An exception indicating one of a variety of problems retrieving
certificates and CRLs from a CertStore
.
A CertStoreException
provides support for wrapping
exceptions. The getCause
method returns the throwable,
if any, that caused this exception to be thrown.
Concurrent Access
Unless otherwise specified, the methods defined in this class are not thread-safe. Multiple threads that need to access a single object concurrently should synchronize amongst themselves and provide the necessary locking. Multiple threads each manipulating separate objects need not synchronize.
See Also
Public Constructor Summary
CertStoreException()
Creates a
CertStoreException with null as
its detail message. |
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CertStoreException(Throwable cause)
Creates a
CertStoreException that wraps the specified
throwable. |
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CertStoreException(String msg, Throwable cause)
Creates a
CertStoreException with the specified detail
message and cause. |
Inherited Method Summary
Public Constructors
public CertStoreException ()
Creates a CertStoreException
with null
as
its detail message.
public CertStoreException (String msg)
Creates a CertStoreException
with the given detail
message. A detail message is a String
that describes this
particular exception.
Parameters
msg | the detail message |
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public CertStoreException (Throwable cause)
Creates a CertStoreException
that wraps the specified
throwable. This allows any exception to be converted into a
CertStoreException
, while retaining information about the
cause, which may be useful for debugging. The detail message is
set to (cause==null ? null : cause.toString()
) (which
typically contains the class and detail message of cause).
Parameters
cause | the cause (which is saved for later retrieval by the
getCause() method). (A null value is
permitted, and indicates that the cause is nonexistent or unknown.)
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public CertStoreException (String msg, Throwable cause)
Creates a CertStoreException
with the specified detail
message and cause.
Parameters
msg | the detail message |
---|---|
cause | the cause (which is saved for later retrieval by the
getCause() method). (A null value is
permitted, and indicates that the cause is nonexistent or unknown.)
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