Validation/Generation
- Passay - Password Validation
- Passay - Customized Messages
- Passay - M of N Rules
- Passay - Password Generation
Positive Matching Rules
- passay - AllowedCharacterRule
- Passay - AllowedRegexRule
- Passay - CharacterRule
- passay - LengthRule
- Passay - CharacterCharacteristicsRule
- Passay - LengthComplexityRule
Negative Matching Rules
- Passay - lllegalCharacterRule
- Passay - NumberRangeRule
- Passay - WhitespaceRule
- Passay - DictionaryRule
- Passay - DictionarySubstringRule
- Passay - HistoryRule
- passay - RepeatCharacterRegexRule
- Passay - UsernameRule
Passay Useful Resources
Passay - CharacterCharacteristicsRule
CharacterCharacteristicsRule class helps in defining whether a password satisfy given N defined rules or not.
Example - Validating Password as per N defined Rule
The below example shows validation of an invalid password as per N defined rules.
PassayDemo.java
package com.tutorialspoint;
import java.io.FileNotFoundException;
import java.io.IOException;
import org.passay.CharacterCharacteristicsRule;
import org.passay.CharacterRule;
import org.passay.EnglishCharacterData;
import org.passay.LengthRule;
import org.passay.PasswordData;
import org.passay.PasswordValidator;
import org.passay.Rule;
import org.passay.RuleResult;
import org.passay.WhitespaceRule;
public class PassayDemo {
public static void main(String[] args) throws FileNotFoundException, IOException {
//Rule 1: Password length should be in between
//8 and 16 characters
Rule rule1 = new LengthRule(8, 16);
//Rule 2: No whitespace allowed
Rule rule2 = new WhitespaceRule();
CharacterCharacteristicsRule rule3 = new CharacterCharacteristicsRule();
//M - Mandatory characters count
rule3.setNumberOfCharacteristics(3);
//Rule 3.a: One Upper-case character
rule3.getRules().add(new CharacterRule(EnglishCharacterData.UpperCase, 1));
//Rule 3.b: One Lower-case character
rule3.getRules().add(new CharacterRule(EnglishCharacterData.LowerCase, 1));
//Rule 3.c: One digit
rule3.getRules().add(new CharacterRule(EnglishCharacterData.Digit, 1));
//Rule 3.d: One special character
rule3.getRules().add(new CharacterRule(EnglishCharacterData.Special, 1));
PasswordValidator validator = new PasswordValidator(rule1, rule2, rule3);
PasswordData password = new PasswordData("microsoft123");
RuleResult result = validator.validate(password);
if(result.isValid()){
System.out.println("Password validated.");
} else {
System.out.println("Invalid Password: " + validator.getMessages(result));
}
}
}
Output
Compile and run the code to verify the result −
Invalid Password: [Password must contain 1 or more uppercase characters., Password must contain 1 or more special characters., Password matches 2 of 4 character rules, but 3 are required.]
Example - Validating a Valid Password as per N defined Rule
The below example shows validation of a valid password as per N defined rules.
PassayDemo.java
package com.tutorialspoint;
import java.io.FileNotFoundException;
import java.io.IOException;
import org.passay.CharacterCharacteristicsRule;
import org.passay.CharacterRule;
import org.passay.EnglishCharacterData;
import org.passay.LengthRule;
import org.passay.PasswordData;
import org.passay.PasswordValidator;
import org.passay.Rule;
import org.passay.RuleResult;
import org.passay.WhitespaceRule;
public class PassayDemo {
public static void main(String[] args) throws FileNotFoundException, IOException {
//Rule 1: Password length should be in between
//8 and 16 characters
Rule rule1 = new LengthRule(8, 16);
//Rule 2: No whitespace allowed
Rule rule2 = new WhitespaceRule();
CharacterCharacteristicsRule rule3 = new CharacterCharacteristicsRule();
//M - Mandatory characters count
rule3.setNumberOfCharacteristics(3);
//Rule 3.a: One Upper-case character
rule3.getRules().add(new CharacterRule(EnglishCharacterData.UpperCase, 1));
//Rule 3.b: One Lower-case character
rule3.getRules().add(new CharacterRule(EnglishCharacterData.LowerCase, 1));
//Rule 3.c: One digit
rule3.getRules().add(new CharacterRule(EnglishCharacterData.Digit, 1));
//Rule 3.d: One special character
rule3.getRules().add(new CharacterRule(EnglishCharacterData.Special, 1));
PasswordValidator validator = new PasswordValidator(rule1, rule2, rule3);
PasswordData password = new PasswordData("microsoft@123");
RuleResult result = validator.validate(password);
if(result.isValid()){
System.out.println("Password validated.");
} else {
System.out.println("Invalid Password: " + validator.getMessages(result));
}
}
}
Output
Compile and run the code to verify the result −
Password validated.
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