# # This is the "master security properties file". # # An alternate java.security properties file may be specified # from the command line via the system property # # -Djava.security.properties=<URL> # # This properties file appends to the master security properties file. # If both properties files specify values for the same key, the value # from the command-line properties file is selected, as it is the last # one loaded. # # Also, if you specify # # -Djava.security.properties==<URL> (2 equals), # # then that properties file completely overrides the master security # properties file. # # To disable the ability to specify an additional properties file from # the command line, set the key security.overridePropertiesFile # to false in the master security properties file. It is set to true # by default. # In this file, various security properties are set for use by # java.security classes. This is where users can statically register # Cryptography Package Providers ("providers" for short). The term # "provider" refers to a package or set of packages that supply a # concrete implementation of a subset of the cryptography aspects of # the Java Security API. A provider may, for example, implement one or # more digital signature algorithms or message digest algorithms. # # Each provider must implement a subclass of the Provider class. # To register a provider in this master security properties file, # specify the provider and priority in the format # # security.provider.<n>=<provName | className> # # This declares a provider, and specifies its preference # order n. The preference order is the order in which providers are # searched for requested algorithms (when no specific provider is # requested). The order is 1-based; 1 is the most preferred, followed # by 2, and so on. # # <provName> must specify the name of the Provider as passed to its super # class java.security.Provider constructor. This is for providers loaded # through the ServiceLoader mechanism. # # <className> must specify the subclass of the Provider class whose # constructor sets the values of various properties that are required # for the Java Security API to look up the algorithms or other # facilities implemented by the provider. This is for providers loaded # through classpath. # # Note: Providers can be dynamically registered instead by calls to # either the addProvider or insertProviderAt method in the Security # class. # # List of providers and their preference orders (see above): # security.provider.1=SUN security.provider.2=SunRsaSign security.provider.3=SunEC security.provider.4=SunJSSE security.provider.5=SunJCE security.provider.6=SunJGSS security.provider.7=SunSASL security.provider.8=XMLDSig security.provider.9=SunPCSC security.provider.10=JdkLDAP security.provider.11=JdkSASL security.provider.12=SunPKCS11 # # A list of preferred providers for specific algorithms. These providers will # be searched for matching algorithms before the list of registered providers. # Entries containing errors (parsing, etc) will be ignored. Use the # -Djava.security.debug=jca property to debug these errors. # # The property is a comma-separated list of serviceType.algorithm:provider # entries. The serviceType (example: "MessageDigest") is optional, and if # not specified, the algorithm applies to all service types that support it. # The algorithm is the standard algorithm name or transformation. # Transformations can be specified in their full standard name # (ex: AES/CBC/PKCS5Padding), or as partial matches (ex: AES, AES/CBC). # The provider is the name of the provider. Any provider that does not # also appear in the registered list will be ignored. # # There is a special serviceType for this property only to group a set of # algorithms together. The type is "Group" and is followed by an algorithm # keyword. Groups are to simplify and lessen the entries on the property # line. Current groups are: # Group.SHA2 = SHA-224, SHA-256, SHA-384, SHA-512, SHA-512/224, SHA-512/256 # Group.HmacSHA2 = HmacSHA224, HmacSHA256, HmacSHA384, HmacSHA512 # Group.SHA2RSA = SHA224withRSA, SHA256withRSA, SHA384withRSA, SHA512withRSA # Group.SHA2DSA = SHA224withDSA, SHA256withDSA, SHA384withDSA, SHA512withDSA # Group.SHA2ECDSA = SHA224withECDSA, SHA256withECDSA, SHA384withECDSA, \ # SHA512withECDSA # Group.SHA3 = SHA3-224, SHA3-256, SHA3-384, SHA3-512 # Group.HmacSHA3 = HmacSHA3-224, HmacSHA3-256, HmacSHA3-384, HmacSHA3-512 # # Example: # jdk.security.provider.preferred=AES/GCM/NoPadding:SunJCE, \ # MessageDigest.SHA-256:SUN, Group.HmacSHA2:SunJCE # #jdk.security.provider.preferred= # # Sun Provider SecureRandom seed source. # # Select the primary source of seed data for the "NativePRNG", "SHA1PRNG" # and "DRBG" SecureRandom