDigest") is optional, and if
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								# not specified, the algorithm applies to all service types that support it.
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								# The algorithm is the standard algorithm name or transformation.
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								# Transformations can be specified in their full standard name
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								# (ex: AES/CBC/PKCS5Padding), or as partial matches (ex: AES, AES/CBC).
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								# The provider is the name of the provider. Any provider that does not
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								# also appear in the registered list will be ignored.
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								#
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								# There is a special serviceType for this property only to group a set of
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								# algorithms together. The type is "Group" and is followed by an algorithm
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								# keyword. Groups are to simplify and lessen the entries on the property
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								# line. Current groups are:
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								#   Group.SHA2 = SHA-224, SHA-256, SHA-384, SHA-512, SHA-512/224, SHA-512/256
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								#   Group.HmacSHA2 = HmacSHA224, HmacSHA256, HmacSHA384, HmacSHA512
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								#   Group.SHA2RSA = SHA224withRSA, SHA256withRSA, SHA384withRSA, SHA512withRSA
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								#   Group.SHA2DSA = SHA224withDSA, SHA256withDSA, SHA384withDSA, SHA512withDSA
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								#   Group.SHA2ECDSA = SHA224withECDSA, SHA256withECDSA, SHA384withECDSA, \
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								#                     SHA512withECDSA
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								#   Group.SHA3 = SHA3-224, SHA3-256, SHA3-384, SHA3-512
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								#   Group.HmacSHA3 = HmacSHA3-224, HmacSHA3-256, HmacSHA3-384, HmacSHA3-512
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								#
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								# Example:
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								#   jdk.security.provider.preferred=AES/GCM/NoPadding:SunJCE, \
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								#         MessageDigest.SHA-256:SUN, Group.HmacSHA2:SunJCE
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								#
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								#jdk.security.provider.preferred=
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								#
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								# Sun Provider SecureRandom seed source.
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								#
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								# Select the primary source of seed data for the "NativePRNG", "SHA1PRNG"
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								# and "DRBG" SecureRandom implementations in the "Sun" provider.
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								# (Other SecureRandom implementations might also use this property.)
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								#
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								# On Unix-like systems (for example, Linux/MacOS), the
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								# "NativePRNG", "SHA1PRNG" and "DRBG" implementations obtains seed data from
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								# special device files such as file:/dev/random.
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								#
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								# On Windows systems, specifying the URLs "file:/dev/random" or
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								# "file:/dev/urandom" will enable the native Microsoft CryptoAPI seeding
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								# mechanism for SHA1PRNG and DRBG.
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								#
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								# By default, an attempt is made to use the entropy gathering device
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								# specified by the "securerandom.source" Security property.  If an
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								# exception occurs while accessing the specified URL:
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								#
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								#     NativePRNG:
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								#         a default value of /dev/random will be used.  If neither
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								#         are available, the implementation will be disabled.
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								#         "file" is the only currently supported protocol type.
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								#
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								#     SHA1PRNG and DRBG:
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								#         the traditional system/thread activity algorithm will be used.
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								#
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								# The entropy gathering device can also be specified with the System
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								# property "java.security.egd". For example:
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								#
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								#   % java -Djava.security.egd=file:/dev/random MainClass
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								#
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								# Specifying this System property will override the
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								# "securerandom.source" Security property.
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								#
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								# In addition, if "file:/dev/random" or "file:/dev/urandom" is
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								# specified, the "NativePRNG" implementation will be more preferred than
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								# DRBG and SHA1PRNG in the Sun provider.
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								#
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								securerandom.source=file:/dev/random
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								#
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								# A list of known strong SecureRandom implementations.
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								#
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								# To help guide applications in selecting a suitable strong
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								# java.security.SecureRandom implementation, Java distributions should
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								# indicate a list of known strong implementations using the property.
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								#
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								# This is a comma-separated list of algorithm and/or algorithm:provider
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								# entries.
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								#
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								securerandom.strongAlgorithms=Windows-PRNG:SunMSCAPI,DRBG:SUN
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								#
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								# Sun provider DRBG configuration and default instantiation request.
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								#
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								# NIST SP 800-90Ar1 lists several DRBG mechanisms. Each can be configured
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								# with a DRBG algorithm name, and can be instantiated with a security strength,
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								# prediction resistance support, etc. This property defines the configuration
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								# and the default instantiation request of "DRBG" SecureRandom implementations
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								# in the SUN provider. (Other DRBG implementations can also use this property.)
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								# Applications can request different instantiation parameters like security
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								# strength, capability, personalization string using one of the
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								# getInstance(...,SecureRandomParameters,...) methods with a
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								# DrbgParameters.Instantiation argument, but other settings such as the
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								# mechanism and DRBG algorithm names are not currently configurable by any API.
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								#
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								# Please note that the SUN implementation of DRBG always supports reseeding.
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								#
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								# The value of this property is a comma-separated list of all configurable
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								# aspects. The aspects can appear in any order but the same aspect can only
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								# appear at most once. Its BNF-style definition is:
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								#
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								#   Value:
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								#     aspect { "," aspect }
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								#
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								#   aspect:
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								#     mech_name | algorithm_name | strength | capability | df
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								#
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								#   // The DRBG mechanism to use. Default "Hash_DRBG"
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								#   mech_name:
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								#     "Hash_DRBG" | "HMAC_DRBG" | "CTR_DRBG"
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								#
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								#   // The DRBG algorithm name. The "SHA-***" names are for Hash_DRBG and
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								#   // HMAC_DRBG, default "SHA-256". The "AES-***" names are for CTR_DRBG,
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								#   // default "AES-128" when using the limited cryptographic or "AES-256"
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								#   // when using the unlimited.
