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Deploying RSA-Signed Applets in Java Plug-in

Java Rich Internet Applications Guide > Security > Deploying RSA-Signed Applets in Java Plug-in

The following topics are covered:

How to Deploy RSA Signed Applets

To deploy RSA signed applets:

  1. Reference the JAR from the HTML page using archive, cache_archive, or cache_archive_ex format.
  2. Place the JAR file and HTML page on the web server.

When users of Java Plug-in encounter an RSA signed applet, the Plug-in will verify whether:

  1. The applet is correctly signed
  2. The RSA certificate chain and root CA are valid

If the applet is correctly signed and the RSA certificate chain and root CA are valid, the Plug-in will pop-up a security dialog telling the user and providing four options:

  1. Grant always: If selected, the applet will be granted the AllPermission permission. Any applet signed with the same certificate will be trusted automatically in the future, and no security dialog will pop up when the certificate is encountered again. This option selection can be changed from the Java Control Panel.
  2. Grant this session: If selected, the applet will be granted the AllPermission permission. Any applet signed with the same certificate will be trusted automatically within the same browser session.
  3. Deny: If selected, the applet will be treated as untrusted.
  4. View Issuer: If selected, the user can examine the attributes of each certificate in the certificate chain in the JAR file.

Once the user selects the options from the security dialog, the applet will be run in the corresponding security context. Note that all options are selected on the fly; no preconfiguration is required.

Certificate Management

The Certificates dialog from the Java Control Panel manages RSA signed applets. (Access this dialog from the Security panel.) The Certificates dialog contains a list of certificates that received "Grant always" permission when the Java Plug-in security dialog (pop-up) ran. Users can remove any certificate from the list, and if an applet signed by a removed certificates is encountered again, a security dialog pop-up will appear asking for permission. Users can also export and view certificates through the Java Control Panel.

Disabling RSA Signed Applet Support

RSA signed applets can be entirely disabled in Java Plug-in by specifying the usePolicy permission in the policy file. If the usePolicy permission is among the permissions granted to the given codesource (by the configured security policy), user prompting will not take place, and only permissions specified in the security policy will be granted to the codesource. By default, RSA signed applets are enabled in the Java Plug-in.


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