Permissions | 简单又强大的权限管理库,采用fragment中转,避免切换黑屏问题 | Authorization library
kandi X-RAY | Permissions Summary
kandi X-RAY | Permissions Summary
简单又强大的权限管理库,采用fragment中转,避免切换黑屏问题
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Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA
- On request permissions result
- Checks if permissions are allowed
- Checks whether the current application is marshalling
- Checks if the given activity is granted
- Initialize the activity
- Issue request
- Click method
- Request implementation
- Gets the RxPermissionsFragment if it exists
- Find RxPermissionsFragment
- Start application settings
- Compares this permission
- Check permission
- This method returns a hashCode of the name
- On create
- Override this method to handle the activity result code
Permissions Key Features
Permissions Examples and Code Snippets
@Override
public void onPermissionsDenied(int requestCode, List perms) {
Log.d(TAG, "onPermissionsDenied:" + requestCode + ":" + perms.size());
// (Optional) Check whether the user denied any permissions and checked "NEVER ASK AGAIN."
//
Community Discussions
Trending Discussions on Permissions
QUESTION
How to publish two messages of the same type to different worker instances based on the message content without using Send and RequestAddress?
My scenario is:
I am using Azure ServiceBus and Azure StorageTables.
I am running two different instances of the same worker service workera and workerb. I need workera and workerb to both consume messages of type Command based on the value of Command.WorkerPrefix.
the Command type looks like:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 23:37Using MassTransit with Azure Service Bus, I would suggest taking the message routing burden away from the publisher, and moving it to the consumer. By configuring the receive endpoint and using a subscription filter each instance would add its own subscription and use a message header to filter published messages.
On the publisher, a message header would be added:
QUESTION
This code receives information from an acquaintance you want to register in editText, and then clicks finButton to save the information you receive as a file called friendlist.txt. However, the Toast message is outputted from the try-catch statement that is currently performed when finButton is pressed. Also, the checkpermission does not work, which is wrapped in a try~catch statement, but does not have output on the logcat.
And manifest.
uses-permission android:name="android.permission.READ_EXTERNAL_STORAGE"
uses-permission android:name="android.permission.WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE"
is written.
Please let me know the solution. And this content is written with a translator, so the sentence can be strange.
when you press finButton, the logcat is shown below.
The code corresponding to the 116th line is this.
...FileOutputStream outstream = openFileOutput("friendList.txt", Activity.MODE_WORLD_WRITEABLE);
ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-16 at 01:47Try with Context.MODE_APPEND or Context.MODE_PRIVATE instead of Activity.MODE_WORLD_WRITEABLE
QUESTION
I have created a GCP service account with org viewer permissions (I assume therefore having read rights in all projects)
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 20:49The error messages states that the service account does not have the permission compute.disks.list
.
What permissions does the role roles/resourcemanager.organizationViewer
have?
QUESTION
I am trying to make a simple script that checks if the users ID is the one in the script.
But I can't seem to figure it out.
I hope you guys can help me.
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 19:17Just add them to an array and check if the current author's ID is in that array:
QUESTION
I have a table in SQL Server 2008 database hosted on a shared web hosting. I cannot change the collation of the database because I don't have permissions.
When I created the table, I set the collation for the columns that I want but it doesn't do anything and I still see ????
when I query the table. I tried nvarchar
as well and it didn't work.
The table:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Mar-25 at 20:05The problem is your INSERT
/UPDATE
statements. Unless you define those values as an nvarchar
then the characters outside the databases collation will be lost. This means you need to declare your parameters as an nvarchar
. As a result I would suggest, instead, not changing the collation of the columns and changing them as an nvarchar
and using an nvarchar
s throughout your code.
QUESTION
I'm developing an AWS Lambda function which will need to access an Outlook 365 inbox at a regular interval. I'm using Graph API for accessing the inbox.
I created a new Azure AD web application registration using the Azure Active Directory admin center.(https://aad.portal.azure.com/) When assigning API Permissions to my app, I have an option to choose between Delegated permissions and Application permissions. I can't use delegated permissions since my code will run without any user interaction.
When choosing application permissions, I can't find a way to restrict the permission to one user account. For example, if I try to give the app Mail.Read application permission, it'll get access to all mailboxes in the enterprise. Or maybe I'm interpreting the permission description incorrectly.
How do I give my app API permissions to one user's mailbox?
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Mar-25 at 08:20This issue was solved by Shiva's comment, add it as the answer to close the question:
Some apps call Microsoft Graph using their own identity and not on behalf of a user. For example, the Mail.Read application permission allows apps to read mail in all mailboxes without a signed-in user.