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								#   algorithm_name:
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								#     "SHA-224" | "SHA-512/224" | "SHA-256" |
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								#     "SHA-512/256" | "SHA-384" | "SHA-512" |
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								#     "AES-128" | "AES-192" | "AES-256"
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								#
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								#   // Security strength requested. Default "128"
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								#   strength:
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								#     "112" | "128" | "192" | "256"
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								#
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								#   // Prediction resistance and reseeding request. Default "none"
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								#   //  "pr_and_reseed" - Both prediction resistance and reseeding
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								#   //                    support requested
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								#   //  "reseed_only"   - Only reseeding support requested
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								#   //  "none"          - Neither prediction resistance not reseeding
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								#   //                    support requested
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								#   pr:
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								#     "pr_and_reseed" | "reseed_only" | "none"
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								#
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								#   // Whether a derivation function should be used. only applicable
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								#   // to CTR_DRBG. Default "use_df"
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								#   df:
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								#     "use_df" | "no_df"
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								#
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								# Examples,
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								 | 
							
								#   securerandom.drbg.config=Hash_DRBG,SHA-224,112,none
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								#   securerandom.drbg.config=CTR_DRBG,AES-256,192,pr_and_reseed,use_df
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								#
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								 | 
							
								# The default value is an empty string, which is equivalent to
							 | 
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								#   securerandom.drbg.config=Hash_DRBG,SHA-256,128,none
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								#
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						||
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								securerandom.drbg.config=
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								 | 
							
								
							 | 
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								 | 
							
								#
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								# Class to instantiate as the javax.security.auth.login.Configuration
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								# provider.
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								#
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						||
| 
								 | 
							
								login.configuration.provider=sun.security.provider.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. The system class loader is used to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# locate this class.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								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}/conf/security/java.policy
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								policy.url.2=file:${user.home}/.java.policy
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Controls whether or not properties are expanded in policy and login
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# configuration files. If set to false, properties (${...}) will not
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# be expanded in policy and login configuration files. If commented out or
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# set to an empty string, the default value is "false" for policy files and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# "true" for login configuration files.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								policy.expandProperties=true
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Controls whether or not an extra policy or login configuration file is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# allowed to be passed on the command line with -Djava.security.policy=somefile
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# or -Djava.security.auth.login.config=somefile. If commented out or set to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# an empty string, the default value is "false".
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								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. Note: the default policy
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# provider (sun.security.provider.PolicyFile) does not support this property.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								policy.ignoreIdentityScope=false
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Default keystore type.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								keystore.type=pkcs12
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Controls compatibility mode for JKS and PKCS12 keystore types.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# When set to 'true', both JKS and PKCS12 keystore types support loading
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# keystore files in either JKS or PKCS12 format. When set to 'false' the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# JKS keystore type supports loading only JKS keystore files and the PKCS12
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# keystore type supports loading only PKCS12 keystore files.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								keystore.type.compat=true
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# List of comma-separated packages that start with or equal this string
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# will cause a security exception to be thrown when passed to the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# SecurityManager::checkPackageAccess method unless the corresponding
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# RuntimePermission("accessClassInPackage."+package) has been granted.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								package.access=sun.misc.,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								               sun.reflect.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# List of comma-separated packages that start with or equal this string
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# will cause a security exception to be thrown when passed to the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# SecurityManager::checkPackageDefinition method unless the corresponding
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# RuntimePermission("defineClassInPackage."+package) has been granted.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# By default, none of the class loaders supplied with the JDK call
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# checkPackageDefinition.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								package.definition=sun.misc.,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								                   sun.reflect.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# 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=PKIX
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# 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. When a security
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# manager is not set, the default behavior in this implementation
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# is to cache for 30 seconds.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# NOTE: setting this 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
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Properties to configure OCSP for certificate revocation checking
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Enable OCSP
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# By default, OCSP is not used for certificate revocation checking.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# This property enables the use of OCSP when set to the value "true".
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# NOTE: SocketPermission is required to connect to an OCSP responder.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Example,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   ocsp.enable=true
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Location of the OCSP responder
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# By default, the location of the OCSP responder is determined implicitly
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# from the certificate being validated. This property explicitly specifies
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# the location of the OCSP responder. The property is used when the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Authority Information Access extension (defined in RFC 5280) is absent
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# from the certificate or when it requires overriding.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Example,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   ocsp.responderURL=http://ocsp.example.net:80
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Subject name of the OCSP responder's certificate
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# By default, the certificate of the OCSP responder is that of the issuer
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# of the certificate being validated. This property identifies the certificate
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# of the OCSP responder when the default does not apply. Its value is a string
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# distinguished name (defined in RFC 2253) which identifies a certificate in
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# the set of certificates supplied during cert path validation. In cases where
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# the subject name alone is not sufficient to uniquely identify the certificate
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# then both the "ocsp.responderCertIssuerName" and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# "ocsp.responderCertSerialNumber" properties must be used instead. When this
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# property is set then those two properties are ignored.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Example,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   ocsp.responderCertSubjectName=CN=OCSP Responder, O=XYZ Corp
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Issuer name of the OCSP responder's certificate
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# By default, the certificate of the OCSP responder is that of the issuer
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# of the certificate being validated. This property identifies the certificate
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# of the OCSP responder when the default does not apply. Its value is a string
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# distinguished name (defined in RFC 2253) which identifies a certificate in
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# the set of certificates supplied during cert path validation. When this
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# property is set then the "ocsp.responderCertSerialNumber" property must also
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# be set. When the "ocsp.responderCertSubjectName" property is set then this
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# property is ignored.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Example,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   ocsp.responderCertIssuerName=CN=Enterprise CA, O=XYZ Corp
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Serial number of the OCSP responder's certificate
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# By default, the certificate of the OCSP responder is that of the issuer
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# of the certificate being validated. This property identifies the certificate
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# of the OCSP responder when the default does not apply. Its value is a string
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# of hexadecimal digits (colon or space separators may be present) which
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# identifies a certificate in the set of certificates supplied during cert path
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# validation. When this property is set then the "ocsp.responderCertIssuerName"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# property must also be set. When the "ocsp.responderCertSubjectName" property
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# is set then this property is ignored.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Example,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   ocsp.responderCertSerialNumber=2A:FF:00
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Policy for failed Kerberos KDC lookups:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# When a KDC is unavailable (network error, service failure, etc), it is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# put inside a secondary list and accessed less often for future requests. The
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# value (case-insensitive) for this policy can be:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# tryLast
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    KDCs in the secondary list are always tried after those not on the list.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# tryLess[:max_retries,timeout]
