Hi Richard,

>>The default policy file does not allow an applet to do much more than
>> >>open a connection the web server the class was downloaded from. If
>> >>you need to do anything else (like open a connection to an EJB) then
>> >>the client will have to change their policy. There is no way round
>> >>this - If there were, it would
>>defy the whole point of the policy which is to prevent untrusted code
>> >>from doing anything potentially damaging.

Which policy file you are talking about? On the server or on the client?
I understand about server. But why I have to change policy file on the
client? Applet do not access any files on the client.

>The next best thing would be to have an installer that the client can
>download and run. This could update the policy file to whatever you wanted.
My client don't want any players on his machine. Otherwise I would use
application+webstart.
Thanks
Anatole


>From: "Richard S.Martin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: "Anatole Kulick" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Subject: Re: Applet & JMS security
>Date: Tue, 26 Mar 2002 10:23:57 +0000
>
>The default policy file does not allow an applet to do much more than open
>a
>connection the web server the class was downloaded from. If you need to do
>anything else (like open a connection to an EJB) then the client will have
>to
>change their policy. There is no way round this - If there were, it would
>defy the whole point of the policy which is to prevent untrusted code from
>doing anything potentially damaging.
>
>The next best thing would be to have an installer that the client can
>download and run. This could update the policy file to whatever you wanted.
>
>
>On Saturday 23 March 2002 18:09 pm, you wrote:
> > Hi all!
> >
> > I developed an applet which allows communications between clients using
>JMS
> > in J2EE environment. Everything works fine, but to my surprise every
>client
> > have to change his .java.policy file. Why? My applet is in a sandbox.
> > Apparently JMS vendors are doing this and I tried several. How to avoid
> > changing  policy files on the client side? Any JMS experts here? I guess
> > the same thing will happen when applet will call EJB. Thanks.
> >
> > Anatole
> >
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