Reputation: 1898
I am inserting a client certificate into my servertruststore using following code
FileInputStream fileInputStream = new FileInputStream( "c:/server.jks" );
keyStore.load( fileInputStream, "keystore".toCharArray() );
fileInputStream.close();
keyStore.setCertificateEntry( alias, new X509Certificate( trustedCertificate ) );
FileOutputStream fileOutputStream = new FileOutputStream("c:/server.jks" );
keyStore.store( fileOutputStream, "keystore".toCharArray() );
fileOutputStream.close();
Now i see that certificate is entered into my truststore but the CA's certificate which signed client's certificate is not present in my truststore. So I want to know is there any way we can check whether the certificate of CA is available or not before entering a certificate into keystore?
Upvotes: 2
Views: 1194
Reputation: 1116
I guess what you have to do is to verify if the certificate has been issued by a root authority or it has been self-signed. I presume you are using the default java keystore which is cacerts. I haven't tested the code but I think this may be a solution to your problem:
How can I get a list of trusted root certificates in Java?
String filename = System.getProperty("java.home") + "/lib/security/cacerts".replace('/', File.separatorChar);
Set<X509Certificate> additionalCerts = new HashSet<X509Certificate>();
FileInputStream is = new FileInputStream(filename);
KeyStore keystore = KeyStore.getInstance(KeyStore.getDefaultType());
String password = "changeit";
keystore.load(is, password.toCharArray());
// This class retrieves the most-trusted CAs from the keystore
PKIXParameters params = new PKIXParameters(keystore);
// Get the set of trust anchors, which contain the most-trusted CA certificates
Iterator it = params.getTrustAnchors().iterator();
while( it.hasNext() ) {
TrustAnchor ta = (TrustAnchor)it.next();
// Get certificate
X509Certificate cert = ta.getTrustedCert();
additionalCerts.add(cert);
}
Upvotes: 3