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    KDCs in the secondary list are still tried by their order in the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    configuration, but with smaller max_retries and timeout values.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    max_retries and timeout are optional numerical parameters (default 1 and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    5000, which means once and 5 seconds). Please note that if any of the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    values defined here are more than what is defined in krb5.conf, it will be
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    ignored.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Whenever a KDC is detected as available, it is removed from the secondary
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# list. The secondary list is reset when krb5.conf is reloaded. You can add
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# refreshKrb5Config=true to a JAAS configuration file so that krb5.conf is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# reloaded whenever a JAAS authentication is attempted.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Example,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   krb5.kdc.bad.policy = tryLast
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   krb5.kdc.bad.policy = tryLess:2,2000
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								krb5.kdc.bad.policy = tryLast
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Kerberos cross-realm referrals (RFC 6806)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# OpenJDK's Kerberos client supports cross-realm referrals as defined in
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# RFC 6806. This allows to setup more dynamic environments in which clients
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# do not need to know in advance how to reach the realm of a target principal
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# (either a user or service).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# When a client issues an AS or a TGS request, the "canonicalize" option
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# is set to announce support of this feature. A KDC server may fulfill the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# request or reply referring the client to a different one. If referred,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# the client will issue a new request and the cycle repeats.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# In addition to referrals, the "canonicalize" option allows the KDC server
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# to change the client name in response to an AS request. For security reasons,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# RFC 6806 (section 11) FAST scheme is enforced.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Disable Kerberos cross-realm referrals. Value may be overwritten with a
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# System property (-Dsun.security.krb5.disableReferrals).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								sun.security.krb5.disableReferrals=false
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Maximum number of AS or TGS referrals to avoid infinite loops. Value may
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# be overwritten with a System property (-Dsun.security.krb5.maxReferrals).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								sun.security.krb5.maxReferrals=5
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# This property contains a list of disabled EC Named Curves that can be included
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# in the jdk.[tls|certpath|jar].disabledAlgorithms properties.  To include this
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# list in any of the disabledAlgorithms properties, add the property name as
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# an entry.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#jdk.disabled.namedCurves=
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Algorithm restrictions for certification path (CertPath) processing
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# In some environments, certain algorithms or key lengths may be undesirable
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# for certification path building and validation.  For example, "MD2" is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# generally no longer considered to be a secure hash algorithm.  This section
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# describes the mechanism for disabling algorithms based on algorithm name
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# and/or key length.  This includes algorithms used in certificates, as well
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# as revocation information such as CRLs and signed OCSP Responses.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The syntax of the disabled algorithm string is described as follows:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   DisabledAlgorithms:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       " DisabledAlgorithm { , DisabledAlgorithm } "
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   DisabledAlgorithm:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       AlgorithmName [Constraint] { '&' Constraint } | IncludeProperty
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   AlgorithmName:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       (see below)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   Constraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       KeySizeConstraint | CAConstraint | DenyAfterConstraint |
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       UsageConstraint
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   KeySizeConstraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       keySize Operator KeyLength
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   Operator:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       <= | < | == | != | >= | >
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   KeyLength:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       Integer value of the algorithm's key length in bits
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   CAConstraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       jdkCA
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   DenyAfterConstraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       denyAfter YYYY-MM-DD
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   UsageConstraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       usage [TLSServer] [TLSClient] [SignedJAR]
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   IncludeProperty:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       include <security property>
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The "AlgorithmName" is the standard algorithm name of the disabled
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# algorithm. See the Java Security Standard Algorithm Names Specification
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# for information about Standard Algorithm Names.  Matching is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# performed using a case-insensitive sub-element matching rule.  (For
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# example, in "SHA1withECDSA" the sub-elements are "SHA1" for hashing and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# "ECDSA" for signatures.)  If the assertion "AlgorithmName" is a
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# sub-element of the certificate algorithm name, the algorithm will be
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# rejected during certification path building and validation.  For example,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# the assertion algorithm name "DSA" will disable all certificate algorithms
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# that rely on DSA, such as NONEwithDSA, SHA1withDSA.  However, the assertion
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# will not disable algorithms related to "ECDSA".
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The "IncludeProperty" allows a implementation-defined security property that
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# can be included in the disabledAlgorithms properties.  These properties are
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# to help manage common actions easier across multiple disabledAlgorithm
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# properties.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# There is one defined security property:  jdk.disabled.namedCurves
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# See the property for more specific details.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# A "Constraint" defines restrictions on the keys and/or certificates for
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# a specified AlgorithmName:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   KeySizeConstraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#     keySize Operator KeyLength
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       The constraint requires a key of a valid size range if the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       "AlgorithmName" is of a key algorithm.  The "KeyLength" indicates
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       the key size specified in number of bits.  For example,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       "RSA keySize <= 1024" indicates that any RSA key with key size less
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       than or equal to 1024 bits should be disabled, and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       "RSA keySize < 1024, RSA keySize > 2048" indicates that any RSA key
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       with key size less than 1024 or greater than 2048 should be disabled.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       This constraint is only used on algorithms that have a key size.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   CAConstraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#     jdkCA
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       This constraint prohibits the specified algorithm only if the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       algorithm is used in a certificate chain that terminates at a marked
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       trust anchor in the lib/security/cacerts keystore.  If the jdkCA
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       constraint is not set, then all chains using the specified algorithm
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       are restricted.  jdkCA may only be used once in a DisabledAlgorithm
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       expression.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       Example:  To apply this constraint to SHA-1 certificates, include
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       the following:  "SHA1 jdkCA"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   DenyAfterConstraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#     denyAfter YYYY-MM-DD
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       This constraint prohibits a certificate with the specified algorithm
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       from being used after the date regardless of the certificate's
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       validity.  JAR files that are signed and timestamped before the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       constraint date with certificates containing the disabled algorithm
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       will not be restricted.  The date is processed in the UTC timezone.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       This constraint can only be used once in a DisabledAlgorithm
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       expression.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       Example:  To deny usage of RSA 2048 bit certificates after Feb 3 2020,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       use the following:  "RSA keySize == 2048 & denyAfter 2020-02-03"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   UsageConstraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#     usage [TLSServer] [TLSClient] [SignedJAR]
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       This constraint prohibits the specified algorithm for
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       a specified usage.  This should be used when disabling an algorithm
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       for all usages is not practical. 'TLSServer' restricts the algorithm
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       in TLS server certificate chains when server authentication is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       performed. 'TLSClient' restricts the algorithm in TLS client
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       certificate chains when client authentication is performed.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       'SignedJAR' constrains use of certificates in signed jar files.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       The usage type follows the keyword and more than one usage type can
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       be specified with a whitespace delimiter.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       Example:  "SHA1 usage TLSServer TLSClient"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# When an algorithm must satisfy more than one constraint, it must be
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# delimited by an ampersand '&'.  For example, to restrict certificates in a
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# chain that terminate at a distribution provided trust anchor and contain
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# RSA keys that are less than or equal to 1024 bits, add the following
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# constraint:  "RSA keySize <= 1024 & jdkCA".
