The java.security.AllPermission class grants all possible permissions to the caller. This facility was included for routine testing purposes to make it less cumbersome to deal with a multitude of permissions or for use when the code is completely trusted. It should never find place in production code.
Non-Compliant Code Example
This non-compliant example grants AllPermission to a library (klib). The permission itself is specified in the security policy file used by the SecurityManager. Alternatively, a permission object can be obtained in the code by subclassing the Permission class (or any subclass like BasicPermission) in the java.security package.
/* grant the klib library AllPermission */ grant codebase "file:${klib.home}/j2ee/home/klib.jar" { permission java.security.AllPermission; };
Compliant Solution
The policy file can be signed and made to provide more restrictive permissions.
grant codeBase "file:${klib.home}/j2ee/home/klib.jar", signedBy "Admin" { permission java.io.FilePermission "/tmp/*", "read"; permission java.io.SocketPermission "*", "connect"; };
Always assign appropriate permissions to code. This can be achieved by extending any of the permission classes. The solution below shows how to implement restrictive permissions within the code.
//security manager code perm = new java.io.FilePermission("/tmp/JavaFile","read"); //other code
References
Inside Java 2 Platform Security
Java documentation http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.4.2/docs/api/java/security/AllPermission.html
Java Documentation http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.4.2/docs/guide/security/spec/security-spec.doc3.html