Why do you get access denied pages a lot in your app?
I would say a user shouldnt be abe to click on that link in the first
place. Only maybe when he tampers with it. But if you have session
pages that that shouldnt be a problem. (only bookmakrable pages where
a user has to first login for)

On 2/19/08, Warren <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Maurice,
>
> I was thinking about this "Access Denied" message problem I have been
> working on and thought up some features that might be useful in future
> releases. It would be nice to be able to configure "Access Denied" messages
> directly into the hive like this:
>
> grant principal com.scanman.security.authorization.ScanManPrincipal "ScanMan
> Receiving" "Principal Access Denied Message Here"
> {
>       permission ${ComponentPermission} "${RecvMenu}", "inherit, render, 
> enable",
> "Permission Access Denied Message Here";
> };
> grant principal com.scanman.security.authorization.ScanManPrincipal "ScanMan
> Ordering" "Principal Access Denied Message Here"
> {
>       permission ${ComponentPermission} "${OrderMenu}", "inherit, render,
> enable", "Permission Access Denied Message Here";
> };
>
> I believe you are following some kind of standard for how the hive is
> set-up, so I am not sure this would work. But anyway, you could then set-up
> the configuration of how these messages were used in the
> SwarmWebApplication. For Example, put them into the error queue, or take
> advantage of message resources, message keys and localization and so on. I
> ended up putting these messages into the error queue from MySwarmStrategy
> and it works great.
>
> I can't imagine that a feature like this would not be of some value to other
> users. My app has a lot of different levels of security and permissions that
> the Administrative user can configure within a separate "Point of Sale" app.
> Messages of this sort are valuable to a user so that security levels and
> permissions can be tweaked to best suit a companies policies. A simple
> "Access Denied" message gives little clue as to why access was denied.
>
> That's my two cents. Thanks for all the help you have given me. Your project
> surely deserves a lot of credit.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Warren Bell
>
>
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>

---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to