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# All DisabledAlgorithms expressions are processed in the order defined in the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# property.  This requires lower keysize constraints to be specified
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# before larger keysize constraints of the same algorithm.  For example:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# "RSA keySize < 1024 & jdkCA, RSA keySize < 2048".
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: The algorithm restrictions do not apply to trust anchors or
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# self-signed certificates.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: This property is currently used by Oracle's PKIX implementation. It
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Example:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   jdk.certpath.disabledAlgorithms=MD2, DSA, RSA keySize < 2048
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								jdk.certpath.disabledAlgorithms=MD2, MD5, SHA1 jdkCA & usage TLSServer, \
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    RSA keySize < 1024, DSA keySize < 1024, EC keySize < 224, \
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    SHA1 usage SignedJAR & denyAfter 2019-01-01
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Legacy algorithms for certification path (CertPath) processing and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# signed JAR files.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# In some environments, a certain algorithm or key length may be undesirable
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# but is not yet disabled.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Tools such as keytool and jarsigner may emit warnings when these legacy
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# algorithms are used. See the man pages for those tools for more information.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The syntax is the same as the "jdk.certpath.disabledAlgorithms" and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# "jdk.jar.disabledAlgorithms" security properties.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: This property is currently used by the JDK Reference
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# implementation. It is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# implementations.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								jdk.security.legacyAlgorithms=SHA1, \
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    RSA keySize < 2048, DSA keySize < 2048
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Algorithm restrictions for signed JAR files
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# In some environments, certain algorithms or key lengths may be undesirable
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# for signed JAR validation.  For example, "MD2" is generally no longer
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# considered to be a secure hash algorithm.  This section describes the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# mechanism for disabling algorithms based on algorithm name and/or key length.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# JARs signed with any of the disabled algorithms or key sizes will be treated
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# as unsigned.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The syntax of the disabled algorithm string is described as follows:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   DisabledAlgorithms:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       " DisabledAlgorithm { , DisabledAlgorithm } "
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   DisabledAlgorithm:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       AlgorithmName [Constraint] { '&' Constraint }
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   AlgorithmName:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       (see below)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   Constraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       KeySizeConstraint | DenyAfterConstraint
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   KeySizeConstraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       keySize Operator KeyLength
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   DenyAfterConstraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       denyAfter YYYY-MM-DD
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   Operator:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       <= | < | == | != | >= | >
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   KeyLength:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       Integer value of the algorithm's key length in bits
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: This property is currently used by the JDK Reference
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# implementation. It is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# implementations.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# See "jdk.certpath.disabledAlgorithms" for syntax descriptions.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								jdk.jar.disabledAlgorithms=MD2, MD5, RSA keySize < 1024, \
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								      DSA keySize < 1024, SHA1 denyAfter 2019-01-01
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Algorithm restrictions for Secure Socket Layer/Transport Layer Security
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# (SSL/TLS/DTLS) processing
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# In some environments, certain algorithms or key lengths may be undesirable
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# when using SSL/TLS/DTLS.  This section describes the mechanism for disabling
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# algorithms during SSL/TLS/DTLS security parameters negotiation, including
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# protocol version negotiation, cipher suites selection, named groups
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# selection, signature schemes selection, peer authentication and key
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# exchange mechanisms.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Disabled algorithms will not be negotiated for SSL/TLS connections, even
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# if they are enabled explicitly in an application.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# For PKI-based peer authentication and key exchange mechanisms, this list
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# of disabled algorithms will also be checked during certification path
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# building and validation, including algorithms used in certificates, as
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# well as revocation information such as CRLs and signed OCSP Responses.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# This is in addition to the jdk.certpath.disabledAlgorithms property above.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# See the specification of "jdk.certpath.disabledAlgorithms" for the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# syntax of the disabled algorithm string.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: The algorithm restrictions do not apply to trust anchors or
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# self-signed certificates.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: This property is currently used by the JDK Reference implementation.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# It is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Example:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   jdk.tls.disabledAlgorithms=MD5, SSLv3, DSA, RSA keySize < 2048, \
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       rsa_pkcs1_sha1, secp224r1
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								jdk.tls.disabledAlgorithms=SSLv3, TLSv1, TLSv1.1, RC4, DES, MD5withRSA, \
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    DH keySize < 1024, EC keySize < 224, 3DES_EDE_CBC, anon, NULL
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Legacy algorithms for Secure Socket Layer/Transport Layer Security (SSL/TLS)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# processing in JSSE implementation.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# In some environments, a certain algorithm may be undesirable but it
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# cannot be disabled because of its use in legacy applications.  Legacy
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# algorithms may still be supported, but applications should not use them
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# as the security strength of legacy algorithms are usually not strong enough
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# in practice.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# During SSL/TLS security parameters negotiation, legacy algorithms will
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# not be negotiated unless there are no other candidates.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The syntax of the legacy algorithms string is described as this Java
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# BNF-style:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   LegacyAlgorithms:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       " LegacyAlgorithm { , LegacyAlgorithm } "
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   LegacyAlgorithm:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       AlgorithmName (standard JSSE algorithm name)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# See the specification of security property "jdk.certpath.disabledAlgorithms"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# for the syntax and description of the "AlgorithmName" notation.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Per SSL/TLS specifications, cipher suites have the form:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       SSL_KeyExchangeAlg_WITH_CipherAlg_MacAlg
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# or
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       TLS_KeyExchangeAlg_WITH_CipherAlg_MacAlg
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# For example, the cipher suite TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA uses RSA as the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# key exchange algorithm, AES_128_CBC (128 bits AES cipher algorithm in CBC
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# mode) as the cipher (encryption) algorithm, and SHA-1 as the message digest
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# algorithm for HMAC.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The LegacyAlgorithm can be one of the following standard algorithm names:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#     1. JSSE cipher suite name, e.g., TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#     2. JSSE key exchange algorithm name, e.g., RSA