Configuring ApplicationAccessPolicy is used to limit the app access to a specific set of mailboxes.
1.Connect to Exchange Online PowerShell
QUESTION
I have users in a Cognito user pool, some of whom are in an Administrators
group. These administrators need to be allowed to read/write to a specific S3 bucket, and other users must not.
To achieve this, I assigned a role to the Administrators
group which looked like this:
ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 12:03The solution lies in the federated identity pool's settings.
By default the identity pool will provide the IAM role that it's configured with. In other words, one of either the "unauthenticated role" or the "authenticated role" that it's set up with.
But it can be told instead to provide a role specified by the authentication provider. That's what will solve the problem here.
- In the AWS console, in Cognito, open the relevant identity pool.
- Click "Edit identity pool" (top right)
- Expand "Authentication Providers"
- Under Authenticated Role Selection, choose "Choose role from token".
That will allow Cognito to specify its own roles, and you will find that the users get the privileges of their group.
QUESTION
Further to: API Permission Issue while Azure App Registration
and Why is "Application permissions" disabled in Azure AD's "Request API permissions"?
I cannot activate the Application Permissions button in the API permissions when I am trying to register an application in Active Directory. I have created the roles (several times) and ensured all of the properties are correct as described in both posts and in https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/active-directory/develop/scenario-protected-web-api-app-registration - including that it the role is set for application, . I am using the default directory of my Azure account. I am the only member in my directory and am a member of global administrators.
Is there something else I am missing?
My end goal is simply to use the .Net SDK to manage the firewall on an application service using a client secret that can be distributed with an application.
Here is the manifest
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 10:11Okay, so you want an app registration to manage an App Service through Azure Resource Management API as itself with client credentials flow? In that case you don't need to assign any application permissions to your app. You need to create the app, and then go to e.g. the App Service resource's Access Control (IAM) tab, and add the needed role to your app there.
The reason that the app permissions tab there is grey is because the Azure Service Management app registration (which you can't edit) does not define any app permissions. When you define an app permission in the manifest, that becomes a permission that other applications could use to call your API, not Azure Resource Management API.
QUESTION
I've got a requirement to be able to copy a blob from a container in 1 storage account into a container in another storage account. Previously the source container had public access set to 'Container'. I was using the connection string to connect to the account and then get a reference to the blob.
I'm using StartCopyAsync(sourceBlob). This was originally working fine when the container had public access set to container. Now it throws a StorageException of 'The specified resource does not exist'. Is this a permissions thing? I would have expected an error message to say I didn't have permissions. I can see the resource is there in the container.
Assuming it is a permissions thing, is there a way to copy a blob from a container that has public access set to 'private'? The docs suggest it can be done by 'authorised request' but what how do you do that?
Update
I've tried Gaurav Mantri's suggestion but currently getting an error of "This request is not authorized to perform this operation". Here's my code:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-11 at 23:55It is indeed a permission issue. For copy blob operation to work, the source blob must be publicly accessible. From this link
:
When your container's ACL was public, the source blob was publicly accessible i.e. anybody could directly access the blob by its URL. However once you changed the container's ACL to private, the source blob is no longer publicly accessible.
To solve your problem, what you need to do is create a SAS URL for the source blob with at least Read
permission and use that SAS URL in your StartCopyAsync
method.
QUESTION
I have a winform application that sometimes needs to log info to a local file when connection to service is broken. After reconnect all log files will be sent to the service for logging in database. Because the log is stored in the root of the application folder it can be read by other user accounts of the computer. So if user A that gets an exception do not have connection to the service the content of the logfile from user A will be sent when user B connects to the service.
The problem is that some users to not give write permissions to the root folder.
There is special user folders that could be used but the problem is that user B will not be able to send user A log file to service.
Is there any shared Windows folder where I always can write? Or do I have to require write permission of the root of the application?
Regards
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 09:44If you want to write logs for the per User that the application is started as, I would write them in AppData, but if you want to store logs that is global to your application I would write the logs in ProgramData.
In C# you can get these special folders with Environment.GetFolderPath and passing as an argument the desired Environment.SpecialFolder.
Community Discussions, Code Snippets contain sources that include Stack Exchange Network
Vulnerabilities
No vulnerabilities reported
Install Permissions
You can use Permissions like any standard Java library. Please include the the jar files in your classpath. You can also use any IDE and you can run and debug the Permissions component as you would do with any other Java program. Best practice is to use a build tool that supports dependency management such as Maven or Gradle. For Maven installation, please refer maven.apache.org. For Gradle installation, please refer gradle.org .
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