EventWaitHandleAccessRule.EventWaitHandleRights Property
Definition
Important
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Gets the rights allowed or denied by the access rule.
public:
property System::Security::AccessControl::EventWaitHandleRights EventWaitHandleRights { System::Security::AccessControl::EventWaitHandleRights get(); };
public System.Security.AccessControl.EventWaitHandleRights EventWaitHandleRights { get; }
member this.EventWaitHandleRights : System.Security.AccessControl.EventWaitHandleRights
Public ReadOnly Property EventWaitHandleRights As EventWaitHandleRights
Property Value
A bitwise combination of EventWaitHandleRights values indicating the rights allowed or denied by the access rule.
Examples
The following code example demonstrates the use of the EventWaitHandleRights property to display the rights in the set of rules contained in an EventWaitHandleSecurity object. The example creates an EventWaitHandleSecurity object, adds rules that allow and deny various rights for the current user, and displays the resulting pair of rules. The example then allows new rights for the current user and displays the result, showing that the new rights are merged with the existing Allow rule.
Note
This example does not attach the security object to a EventWaitHandle object. Examples that attach security objects can be found in EventWaitHandle.GetAccessControl and EventWaitHandle.SetAccessControl.
using System;
using System.Threading;
using System.Security.AccessControl;
using System.Security.Principal;
public class Example
{
public static void Main()
{
// Create a string representing the current user.
string user = Environment.UserDomainName + "\\" +
Environment.UserName;
// Create a security object that grants no access.
EventWaitHandleSecurity mSec = new EventWaitHandleSecurity();
// Add a rule that grants the current user the
// right to wait on or signal the event.
EventWaitHandleAccessRule rule = new EventWaitHandleAccessRule(user,
EventWaitHandleRights.Synchronize | EventWaitHandleRights.Modify,
AccessControlType.Allow);
mSec.AddAccessRule(rule);
// Add a rule that denies the current user the
// right to change permissions on the event.
rule = new EventWaitHandleAccessRule(user,
EventWaitHandleRights.ChangePermissions,
AccessControlType.Deny);
mSec.AddAccessRule(rule);
// Display the rules in the security object.
ShowSecurity(mSec);
// Add a rule that allows the current user the
// right to read permissions on the event. This rule
// is merged with the existing Allow rule.
rule = new EventWaitHandleAccessRule(user,
EventWaitHandleRights.ReadPermissions,
AccessControlType.Allow);
mSec.AddAccessRule(rule);
ShowSecurity(mSec);
}
private static void ShowSecurity(EventWaitHandleSecurity security)
{
Console.WriteLine("\r\nCurrent access rules:\r\n");
foreach(EventWaitHandleAccessRule ar in
security.GetAccessRules(true, true, typeof(NTAccount)))
{
Console.WriteLine(" User: {0}", ar.IdentityReference);
Console.WriteLine(" Type: {0}", ar.AccessControlType);
Console.WriteLine(" Rights: {0}", ar.EventWaitHandleRights);
Console.WriteLine();
}
}
}
/*This code example produces output similar to following:
Current access rules:
User: TestDomain\TestUser
Type: Deny
Rights: ChangePermissions
User: TestDomain\TestUser
Type: Allow
Rights: Modify, Synchronize
Current access rules:
User: TestDomain\TestUser
Type: Deny
Rights: ChangePermissions
User: TestDomain\TestUser
Type: Allow
Rights: Modify, ReadPermissions, Synchronize
*/
Imports System.Threading
Imports System.Security.AccessControl
Imports System.Security.Principal
Public Class Example
Public Shared Sub Main()
' Create a string representing the current user.
Dim user As String = Environment.UserDomainName _
& "\" & Environment.UserName
' Create a security object that grants no access.
Dim mSec As New EventWaitHandleSecurity()
' Add a rule that grants the current user the
' right to wait on or signal the event.
Dim rule As New EventWaitHandleAccessRule(user, _
EventWaitHandleRights.Synchronize _
Or EventWaitHandleRights.Modify, _
AccessControlType.Allow)
mSec.AddAccessRule(rule)
' Add a rule that denies the current user the
' right to change permissions on the event.
rule = New EventWaitHandleAccessRule(user, _
EventWaitHandleRights.ChangePermissions, _
AccessControlType.Deny)
mSec.AddAccessRule(rule)
' Display the rules in the security object.
ShowSecurity(mSec)
' Add a rule that allows the current user the
' right to read permissions on the event. This rule
' is merged with the existing Allow rule.
rule = New EventWaitHandleAccessRule(user, _
EventWaitHandleRights.ReadPermissions, _
AccessControlType.Allow)
mSec.AddAccessRule(rule)
ShowSecurity(mSec)
End Sub
Private Shared Sub ShowSecurity(ByVal security As EventWaitHandleSecurity)
Console.WriteLine(vbCrLf & "Current access rules:" & vbCrLf)
For Each ar As EventWaitHandleAccessRule In _
security.GetAccessRules(True, True, GetType(NTAccount))
Console.WriteLine(" User: {0}", ar.IdentityReference)
Console.WriteLine(" Type: {0}", ar.AccessControlType)
Console.WriteLine(" Rights: {0}", ar.EventWaitHandleRights)
Console.WriteLine()
Next
End Sub
End Class
'This code example produces output similar to following:
'
'Current access rules:
'
' User: TestDomain\TestUser
' Type: Deny
' Rights: ChangePermissions
'
' User: TestDomain\TestUser
' Type: Allow
' Rights: Modify, Synchronize
'
'
'Current access rules:
'
' User: TestDomain\TestUser
' Type: Deny
' Rights: ChangePermissions
'
' User: TestDomain\TestUser
' Type: Allow
' Rights: Modify, ReadPermissions, Synchronize
Remarks
EventWaitHandleAccessRule objects are immutable. You can create a new access rule representing a different user, different rights, or a different AccessControlType, but you cannot modify an existing access rule.