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#     3. JSSE cipher (encryption) algorithm name, e.g., AES_128_CBC
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#     4. JSSE message digest algorithm name, e.g., SHA
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# See SSL/TLS specifications and the Java Security Standard Algorithm Names
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Specification for information about the algorithm names.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: If a legacy algorithm is also restricted through the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# jdk.tls.disabledAlgorithms property or the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# java.security.AlgorithmConstraints API (See
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# javax.net.ssl.SSLParameters.setAlgorithmConstraints()),
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# then the algorithm is completely disabled and will not be negotiated.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: This property is currently used by the JDK Reference implementation.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# It is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# There is no guarantee the property will continue to exist or be of the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# same syntax in future releases.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Example:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   jdk.tls.legacyAlgorithms=DH_anon, DES_CBC, SSL_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_MD5
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								jdk.tls.legacyAlgorithms=NULL, anon, RC4, DES, 3DES_EDE_CBC
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The pre-defined default finite field Diffie-Hellman ephemeral (DHE)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# parameters for Transport Layer Security (SSL/TLS/DTLS) processing.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# In traditional SSL/TLS/DTLS connections where finite field DHE parameters
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# negotiation mechanism is not used, the server offers the client group
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# parameters, base generator g and prime modulus p, for DHE key exchange.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# It is recommended to use dynamic group parameters.  This property defines
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# a mechanism that allows you to specify custom group parameters.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The syntax of this property string is described as this Java BNF-style:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   DefaultDHEParameters:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       DefinedDHEParameters { , DefinedDHEParameters }
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   DefinedDHEParameters:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       "{" DHEPrimeModulus , DHEBaseGenerator "}"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   DHEPrimeModulus:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       HexadecimalDigits
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   DHEBaseGenerator:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       HexadecimalDigits
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   HexadecimalDigits:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       HexadecimalDigit { HexadecimalDigit }
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   HexadecimalDigit: one of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F a b c d e f
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Whitespace characters are ignored.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The "DefinedDHEParameters" defines the custom group parameters, prime
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# modulus p and base generator g, for a particular size of prime modulus p.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The "DHEPrimeModulus" defines the hexadecimal prime modulus p, and the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# "DHEBaseGenerator" defines the hexadecimal base generator g of a group
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# parameter.  It is recommended to use safe primes for the custom group
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# parameters.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If this property is not defined or the value is empty, the underlying JSSE
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# provider's default group parameter is used for each connection.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the property value does not follow the grammar, or a particular group
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# parameter is not valid, the connection will fall back and use the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# underlying JSSE provider's default group parameter.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: This property is currently used by OpenJDK's JSSE implementation. It
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Example:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   jdk.tls.server.defaultDHEParameters=
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       { \
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF C90FDAA2 2168C234 C4C6628B 80DC1CD1 \
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       29024E08 8A67CC74 020BBEA6 3B139B22 514A0879 8E3404DD \
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       EF9519B3 CD3A431B 302B0A6D F25F1437 4FE1356D 6D51C245 \
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       E485B576 625E7EC6 F44C42E9 A637ED6B 0BFF5CB6 F406B7ED \
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       EE386BFB 5A899FA5 AE9F2411 7C4B1FE6 49286651 ECE65381 \
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF, 2}
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# TLS key limits on symmetric cryptographic algorithms
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# This security property sets limits on algorithms key usage in TLS 1.3.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# When the amount of data encrypted exceeds the algorithm value listed below,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# a KeyUpdate message will trigger a key change.  This is for symmetric ciphers
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# with TLS 1.3 only.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The syntax for the property is described below:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   KeyLimits:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       " KeyLimit { , KeyLimit } "
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   WeakKeyLimit:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       AlgorithmName Action Length
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   AlgorithmName:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       A full algorithm transformation.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   Action:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       KeyUpdate
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   Length:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       The amount of encrypted data in a session before the Action occurs
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       This value may be an integer value in bytes, or as a power of two, 2^29.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   KeyUpdate:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       The TLS 1.3 KeyUpdate handshake process begins when the Length amount
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       is fulfilled.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: This property is currently used by OpenJDK's JSSE implementation. It
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								jdk.tls.keyLimits=AES/GCM/NoPadding KeyUpdate 2^37
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Cryptographic Jurisdiction Policy defaults
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Import and export control rules on cryptographic software vary from
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# country to country.  By default, Java provides two different sets of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# cryptographic policy files[1]:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#     unlimited:  These policy files contain no restrictions on cryptographic
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#                 strengths or algorithms
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#     limited:    These policy files contain more restricted cryptographic
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#                 strengths
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The default setting is determined by the value of the "crypto.policy"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Security property below. If your country or usage requires the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# traditional restrictive policy, the "limited" Java cryptographic
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# policy is still available and may be appropriate for your environment.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If you have restrictions that do not fit either use case mentioned
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# above, Java provides the capability to customize these policy files.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The "crypto.policy" security property points to a subdirectory
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# within <java-home>/conf/security/policy/ which can be customized.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Please see the <java-home>/conf/security/policy/README.txt file or consult
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# the Java Security Guide/JCA documentation for more information.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# YOU ARE ADVISED TO CONSULT YOUR EXPORT/IMPORT CONTROL COUNSEL OR ATTORNEY
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# TO DETERMINE THE EXACT REQUIREMENTS.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# [1] Please note that the JCE for Java SE, including the JCE framework,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# cryptographic policy files, and standard JCE providers provided with
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# the Java SE, have been reviewed and approved for export as mass market
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# encryption item by the US Bureau of Industry and Security.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: This property is currently used by the JDK Reference implementation.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# It is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								crypto.policy=unlimited
