Spec-Zone .ru
спецификации, руководства, описания, API
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JavaTM 2 Platform Standard Edition |
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java.lang.Object | +--java.security.cert.Certificate | +--java.security.cert.X509Certificate
Abstract class for X.509 certificates. This provides a standard way to access all the attributes of an X.509 certificate.
In June of 1996, the basic X.509 v3 format was completed by ISO/IEC and ANSI X9, which is described below in ASN.1:
Certificate ::= SEQUENCE { tbsCertificate TBSCertificate, signatureAlgorithm AlgorithmIdentifier, signature BIT STRING }
These certificates are widely used to support authentication and other functionality in Internet security systems. Common applications include Privacy Enhanced Mail (PEM), Transport Layer Security (SSL), code signing for trusted software distribution, and Secure Electronic Transactions (SET).
These certificates are managed and vouched for by Certificate Authorities (CAs). CAs are services which create certificates by placing data in the X.509 standard format and then digitally signing that data. CAs act as trusted third parties, making introductions between principals who have no direct knowledge of each other. CA certificates are either signed by themselves, or by some other CA such as a "root" CA.
A good decription and profiling is provided in the IETF PKIX WG draft, Part I: X.509 Certificate and CRL Profile, <draft-ietf-pkix-ipki-part1-07.txt>.
The ASN.1 definition of tbsCertificate
is:
TBSCertificate ::= SEQUENCE { version [0] EXPLICIT Version DEFAULT v1, serialNumber CertificateSerialNumber, signature AlgorithmIdentifier, issuer Name, validity Validity, subject Name, subjectPublicKeyInfo SubjectPublicKeyInfo, issuerUniqueID [1] IMPLICIT UniqueIdentifier OPTIONAL, -- If present, version must be v2 or v3 subjectUniqueID [2] IMPLICIT UniqueIdentifier OPTIONAL, -- If present, version must be v2 or v3 extensions [3] EXPLICIT Extensions OPTIONAL -- If present, version must be v3 }
Certificates are instantiated using a certificate factory. The following is an example of how to instantiate an X.509 certificate:
InputStream inStream = new FileInputStream("fileName-of-cert"); CertificateFactory cf = CertificateFactory.getInstance("X.509"); X509Certificate cert = (X509Certificate)cf.generateCertificate(inStream); inStream.close();
Certificate
,
CertificateFactory
,
X509Extension
Constructor Summary | |
protected |
X509Certificate()
Constructor for X.509 certificates. |
Method Summary | |
abstract void |
checkValidity()
Checks that the certificate is currently valid. |
abstract void |
checkValidity(Date date)
Checks that the given date is within the certificate's validity period. |
abstract int |
getBasicConstraints()
Gets the certificate constraints path length from the critical BasicConstraints extension, (OID = 2.5.29.19). |
abstract Principal |
getIssuerDN()
Gets the issuer (issuer distinguished name) value from
the certificate. |
abstract boolean[] |
getIssuerUniqueID()
Gets the issuerUniqueID value from the certificate. |
abstract boolean[] |
getKeyUsage()
Gets a boolean array representing bits of the KeyUsage extension, (OID = 2.5.29.15). |
abstract Date |
getNotAfter()
Gets the notAfter date from the validity period of
the certificate. |
abstract Date |
getNotBefore()
Gets the notBefore date from the validity period of
the certificate. |
abstract BigInteger |
getSerialNumber()
Gets the serialNumber value from the certificate. |
abstract String |
getSigAlgName()
Gets the signature algorithm name for the certificate signature algorithm. |
abstract String |
getSigAlgOID()
Gets the signature algorithm OID string from the certificate. |
abstract byte[] |
getSigAlgParams()
Gets the DER-encoded signature algorithm parameters from this certificate's signature algorithm. |
abstract byte[] |
getSignature()
Gets the signature value (the raw signature bits) from
the certificate. |
abstract Principal |
getSubjectDN()
Gets the subject (subject distinguished name) value
from the certificate. |
abstract boolean[] |
getSubjectUniqueID()
Gets the subjectUniqueID value from the certificate. |
abstract byte[] |
getTBSCertificate()
Gets the DER-encoded certificate information, the tbsCertificate from this certificate. |
abstract int |
getVersion()
Gets the version (version number) value from the
certificate. |
Methods inherited from class java.security.cert.Certificate |
equals,
getEncoded,
getPublicKey,
getType,
hashCode,
toString,
verify,
verify |
Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object |
clone,
finalize,
getClass,
notify,
notifyAll,
wait,
wait,
wait |
Constructor Detail |
protected X509Certificate()
Method Detail |
public abstract void checkValidity() throws CertificateExpiredException, CertificateNotYetValidException
The validity period consists of two date/time values: the first and last dates (and times) on which the certificate is valid. It is defined in ASN.1 as:
validity ValidityValidity ::= SEQUENCE { notBefore CertificateValidityDate, notAfter CertificateValidityDate }
CertificateValidityDate ::= CHOICE { utcTime UTCTime, generalTime GeneralizedTime }
public abstract void checkValidity(Date date) throws CertificateExpiredException, CertificateNotYetValidException
date
- the Date to check against to see if this certificate
is valid at that date/time.date
supplied.date
supplied.checkValidity()
public abstract int getVersion()
version
(version number) value from the
certificate.
The ASN.1 definition for this is:
version [0] EXPLICIT Version DEFAULT v1Version ::= INTEGER { v1(0), v2(1), v3(2) }
public abstract BigInteger getSerialNumber()
serialNumber
value from the certificate.