implementations in the "Sun" provider. # (Other SecureRandom implementations might also use this property.) # # On Unix-like systems (for example, Solaris/Linux/MacOS), the # "NativePRNG", "SHA1PRNG" and "DRBG" implementations obtains seed data from # special device files such as file:/dev/random. # # On Windows systems, specifying the URLs "file:/dev/random" or # "file:/dev/urandom" will enable the native Microsoft CryptoAPI seeding # mechanism for SHA1PRNG and DRBG. # # By default, an attempt is made to use the entropy gathering device # specified by the "securerandom.source" Security property. If an # exception occurs while accessing the specified URL: # # NativePRNG: # a default value of /dev/random will be used. If neither # are available, the implementation will be disabled. # "file" is the only currently supported protocol type. # # SHA1PRNG and DRBG: # the traditional system/thread activity algorithm will be used. # # The entropy gathering device can also be specified with the System # property "java.security.egd". For example: # # % java -Djava.security.egd=file:/dev/random MainClass # # Specifying this System property will override the # "securerandom.source" Security property. # # In addition, if "file:/dev/random" or "file:/dev/urandom" is # specified, the "NativePRNG" implementation will be more preferred than # DRBG and SHA1PRNG in the Sun provider. # securerandom.source=file:/dev/random # # A list of known strong SecureRandom implementations. # # To help guide applications in selecting a suitable strong # java.security.SecureRandom implementation, Java distributions should # indicate a list of known strong implementations using the property. # # This is a comma-separated list of algorithm and/or algorithm:provider # entries. # securerandom.strongAlgorithms=NativePRNGBlocking:SUN,DRBG:SUN # # Sun provider DRBG configuration and default instantiation request. # # NIST SP 800-90Ar1 lists several DRBG mechanisms. Each can be configured # with a DRBG algorithm name, and can be instantiated with a security strength, # prediction resistance support, etc. This property defines the configuration # and the default instantiation request of "DRBG" SecureRandom implementations # in the SUN provider. (Other DRBG implementations can also use this property.) # Applications can request different instantiation parameters like security # strength, capability, personalization string using one of the # getInstance(...,SecureRandomParameters,...) methods with a # DrbgParameters.Instantiation argument, but other settings such as the # mechanism and DRBG algorithm names are not currently configurable by any API. # # Please note that the SUN implementation of DRBG always supports reseeding. # # The value of this property is a comma-separated list of all configurable # aspects. The aspects can appear in any order but the same aspect can only # appear at most once. Its BNF-style definition is: # # Value: # aspect { "," aspect } # # aspect: # mech_name | algorithm_name | strength | capability | df # # // The DRBG mechanism to use. Default "Hash_DRBG" # mech_name: # "Hash_DRBG" | "HMAC_DRBG" | "CTR_DRBG" # # // The DRBG algorithm name. The "SHA-***" names are for Hash_DRBG and # // HMAC_DRBG, default "SHA-256". The "AES-***" names are for CTR_DRBG, # // default "AES-128" when using the limited cryptographic or "AES-256" # // when using the unlimited. # algorithm_name: # "SHA-224" | "SHA-512/224" | "SHA-256" | # "SHA-512/256" | "SHA-384" | "SHA-512" | # "AES-128" | "AES-192" | "AES-256" # # // Security strength requested. Default "128" # strength: # "112" | "128" | "192" | "256" # # // Prediction resistance and reseeding request. Default "none" # // "pr_and_reseed" - Both prediction resistance and reseeding # // support requested # // "reseed_only" - Only reseeding support requested # // "none" - Neither prediction resistance not reseeding # // support requested # pr: # "pr_and_reseed" | "reseed_only" | "none" # # // Whether a derivation function should be used. only applicable # // to CTR_DRBG. Default "use_df" # df: # "use_df" | "no_df" # # Examples, # securerandom.drbg.config=Hash_DRBG,SHA-224,112,none # securerandom.drbg.config=CTR_DRBG,AES-256,192,pr_and_reseed,use_df # # The default value is an empty string, which is equivalent to # securerandom.drbg.config=Hash_DRBG,SHA-256,128,none # securerandom.drbg.config= # # Class to instantiate as the javax.security.auth.login.Configuration # provider. # 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:${user.home}/.java.policy # whether or not we expand properties in the policy file # if this is set to false, properties (${...