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The policy for the XML Signature secure validation mode. Validation of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# XML Signatures that violate any of these constraints will fail. The
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# mode is enforced by default. The mode can be disabled by setting the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# property "org.jcp.xml.dsig.secureValidation" to Boolean.FALSE with the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# javax.xml.crypto.XMLCryptoContext.setProperty() method.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   Policy:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       Constraint {"," Constraint }
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   Constraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       AlgConstraint | MaxTransformsConstraint | MaxReferencesConstraint |
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       ReferenceUriSchemeConstraint | KeySizeConstraint | OtherConstraint
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   AlgConstraint
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       "disallowAlg" Uri
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   MaxTransformsConstraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       "maxTransforms" Integer
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   MaxReferencesConstraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       "maxReferences" Integer
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   ReferenceUriSchemeConstraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       "disallowReferenceUriSchemes" String { String }
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   KeySizeConstraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       "minKeySize" KeyAlg Integer
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   OtherConstraint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#       "noDuplicateIds" | "noRetrievalMethodLoops"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# For AlgConstraint, Uri is the algorithm URI String that is not allowed.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# See the XML Signature Recommendation for more information on algorithm
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# URI Identifiers. For KeySizeConstraint, KeyAlg is the standard algorithm
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# name of the key type (ex: "RSA"). If the MaxTransformsConstraint,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# MaxReferencesConstraint or KeySizeConstraint (for the same key type) is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# specified more than once, only the last entry is enforced.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: This property is currently used by the JDK Reference implementation.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# It is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								jdk.xml.dsig.secureValidationPolicy=\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    disallowAlg http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-xslt-19991116,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    disallowAlg http://www.w3.org/2001/04/xmldsig-more#rsa-md5,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    disallowAlg http://www.w3.org/2001/04/xmldsig-more#hmac-md5,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    disallowAlg http://www.w3.org/2001/04/xmldsig-more#md5,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    disallowAlg http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#sha1,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    disallowAlg http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#dsa-sha1,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    disallowAlg http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#rsa-sha1,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    disallowAlg http://www.w3.org/2007/05/xmldsig-more#sha1-rsa-MGF1,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    disallowAlg http://www.w3.org/2001/04/xmldsig-more#ecdsa-sha1,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    maxTransforms 5,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    maxReferences 30,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    disallowReferenceUriSchemes file http https,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    minKeySize RSA 1024,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    minKeySize DSA 1024,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    minKeySize EC 224,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    noDuplicateIds,\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    noRetrievalMethodLoops
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Deserialization JVM-wide filter factory
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# A filter factory class name is used to configure the JVM-wide filter factory.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The class must be public, must have a public zero-argument constructor, implement the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# java.util.function.BinaryOperator<java.io.ObjectInputFilter> interface, provide its
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# implementation and be accessible via the application class loader.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# A builtin filter factory is used if no filter factory is defined.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# See java.io.ObjectInputFilter.Config for more information.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the system property jdk.serialFilterFactory is also specified, it supersedes
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# the security property value defined here.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#jdk.serialFilterFactory=<classname>
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Deserialization JVM-wide filter
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# A filter, if configured, is used by the filter factory to provide the filter used by
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# java.io.ObjectInputStream during deserialization to check the contents of the stream.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# A filter is configured as a sequence of patterns, each pattern is either
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# matched against the name of a class in the stream or defines a limit.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Patterns are separated by ";" (semicolon).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Whitespace is significant and is considered part of the pattern.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the system property jdk.serialFilter is also specified, it supersedes
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# the security property value defined here.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If a pattern includes a "=", it sets a limit.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If a limit appears more than once the last value is used.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Limits are checked before classes regardless of the order in the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# sequence of patterns.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If any of the limits are exceeded, the filter status is REJECTED.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   maxdepth=value - the maximum depth of a graph
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   maxrefs=value  - the maximum number of internal references
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   maxbytes=value - the maximum number of bytes in the input stream
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   maxarray=value - the maximum array length allowed
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Other patterns, from left to right, match the class or package name as
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# returned from Class.getName.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the class is an array type, the class or package to be matched is the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# element type.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Arrays of any number of dimensions are treated the same as the element type.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# For example, a pattern of "!example.Foo", rejects creation of any instance or
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# array of example.Foo.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the pattern starts with "!", the status is REJECTED if the remaining
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# pattern is matched; otherwise the status is ALLOWED if the pattern matches.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the pattern contains "/", the non-empty prefix up to the "/" is the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# module name;
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   if the module name matches the module name of the class then
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   the remaining pattern is matched with the class name.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   If there is no "/", the module name is not compared.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the pattern ends with ".**" it matches any class in the package and all
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# subpackages.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the pattern ends with ".*" it matches any class in the package.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the pattern ends with "*", it matches any class with the pattern as a
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# prefix.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the pattern is equal to the class name, it matches.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Otherwise, the status is UNDECIDED.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#jdk.serialFilter=pattern;pattern
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# RMI Registry Serial Filter
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The filter pattern uses the same format as jdk.serialFilter.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# This filter can override the builtin filter if additional types need to be
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# allowed or rejected from the RMI Registry or to decrease limits but not
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# to increase limits.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the limits (maxdepth, maxrefs, or maxbytes) are exceeded, the object is rejected.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Each non-array type is allowed or rejected if it matches one of the patterns,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# evaluated from left to right, and is otherwise allowed. Arrays of any