The serial number is an integer assigned by the certification
authority to each certificate. It must be unique for each
certificate issued by a given CA (i.e., the issuer name and
serial number identify a unique certificate).
The ASN.1 definition for this is:
serialNumber CertificateSerialNumberCertificateSerialNumber ::= INTEGER
public abstract Principal getIssuerDN()
issuer
(issuer distinguished name) value from
the certificate. The issuer name identifies the entity that signed (and
issued) the certificate.
The issuer name field contains an X.500 distinguished name (DN). The ASN.1 definition for this is:
issuer NameTheName ::= CHOICE { RDNSequence } RDNSequence ::= SEQUENCE OF RelativeDistinguishedName RelativeDistinguishedName ::= SET OF AttributeValueAssertion AttributeValueAssertion ::= SEQUENCE { AttributeType, AttributeValue } AttributeType ::= OBJECT IDENTIFIER AttributeValue ::= ANY
Name
describes a hierarchical name composed of
attributes,
such as country name, and corresponding values, such as US.
The type of the AttributeValue
component is determined by
the AttributeType
; in general it will be a
directoryString
. A directoryString
is usually
one of PrintableString
,
TeletexString
or UniversalString
.public abstract Principal getSubjectDN()
subject
(subject distinguished name) value
from the certificate.
The ASN.1 definition for this is:
subject Name
See getIssuerDN()#getIssuerDN
for Name
and other relevant definitions.
public abstract Date getNotBefore()
notBefore
date from the validity period of
the certificate.
The relevant ASN.1 definitions are:
validity ValidityValidity ::= SEQUENCE { notBefore CertificateValidityDate, notAfter CertificateValidityDate }
CertificateValidityDate ::= CHOICE { utcTime UTCTime, generalTime GeneralizedTime }
checkValidity()
public abstract Date getNotAfter()
notAfter
date from the validity period of
the certificate. See getNotBefore()#getNotBefore
for relevant ASN.1 definitions.checkValidity()
public abstract byte[] getTBSCertificate() throws CertificateEncodingException
tbsCertificate
from this certificate.
This can be used to verify the signature independently.public abstract byte[] getSignature()
signature
value (the raw signature bits) from
the certificate.
The ASN.1 definition for this is:
signature BIT STRING
public abstract String getSigAlgName()
signatureAlgorithm AlgorithmIdentifierAlgorithmIdentifier ::= SEQUENCE { algorithm OBJECT IDENTIFIER, parameters ANY DEFINED BY algorithm OPTIONAL } -- contains a value of the type -- registered for use with the -- algorithm object identifier value
The algorithm name is determined from the algorithm
OID string.
public abstract String getSigAlgOID()
See getSigAlgName()#getSigAlgName
for
relevant ASN.1 definitions.
public abstract byte[] getSigAlgParams()
AlgorithmParameters.AlgorithmParameters(java.security.AlgorithmParametersSpi, java.security.Provider, java.lang.String)
and instantiate with the name returned by
getSigAlgName()#getSigAlgName
.
See getSigAlgName()#getSigAlgName
for
relevant ASN.1 definitions.
public abstract boolean[] getIssuerUniqueID()
issuerUniqueID
value from the certificate.
The issuer unique identifier is present in the certificate
to handle the possibility of reuse of issuer names over time.
The PKIX Part I recommends that names not be reused and that
conforming certificates not make use of unique identifiers.
Applications conforming to that profile should be capable of
parsing unique identifiers and making comparisons.
The ASN.1 definition for this is:
issuerUniqueID [1] IMPLICIT UniqueIdentifier OPTIONALUniqueIdentifier ::= BIT STRING
public abstract boolean[] getSubjectUniqueID()
subjectUniqueID
value from the certificate.
The ASN.1 definition for this is:
subjectUniqueID [2] IMPLICIT UniqueIdentifier OPTIONALUniqueIdentifier ::= BIT STRING
public abstract boolean[] getKeyUsage()
KeyUsage
extension, (OID = 2.5.29.15).
The key usage extension defines the purpose (e.g., encipherment,
signature, certificate signing) of the key contained in the
certificate.
The ASN.1 definition for this is:
KeyUsage ::= BIT STRING { digitalSignature (0), nonRepudiation (1), keyEncipherment (2), dataEncipherment (3), keyAgreement (4), keyCertSign (5), cRLSign (6), encipherOnly (7), decipherOnly (8) }The PKIX part I draft recommends that when used, this be marked as a critical extension.
public abstract int getBasicConstraints()
BasicConstraints
extension, (OID = 2.5.29.19).
The basic constraints extension identifies whether the subject
of the certificate is a Certificate Authority (CA) and
how deep a certification path may exist through that CA. The
pathLenConstraint
field (see below) is meaningful
only if cA
is set to TRUE. In this case, it gives the
maximum number of CA certificates that may follow this certificate in a
certification path. A value of zero indicates that only an end-entity
certificate may follow in the path.
Note that for the PKIX profile this extension is always marked
critical if cA
is TRUE, meaning this certificate belongs
to a Certificate Authority.
The ASN.1 definition for this is:
BasicConstraints ::= SEQUENCE { cA BOOLEAN DEFAULT FALSE, pathLenConstraint INTEGER (0..MAX) OPTIONAL }
cA
value is TRUE.
Otherwise returns -1.
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JavaTM 2 Platform Standard Edition |
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