Hi,
If this were java.base, we would use doPrivilege to ignore the policy
and place specific limits.
Encumbering the default policy with conditions needed by a trusted
subsystem seems
like distributing what should be a local implementation issue.
$.02, Roger
On 6/20/19 2:23 AM, Mandy Chung wrote:
Hi Vladimir,
Indeed these are test issues that the tests will need to grant
permissions
to jdk.internal.vm.compiler as the default policy grants.
Thanks for going extra miles to fix the tests.
My suggestion may be a bit general. What I intend to say the custom
security policy should extend the default policy unless it intentionally
excludes configuring permissions for specific modules. I review the
the patch but the test doesn't clearly tell what the test intends to
do w.r.t. security configuration.
We should avoid inadvertently granting permissions that the test expects
to disallow. A better solution is to limit granting permissions just for
`jdk.internal.vm.compiler` module rather than all.
Attached is ModulePolicy class that allows you to get the Policy for
a specific module. It can be put in the test library that these tests
can use them.
So the test can call ModulePolicy.get("jdk.internal.vm.compiler") and
implies method will call the returned ModulePolicy if present.
test/lib/jdk/test/lib/security is one existing testlibrary for security
related stuff. You can consider putting ModulePolicy.java there.
This is one idea.
Mandy
On 6/19/19 6:03 PM, Vladimir Kozlov wrote:
http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~kvn/8185139/webrev.00/
https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8185139
For Graal to work we have to give Graal module all permissions which
is specified in default policy [1].
Unfortunately this cause problem for Graal running tests which
overwrite default policy.
I discussed this with Mandy and she suggested that such tests should
also check default policy. I implemented her suggestion. Note, this
is not only Graal problem. There were already similar fixes before [2].
I also updated Graal's problem list. Several tests were left on
problem list (with different bug id) because they would not run with
Java Graal (for example, they use --limit-modules flag which prevents
loading Graal module). We will enable such tests again when libgraal
is supported.
I ran testing which execute these tests with Graal. It shows only
known problems which are not related to these changes.
Thanks,
Vladimir
[1]
http://hg.openjdk.java.net/jdk/jdk/file/49ed5e31fe1e/src/java.base/share/lib/security/default.policy#l156
[2] https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8189291