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# component type, including subarrays and arrays of primitives, are allowed.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Array construction of any component type, including subarrays and arrays of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# primitives, are allowed unless the length is greater than the maxarray limit.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The filter is applied to each array element.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: This property is currently used by the JDK Reference implementation.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# It is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The built-in filter allows subclasses of allowed classes and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# can approximately be represented as the pattern:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#sun.rmi.registry.registryFilter=\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    maxarray=1000000;\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    maxdepth=20;\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    java.lang.String;\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    java.lang.Number;\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    java.lang.reflect.Proxy;\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    java.rmi.Remote;\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    sun.rmi.server.UnicastRef;\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    sun.rmi.server.RMIClientSocketFactory;\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    sun.rmi.server.RMIServerSocketFactory;\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    java.rmi.server.UID
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# RMI Distributed Garbage Collector (DGC) Serial Filter
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The filter pattern uses the same format as jdk.serialFilter.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# This filter can override the builtin filter if additional types need to be
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# allowed or rejected from the RMI DGC.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: This property is currently used by the JDK Reference implementation.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# It is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The builtin DGC filter can approximately be represented as the filter pattern:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#sun.rmi.transport.dgcFilter=\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    java.rmi.server.ObjID;\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    java.rmi.server.UID;\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    java.rmi.dgc.VMID;\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    java.rmi.dgc.Lease;\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    maxdepth=5;maxarray=10000
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# JCEKS Encrypted Key Serial Filter
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# This filter, if configured, is used by the JCEKS KeyStore during the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# deserialization of the encrypted Key object stored inside a key entry.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If not configured or the filter result is UNDECIDED (i.e. none of the patterns
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# matches), the filter configured by jdk.serialFilter will be consulted.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the system property jceks.key.serialFilter is also specified, it supersedes
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# the security property value defined here.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The filter pattern uses the same format as jdk.serialFilter. The default
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# pattern allows java.lang.Enum, java.security.KeyRep, java.security.KeyRep$Type,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# and javax.crypto.spec.SecretKeySpec and rejects all the others.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								jceks.key.serialFilter = java.base/java.lang.Enum;java.base/java.security.KeyRep;\
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  java.base/java.security.KeyRep$Type;java.base/javax.crypto.spec.SecretKeySpec;!*
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The iteration count used for password-based encryption (PBE) in JCEKS
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# keystores. Values in the range 10000 to 5000000 are considered valid.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the value is out of this range, or is not a number, or is unspecified;
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# a default of 200000 is used.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the system property jdk.jceks.iterationCount is also specified, it
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# supersedes the security property value defined here.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#jdk.jceks.iterationCount = 200000
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# PKCS12 KeyStore properties
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The following properties, if configured, are used by the PKCS12 KeyStore
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# implementation during the creation of a new keystore. Several of the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# properties may also be used when modifying an existing keystore. The
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# properties can be overridden by a KeyStore API that specifies its own
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# algorithms and parameters.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If an existing PKCS12 keystore is loaded and then stored, the algorithm and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# parameter used to generate the existing Mac will be reused. If the existing
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# keystore does not have a Mac, no Mac will be created while storing. If there
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# is at least one certificate in the existing keystore, the algorithm and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# parameters used to encrypt the last certificate in the existing keystore will
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# be reused to encrypt all certificates while storing. If the last certificate
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# in the existing keystore is not encrypted, all certificates will be stored
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# unencrypted. If there is no certificate in the existing keystore, any newly
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# added certificate will be encrypted (or stored unencrypted if algorithm
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# value is "NONE") using the "keystore.pkcs12.certProtectionAlgorithm" and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# "keystore.pkcs12.certPbeIterationCount" values defined here. Existing private
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# and secret key(s) are not changed. Newly set private and secret key(s) will
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# be encrypted using the "keystore.pkcs12.keyProtectionAlgorithm" and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# "keystore.pkcs12.keyPbeIterationCount" values defined here.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# In order to apply new algorithms and parameters to all entries in an
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# existing keystore, one can create a new keystore and add entries in the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# existing keystore into the new keystore. This can be achieved by calling the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# "keytool -importkeystore" command.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If a system property of the same name is also specified, it supersedes the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# security property value defined here.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the property is set to an illegal value,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# an iteration count that is not a positive integer, or an unknown algorithm
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# name, an exception will be thrown when the property is used.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the property is not set or empty, a default value will be used.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: These properties are currently used by the JDK Reference implementation.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# They are not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The algorithm used to encrypt a certificate. This can be any non-Hmac PBE
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# algorithm defined in the Cipher section of the Java Security Standard
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Algorithm Names Specification. When set to "NONE", the certificate
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# is not encrypted. The default value is "PBEWithHmacSHA256AndAES_256".
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#keystore.pkcs12.certProtectionAlgorithm = PBEWithHmacSHA256AndAES_256
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The iteration count used by the PBE algorithm when encrypting a certificate.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# This value must be a positive integer. The default value is 10000.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#keystore.pkcs12.certPbeIterationCount = 10000
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The algorithm used to encrypt a private key or secret key. This can be
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# any non-Hmac PBE algorithm defined in the Cipher section of the Java
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Security Standard Algorithm Names Specification. The value must not be "NONE".
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The default value is "PBEWithHmacSHA256AndAES_256".
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#keystore.pkcs12.keyProtectionAlgorithm = PBEWithHmacSHA256AndAES_256
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The iteration count used by the PBE algorithm when encrypting a private key
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# or a secret key. This value must be a positive integer. The default value
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# is 10000.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#keystore.pkcs12.keyPbeIterationCount = 10000
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The algorithm used to calculate the optional MacData at the end of a PKCS12
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# file. This can be any HmacPBE algorithm defined in the Mac section of the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Java Security Standard Algorithm Names Specification. When set to "NONE",
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# no Mac is generated. The default value is "HmacPBESHA256".
