Hi Jayjay,
> also, the security=all-permissions seems to be not working. you still have
> to sign ij.jar.
For your applet to have all-permissions, you specifically do need to
sign the JAR. When done correctly, the user will receive a prompt
asking to trust the certificate, and once trusted your applet can do
whatever it wants. If you don't sign the JAR, you can't have
all-permissions.
-Curtis
On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 2:19 PM, Jayjay Lumanang <
[hidden email]> wrote:
> hi all,
>
> im kind of reposting my message because i don't know if i have successfully
> replied to Hareesh's post about this same issue.
>
> i have the same dilemma. i can see in the ImageJ site that there is a sample
> showing the applet as embedded inside the browser. but i can't seem to
> replicate that behavior. i checked the page source, like to compare if there
> were some missing tags or something, but it turned out to be identical.
> also, the security=all-permissions seems to be not working. you still have
> to sign ij.jar.
>
> do we have to edit something inside ImageJApplet.java or some other file?
> it would be really cool if somebody could help in this issue.
>
> thanks a lot!
>