I believe that it's all controlled by the security policy settings on the local
machine. Untrusted applets (by default all applets are untrusted) are only allowed to
make connections back to the host from which they were loaded as stated below. To get
around that, the applets should be signed, and the appropriate grant entries made into
the local policy files.
But be aware that this is all much easier said than done. Depending on
the version of the browser, it may or may not support the Java 2 API. The original
question was re: an applet running on internet explorer, but if in reality that was
just a particular instance and the applet must really run on both ie and netscape,
they each have their own browser-specific extensions to the JDK, in which case you
need to deal with each vendor's product differently, or make sure everybody is using
the Java plug-in.
-- Rob
--On Wednesday, March 21, 2001 08:38:45 AM +0100 Herchel Wojciech
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> i think applets are only allowed to connect back to the server they
> originate from. this might be the problem, or better, consult JDBC
> faq from www.jguru.com
>
> vVolf
>
>
>> -----Oryginalna wiadomooeæ-----
>> Od: Sunny SJ [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>> Wys³ano: 21 marca 2001 04:19
>> Do: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> Temat: Security Policy problem
>>
>>
>> I am creating a Java Applet (running on Internet Explorer web
>> browser) that
>> can access a database located in a remote machine (server).
>> The connection to
>> the remote database is established using JDBC-ODBC bridge. However,
>> I encounter java security problem that restricted me to access the
>> database
>> across the network. Is there anyway I can overcome this problem?
>>
>> Thanks for your help
>> SSJ
>>
>> ____________________________________________________________________
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_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
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Rob Tanner
McMinnville, Oregon
[EMAIL PROTECTED]