public final class SNIHostName extends SNIServerName
host_name in a Server Name Indication (SNI) extension.
As described in section 3, "Server Name Indication", of TLS Extensions (RFC 6066), "HostName" contains the fully qualified DNS hostname of the server, as understood by the client. The encoded server name value of a hostname is represented as a byte string using ASCII encoding without a trailing dot. This allows the support of Internationalized Domain Names (IDN) through the use of A-labels (the ASCII-Compatible Encoding (ACE) form of a valid string of Internationalized Domain Names for Applications (IDNA)) defined in RFC 5890.
Note that SNIHostName objects are immutable.
SNIServerName,
StandardConstants.SNI_HOST_NAME
| Constructor and Description |
|---|
SNIHostName(byte[] encoded)
Creates an
SNIHostName using the specified encoded value.
|
SNIHostName(String
Creates an
SNIHostName using the specified hostname.
|
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
static SNIMatcher |
createSNIMatcher(String
Creates an
SNIMatcher object for
SNIHostNames.
|
boolean |
equals(Object
Compares this server name to the specified object.
|
String |
getAsciiName()
Returns the
StandardCharsets-compliant hostname of this
SNIHostName object.
|
int |
hashCode()
Returns a hash code value for this
SNIHostName.
|
String |
toString()
Returns a string representation of the object, including the DNS hostname in this
SNIHostName object.
|
getEncoded, getTypepublic SNIHostName(Stringhostname)
SNIHostName using the specified hostname.
Note that per RFC 6066, the encoded server name value of a hostname is StandardCharsets-compliant. In this method, hostname can be a user-friendly Internationalized Domain Name (IDN). IDN is used to enforce the restrictions on ASCII characters in hostnames (see RFC 3490, RFC 1122, RFC 1123) and translate the hostname into ASCII Compatible Encoding (ACE), as:
IDN.toASCII(hostname, IDN.USE_STD3_ASCII_RULES);
The hostname argument is illegal if it:
hostname is empty,hostname ends with a trailing dot,hostname is not a valid Internationalized Domain Name (IDN) compliant with the RFC 3490 specification.hostname - the hostname of this server name
NullPointerException - if
hostname is
null
IllegalArgumentException - if
hostname is illegal
public SNIHostName(byte[] encoded)
SNIHostName using the specified encoded value.
This method is normally used to parse the encoded name value in a requested SNI extension.
Per RFC 6066, the encoded name value of a hostname is StandardCharsets-compliant. However, in the previous version of the SNI extension ( RFC 4366), the encoded hostname is represented as a byte string using UTF-8 encoding. For the purpose of version tolerance, this method allows that the charset of encoded argument can be StandardCharsets, as well as StandardCharsets. IDN is used to translate the encoded argument into ASCII Compatible Encoding (ACE) hostname.
It is strongly recommended that this constructor is only used to parse the encoded name value in a requested SNI extension. Otherwise, to comply with RFC 6066, please always use StandardCharsets-compliant charset and enforce the restrictions on ASCII characters in hostnames (see RFC 3490, RFC 1122, RFC 1123) for encoded argument, or use SNIHostName(String) instead.
The encoded argument is illegal if it:
encoded is empty,encoded ends with a trailing dot,encoded is not encoded in StandardCharsets.US_ASCII or StandardCharsets.UTF_8 -compliant charset,encoded is not a valid Internationalized Domain Name (IDN) compliant with the RFC 3490 specification. Note that the encoded byte array is cloned to protect against subsequent modification.
encoded - the encoded hostname of this server name
NullPointerException - if
encoded is
null
IllegalArgumentException - if
encoded is illegal
public StringgetAsciiName()
StandardCharsets.US_ASCII -compliant hostname of this
SNIHostName object.
Note that, per RFC 6066, the returned hostname may be an internationalized domain name that contains A-labels. See RFC 5890 for more information about the detailed A-label specification.
StandardCharsets.US_ASCII -compliant hostname of this
SNIHostName object
public boolean equals(Objectother)
Per RFC 6066, DNS hostnames are case-insensitive. Two server hostnames are equal if, and only if, they have the same name type, and the hostnames are equal in a case-independent comparison.
equals in class
SNIServerName
other - the other server name object to compare with.
other is considered equal to this instance
Object.hashCode() ,
HashMap
public int hashCode()
SNIHostName.
The hash code value is generated using the case-insensitive hostname of this SNIHostName.
hashCode in class
SNIServerName
SNIHostName.
Object.equals(java.lang.Object) ,
System.identityHashCode(java.lang.Object)
public StringtoString()
SNIHostName object.
The exact details of the representation are unspecified and subject to change, but the following may be regarded as typical:
"type=host_name (0), value=
"
The "
"type=host_name (0), value=www.example.com"
or
"type=host_name (0), value=xn--fsqu00a.xn--0zwm56d"
Please NOTE that the exact details of the representation are unspecified and subject to change.
toString in class
SNIServerName
public static SNIMatchercreateSNIMatcher(String regex)
SNIMatcher object for
SNIHostNames.
This method can be used by a server to verify the acceptable SNIHostNames. For example,
SNIMatcher matcher =
SNIHostName.createSNIMatcher("www\\.example\\.com");
will accept the hostname "www.example.com".
SNIMatcher matcher =
SNIHostName.createSNIMatcher("www\\.example\\.(com|org)");
will accept hostnames "www.example.com" and "www.example.org".
regex - the
regular expression pattern representing the hostname(s) to match
SNIMatcher object for
SNIHostNames
NullPointerException - if
regex is
null
PatternSyntaxException - if the regular expression's syntax is invalid