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The KSC SDK for Java - Core module holds the classes that is used by the individual service clients to interact with KSC Web Services. Users need to depend on KSC-java-sdk artifact for accessing individual client classes.

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/*
 * Copyright 2010-2016 ksyun.com, Inc. or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved.
 *
 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License").
 * You may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
 * A copy of the License is located at
 *
 *  http://ksyun.com/apache2.0
 *
 * or in the "license" file accompanying this file. This file is distributed
 * on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either
 * express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing
 * permissions and limitations under the License.
 */
package com.ksc.auth.policy;

import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.Collection;
import java.util.HashSet;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Set;

import com.ksc.auth.policy.internal.JsonPolicyReader;
import com.ksc.auth.policy.internal.JsonPolicyWriter;

/**
 * An AWS access control policy is a object that acts as a container for one or
 * more statements, which specify fine grained rules for allowing or denying
 * various types of actions from being performed on your AWS resources.
 * 

* By default, all requests to use your resource coming from anyone but you are * denied. Access control polices can override that by allowing different types * of access to your resources, or by explicitly denying different types of * access. *

* Each statement in an AWS access control policy takes the form: * "A has permission to do B to C where D applies". *

    *
  • A is the principal - the AWS account that is making a request to * access or modify one of your AWS resources. *
  • B is the action - the way in which your AWS resource is being accessed or modified, such * as sending a message to an Amazon SQS queue, or storing an object in an Amazon S3 bucket. *
  • C is the resource - your AWS entity that the principal wants to access, such * as an Amazon SQS queue, or an object stored in Amazon S3. *
  • D is the set of conditions - optional constraints that specify when to allow or deny * access for the principal to access your resource. Many expressive conditions are available, * some specific to each service. For example you can use date conditions to allow access to * your resources only after or before a specific time. *
*

* Note that an AWS access control policy should not be confused with the * similarly named "POST form policy" concept used in Amazon S3. */ public class Policy { /** The default policy version */ private static final String DEFAULT_POLICY_VERSION = "2012-10-17"; private String id; private String version = DEFAULT_POLICY_VERSION; private List statements = new ArrayList(); /** * Constructs an empty AWS access control policy ready to be populated with * statements. */ public Policy() {} /** * Constructs a new AWS access control policy with the specified policy ID. * The policy ID is a user specified string that serves to help developers * keep track of multiple polices. Policy IDs are often used as a human * readable name for a policy. * * @param id * The policy ID for the new policy object. Policy IDs serve to * help developers keep track of multiple policies, and are often * used to give the policy a meaningful, human readable name. */ public Policy(String id) { this.id = id; } /** * Constructs a new AWS access control policy with the specified policy ID * and collection of statements. The policy ID is a user specified string * that serves to help developers keep track of multiple polices. Policy IDs * are often used as a human readable name for a policy. *

* Any statements that don't have a statement ID yet will automatically be * assigned a unique ID within this policy. * * @param id * The policy ID for the new policy object. Policy IDs serve to * help developers keep track of multiple policies, and are often * used to give the policy a meaningful, human readable name. * @param statements * The statements to include in the new policy. */ public Policy(String id, Collection statements) { this(id); setStatements(statements); } /** * Returns the policy ID for this policy. Policy IDs serve to help * developers keep track of multiple policies, and are often used as human * readable name for a policy. * * @return The policy ID for this policy. */ public String getId() { return id; } /** * Sets the policy ID for this policy. Policy IDs serve to help developers * keep track of multiple policies, and are often used as human readable * name for a policy. * * @param id * The policy ID for this policy. */ public void setId(String id) { this.id = id; } /** * Sets the policy ID for this policy and returns the updated policy so that * multiple calls can be chained together. *

* Policy IDs serve to help developers keep track of multiple policies, and * are often used as human readable name for a policy. * * @param id * The policy ID for this policy. * * @return The updated Policy object so that additional calls can be chained * together. */ public Policy withId(String id) { setId(id); return this; } /** * Returns the version of this AWS policy. * * @return The version of this AWS policy. */ public String getVersion() { return version; } /** * Returns the collection of statements contained by this policy. Individual * statements in a policy are what specify the rules that enable or disable * access to your AWS resources. * * @return The collection of statements contained by this policy. */ public Collection getStatements() { return statements; } /** * Sets the collection of statements contained by this policy. Individual * statements in a policy are what specify the rules that enable or disable * access to your AWS resources. *

* Any statements that don't have a statement ID yet will automatically be * assigned a unique ID within this policy. * * @param statements * The collection of statements included in this policy. */ public void setStatements(Collection statements) { this.statements = new ArrayList(statements); assignUniqueStatementIds(); } /** * Sets the collection of statements contained by this policy and returns * this policy object so that additional method calls can be chained * together. *

* Individual statements in a policy are what specify the rules that enable * or disable access to your AWS resources. *

* Any statements that don't have a statement ID yet will automatically be * assigned a unique ID within this policy. * * @param statements * The collection of statements included in this policy. * * @return The updated policy object, so that additional method calls can be * chained together. */ public Policy withStatements(Statement... statements) { setStatements(Arrays.asList(statements)); return this; } /** * Returns a JSON string representation of this AWS access control policy, * suitable to be sent to an AWS service as part of a request to set an * access control policy. * * @return A JSON string representation of this AWS access control policy. */ public String toJson() { return new JsonPolicyWriter().writePolicyToString(this); } /** * Returns an AWS access control policy object generated from JSON string. * * @param jsonString * The JSON string representation of this AWS access control policy. * * @return An AWS access control policy object. * * @throws IllegalArgumentException * If the specified JSON string is null or invalid and cannot be * converted to an AWS policy object. */ public static Policy fromJson(String jsonString) { return new JsonPolicyReader().createPolicyFromJsonString(jsonString); } private void assignUniqueStatementIds() { Set usedStatementIds = new HashSet(); for (Statement statement : statements) { if (statement.getId() != null) usedStatementIds.add(statement.getId()); } int counter = 0; for (Statement statement : statements) { if (statement.getId() != null) continue; while (usedStatementIds.contains(Integer.toString(++counter))); statement.setId(Integer.toString(counter)); } } }





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