}) will not be expanded in policy # files. # policy.expandProperties=true # whether or not we allow an extra policy to be passed on the command line # with -Djava.security.policy=somefile. Comment out this line to disable # this feature. # 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 blacklist and accessed less often for future requests. The # value (case-insensitive) for this policy can be: # # tryLast # KDCs in the blacklist are always tried after those not on the list. # # tryLess[:max_retries,timeout] # KDCs in the blacklist 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 notes that if any of the values defined here is # more than what is defined in krb5.conf, it will be ignored. # # Whenever a KDC is detected as available, it is removed from the blacklist. # The blacklist 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 # # 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 } # # 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] # # The "AlgorithmName" is the standard algorithm name of the disabled # algorithm. See "Java Cryptography Architecture Standard Algorithm Name # Documentation" 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". # # 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 # # 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 # # 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, 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 jdk.tls.disabledAlgorithms=SSLv3, RC4, MD5withRSA, DH keySize < 1024, \ EC keySize < 224 # 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 "Java Cryptography Architecture Standard # Algorithm Name Documentation" 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= \ K_NULL, C_NULL, M_NULL, \ DHE_DSS_EXPORT, DHE_RSA_EXPORT, DH_anon_EXPORT, DH_DSS_EXPORT, \ DH_RSA_EXPORT, RSA_EXPORT, \ DH_anon, ECDH_anon, \ RC4_128, RC4_40, DES_CBC, DES40_CBC, \ 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} # Cryptographic Jurisdiction Policy defaults # # Due to the import control restrictions of some countries, the default # JCE policy files allow for strong but "limited" cryptographic key # lengths to be used. If your country's cryptographic regulations allow, # the "unlimited" strength policy files can be used instead, which contain # no restrictions on cryptographic strengths. # # If your country has restrictions that don't fit either "limited" or # "unlimited", an appropriate set of policy files should be created and # configured before using this distribution. The jurisdiction policy file # configuration must reflect the cryptographic restrictions appropriate # for your country. # # YOU ARE ADVISED TO CONSULT YOUR EXPORT/IMPORT CONTROL COUNSEL OR ATTORNEY # TO DETERMINE THE EXACT REQUIREMENTS. # # The policy files are flat text files organized into subdirectories of # <java-home>/conf/security/policy. Each directory contains a complete # set of policy files. # # The "crypto.policy" Security property controls the directory selection, # and thus the effective cryptographic policy. # # The default set of directories is: # # limited | unlimited # # however other directories can be created and configured. # # Within a directory, the effective policy is the combined minimum # permissions of the grant statements in the file(s) with the filename # pattern "default_*.policy". At least one grant is required. For # example: # # limited = Export (all) + Import (limited) = Limited # unlimited = Export (all) + Import (all) = Unlimited # # The effective exemption policy is the combined minimum permissions # of the grant statements in the file(s) with the filename pattern # "exempt_*.policy". Exemption grants are optional. # # limited = grants exemption permissions, by which the # effective policy can be circumvented. # e.g. KeyRecovery/Escrow/Weakening. # # Please see the JCA documentation for additional information on these # files and formats. # # 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. The mode is # enabled by setting the property "org.jcp.xml.dsig.secureValidation" to # true with the javax.xml.crypto.XMLCryptoContext.setProperty() method, # or by running the code with a SecurityManager. # # 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,\ maxTransforms 5,\ maxReferences 30,\ disallowReferenceUriSchemes file http https,\ minKeySize RSA 1024,\ minKeySize DSA 1024,\ noDuplicateIds,\ noRetrievalMethodLoops # # Serialization process-wide filter # # A filter, if configured, is 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 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. # # Note: This property is currently used by the JDK Reference implementation. # It is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations. # #sun.rmi.registry.registryFilter=pattern;pattern # # 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