Java in a Nutshell, 5th Edition [Electronic resources]

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As its name implies, the java.security.interfaces package contains only interfaces. These interfaces define methods that provide algorithm-specific information (such as key values and initialization parameter values) about DSA, RSA, and EC public and private keys. If you are using the RSA algorithm, for example, and working with a java.security.PublicKey object, you can cast that PublicKey to an RSAPublicKey object and use the RSA-specific methods defined by RSAPublicKey to query the key value directly.

The java.security.interfaces package was introduced in Java 1.1. As of Java 1.2, the java.security.spec package is the preferred way for obtaining algorithm-specific information about keys and algorithm parameters. This package remains useful in Java 1.2 and later, however, for identifying the type of a given PublicKey or PrivateKey object.

The interfaces in this package are typically of interest only to programmers who are implementing a security provider or who want to implement cryptographic algorithms themselves. Use of this package typically requires some familiarity with the mathematics underlying DSA and RSA public-key cryptography.

Interfaces

public interface 

DSAKey ; public interface

DSAKeyPairGenerator ; public interface

DSAParams ; public interface

DSAPrivateKey extends DSAKey, java.security.PrivateKey; public interface

DSAPublicKey extends DSAKey, java.security.PublicKey; public interface

ECKey ; public interface

ECPrivateKey extends ECKey, java.security.PrivateKey; public interface

ECPublicKey extends ECKey, java.security.PublicKey; public interface

RSAKey ; public interface

RSAMultiPrimePrivateCrtKey extends RSAPrivateKey; public interface

RSAPrivateCrtKey extends RSAPrivateKey; public interface

RSAPrivateKey extends java.security.PrivateKey, RSAKey; public interface

RSAPublicKey extends java.security.PublicKey, RSAKey;