public static class Provider.Service extends Object
Each service has a provider that offers the service, a type, an algorithm name, and the name of the class that implements the service. Optionally, it also includes a list of alternate algorithm names for this service (aliases) and attributes, which are a map of (name, value) String pairs.
This class defines the methods supportsParameter()
and newInstance()
which are used by the Java security framework when it searches for
suitable services and instantiates them. The valid arguments to those
methods depend on the type of service. For the service types defined
within Java SE, see the
Java Cryptography Architecture API Specification & Reference
for the valid values.
Note that components outside of Java SE can define additional types of
services and their behavior.
Instances of this class are immutable.
Constructor and Description |
---|
Service(Provider provider,
String type,
String algorithm,
String className,
List<String> aliases,
Map<String,String> attributes)
Construct a new service.
|
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
String |
getAlgorithm()
Return the name of the algorithm of this service.
|
String |
getAttribute(String name)
Return the value of the specified attribute or null if this
attribute is not set for this Service.
|
String |
getClassName()
Return the name of the class implementing this service.
|
Provider |
getProvider()
Return the Provider of this service.
|
String |
getType()
Get the type of this service.
|
Object |
newInstance(Object constructorParameter)
Return a new instance of the implementation described by this
service.
|
boolean |
supportsParameter(Object parameter)
Test whether this Service can use the specified parameter.
|
String |
toString()
Return a String representation of this service.
|
public Service(Provider provider, String type, String algorithm, String className, List<String> aliases, Map<String,String> attributes)
provider
- the provider that offers this servicetype
- the type of this servicealgorithm
- the algorithm nameclassName
- the name of the class implementing this servicealiases
- List of aliases or null if algorithm has no aliasesattributes
- Map of attributes or null if this implementation
has no attributesNullPointerException
- if provider, type, algorithm, or
className is nullpublic final String getType()
MessageDigest
.public final String getAlgorithm()
SHA-1
.public final Provider getProvider()
public final String getClassName()
public final String getAttribute(String name)
name
- the name of the requested attributeNullPointerException
- if name is nullpublic Object newInstance(Object constructorParameter) throws NoSuchAlgorithmException
The default implementation uses reflection to invoke the standard constructor for this type of service. Security providers can override this method to implement instantiation in a different way. For details and the values of constructorParameter that are valid for the various types of services see the Java Cryptography Architecture API Specification & Reference.
constructorParameter
- the value to pass to the constructor,
or null if this type of service does not use a constructorParameter.InvalidParameterException
- if the value of
constructorParameter is invalid for this type of service.NoSuchAlgorithmException
- if instantiation failed for
any other reason.public boolean supportsParameter(Object parameter)
The security provider framework uses this method with some types of services to quickly exclude non-matching implementations for consideration. Applications will typically not need to call it.
For details and the values of parameter that are valid for the various types of services see the top of this class and the Java Cryptography Architecture API Specification & Reference. Security providers can override it to implement their own test.
parameter
- the parameter to testInvalidParameterException
- if the value of parameter is
invalid for this type of service or if this method cannot be
used with this type of service Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
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