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#keystore.pkcs12.macAlgorithm = HmacPBESHA256
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The iteration count used by the MacData algorithm. This value must be a
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# positive integer. The default value is 10000.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#keystore.pkcs12.macIterationCount = 10000
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Enhanced exception message information
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# By default, exception messages should not include potentially sensitive
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# information such as file names, host names, or port numbers. This property
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# accepts one or more comma separated values, each of which represents a
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# category of enhanced exception message information to enable. Values are
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# case-insensitive. Leading and trailing whitespaces, surrounding each value,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# are ignored. Unknown values are ignored.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# NOTE: Use caution before setting this property. Setting this property
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# exposes sensitive information in Exceptions, which could, for example,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# propagate to untrusted code or be emitted in stack traces that are
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# inadvertently disclosed and made accessible over a public network.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The categories are:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#  hostInfo - IOExceptions thrown by java.net.Socket and the socket types in the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#             java.nio.channels package will contain enhanced exception
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#             message information
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#  jar      - enables more detailed information in the IOExceptions thrown
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#             by classes in the java.util.jar package
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The property setting in this file can be overridden by a system property of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# the same name, with the same syntax and possible values.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#jdk.includeInExceptions=hostInfo,jar
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Disabled mechanisms for the Simple Authentication and Security Layer (SASL)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Disabled mechanisms will not be negotiated by both SASL clients and servers.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# These mechanisms will be ignored if they are specified in the "mechanisms"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# argument of "Sasl.createSaslClient" or the "mechanism" argument of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# "Sasl.createSaslServer".
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The value of this property is a comma-separated list of SASL mechanisms.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The mechanisms are case-sensitive. Whitespaces around the commas are ignored.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: This property is currently used by the JDK Reference implementation.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# It is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Example:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   jdk.sasl.disabledMechanisms=PLAIN, CRAM-MD5, DIGEST-MD5
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								jdk.sasl.disabledMechanisms=
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Policies for distrusting Certificate Authorities (CAs).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# This is a comma separated value of one or more case-sensitive strings, each
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# of which represents a policy for determining if a CA should be distrusted.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The supported values are:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   SYMANTEC_TLS : Distrust TLS Server certificates anchored by a Symantec
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   root CA and issued after April 16, 2019 unless issued by one of the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#   following subordinate CAs which have a later distrust date:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#     1. Apple IST CA 2 - G1, SHA-256 fingerprint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#        AC2B922ECFD5E01711772FEA8ED372DE9D1E2245FCE3F57A9CDBEC77296A424B
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#        Distrust after December 31, 2019.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#     2. Apple IST CA 8 - G1, SHA-256 fingerprint:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#        A4FE7C7F15155F3F0AEF7AAA83CF6E06DEB97CA3F909DF920AC1490882D488ED
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#        Distrust after December 31, 2019.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Leading and trailing whitespace surrounding each value are ignored.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Unknown values are ignored. If the property is commented out or set to the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# empty String, no policies are enforced.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: This property is currently used by the JDK Reference implementation.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# It is not guaranteed to be supported by other SE implementations. Also, this
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# property does not override other security properties which can restrict
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# certificates such as jdk.tls.disabledAlgorithms or
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# jdk.certpath.disabledAlgorithms; those restrictions are still enforced even
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# if this property is not enabled.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								jdk.security.caDistrustPolicies=SYMANTEC_TLS
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# FilePermission path canonicalization
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# This security property dictates how the path argument is processed and stored
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# while constructing a FilePermission object. If the value is set to true, the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# path argument is canonicalized and FilePermission methods (such as implies,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# equals, and hashCode) are implemented based on this canonicalized result.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Otherwise, the path argument is not canonicalized and FilePermission methods are
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# implemented based on the original input. See the implementation note of the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# FilePermission class for more details.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If a system property of the same name is also specified, it supersedes the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# security property value defined here.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The default value for this property is false.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								jdk.io.permissionsUseCanonicalPath=false
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Policies for the proxy_impersonator Kerberos ccache configuration entry
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The proxy_impersonator ccache configuration entry indicates that the ccache
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# is a synthetic delegated credential for use with S4U2Proxy by an intermediate
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# server. The ccache file should also contain the TGT of this server and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# an evidence ticket from the default principal of the ccache to this server.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# This security property determines how Java uses this configuration entry.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# There are 3 possible values:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#  no-impersonate     - Ignore this configuration entry, and always act as
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#                       the owner of the TGT (if it exists).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#  try-impersonate    - Try impersonation when this configuration entry exists.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#                       If no matching TGT or evidence ticket is found,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#                       fallback to no-impersonate.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#  always-impersonate - Always impersonate when this configuration entry exists.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#                       If no matching TGT or evidence ticket is found,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#                       no initial credential is read from the ccache.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The default value is "always-impersonate".
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If a system property of the same name is also specified, it supersedes the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# security property value defined here.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#jdk.security.krb5.default.initiate.credential=always-impersonate
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Trust Anchor Certificates - CA Basic Constraint check
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# X.509 v3 certificates used as Trust Anchors (to validate signed code or TLS
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# connections) must have the cA Basic Constraint field set to 'true'. Also, if
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# they include a Key Usage extension, the keyCertSign bit must be set. These
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# checks, enabled by default, can be disabled for backward-compatibility
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# purposes with the jdk.security.allowNonCaAnchor System and Security
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# properties. In the case that both properties are simultaneously set, the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# System value prevails. The default value of the property is "false".
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#jdk.security.allowNonCaAnchor=true
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The default Character set name (java.nio.charset.Charset.forName())
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# for converting TLS ALPN values between byte arrays and Strings.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Prior versions of the JDK may use UTF-8 as the default charset. If
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# you experience interoperability issues, setting this property to UTF-8
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# may help.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# jdk.tls.alpnCharset=UTF-8
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								jdk.tls.alpnCharset=ISO_8859_1
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# JNDI Object Factories Filter
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# This filter is used by the JNDI runtime to control the set of object factory classes
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# which will be allowed to instantiate objects from object references returned by
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# naming/directory systems. The factory class named by the reference instance will be
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# matched against this filter. The filter property supports pattern-based filter syntax
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# with the same format as jdk.serialFilter.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Each pattern is matched against the factory class name to allow or disallow it's
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# instantiation. The access to a factory class is allowed unless the filter returns
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# REJECTED.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Note: This property is currently used by the JDK Reference implementation.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# It is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the system property jdk.jndi.object.factoriesFilter is also specified, it supersedes
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# the security property value defined here. The default value of the property is "*".
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The default pattern value allows any object factory class specified by the reference
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# instance to recreate the referenced object.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#jdk.jndi.object.factoriesFilter=*
							 |