Manages a keystore (database) of private keys and their
associated X.509 certificate
chains authenticating the corresponding public keys.
Also manages certificates from trusted entities.
keytool is a key and certificate management utility. It enables
users to administer
their own public/private key pairs and associated certificates for use
in self-authentication (where the user authenticates himself/herself
to other users/services) or data integrity and authentication
services, using digital signatures.
It also allows users to cache the public keys (in the form of certificates)
of their communicating peers.
A certificate is a digitally signed statement
from one entity (person, company, etc.), saying that the
public key (and some other information)
of some other entity has a
particular value. (See Certificates.)
When data is digitally signed, the signature can be verified to
check the data integrity and authenticity.
Integrity means that the data has not been
modified or tampered with, and authenticity means the data indeed
comes from whoever claims to have created and signed it.
keytool stores the keys and certificates in a so-called
keystore. The default
keystore implementation
implements the keystore as a file. It protects private keys with a
password.
The jarsigner tool uses
information from a keystore to generate or verify digital signatures
for Java ARchive (JAR) files. (A JAR file packages class files, images,
sounds, and/or other digital data in a single file).
jarsigner verifies the digital signature of a JAR file,
using the certificate that comes with it (it is included in
the signature block file of the JAR file), and then checks
whether or not the public key of that certificate is "trusted",
i.e., is contained in the specified keystore.
Please note: the keytool and jarsigner tools
completely replace the javakey tool provided in JDK 1.1.
These new tools provide more features than javakey,
including the ability to protect the keystore and private keys
with passwords, and the ability to verify signatures in addition
to generating them. The new
keystore architecture replaces the identity database that javakey
created and managed. It is possible to import the information from
an identity database into a keystore, via the
-identitydbkeytool command.
Keystore Entries
There are two different types of entries in a keystore:
key entries - each holds very sensitive cryptographic key
information, which is stored in a protected format to prevent unauthorized
access. Typically, a key stored in this type of entry is a secret key, or a
private key accompanied by the
certificate "chain" for the corresponding
public key. The keytool and jarsigner tools only handle
the latter type of entry, that is private keys and their associated certificate
chains.
trusted certificate entries - each contains a single public
key certificate belonging to another party. It is called a
"trusted certificate" because the keystore owner trusts that the public key
in the certificate indeed belongs to the identity identified by the
"subject" (owner) of the certificate.
The issuer of the certificate vouches for this, by signing
the certificate.
Keystore Aliases
All keystore entries (key and trusted certificate
entries) are accessed via unique aliases. Aliases are
case-insensitive; the aliases Hugo and hugo
would refer to the same keystore entry.
An alias is specified when you
add an entity to the keystore using the
-genkey command to generate
a key pair (public and private key) or the
-import command
to add a certificate or certificate chain to the list
of trusted certificates.
Subsequent keytool commands must
use this same alias to refer to the entity.
For example, suppose you use the alias duke to generate
a new public/private key pair and wrap the public key into a self-signed
certificate (see Certificate Chains)
via the following command:
keytool -genkey -alias duke -keypass dukekeypasswd
This specifies an inital password of "dukekeypasswd" required by
subsequent commands to access
the private key assocated with the alias duke.
If you later want to change
duke's private key password, you use a command like the following:
keytool -keypasswd -alias duke -keypass dukekeypasswd -new newpass
This changes the password from "dukekeypasswd" to "newpass".
Please note: A password should not actually be specified on a
command line or in a script unless it is for testing purposes,
or you are on a secure system. If you don't specify a required
password option on a command line, you will be prompted for it.
When typing in a password at the password prompt,
the password is currently echoed (displayed exactly as typed),
so be careful not to type it in front of anyone.
Keystore Location
Each keytool command has a -keystore option for
specifying the name and location of the persistent keystore file for the
keystore managed by keytool. The keystore is by default stored in a file
named .keystore in the user's home directory, as determined by the
"user.home" system property. On Solaris systems "user.home" defaults
to the user's home directory.
Keystore Creation
A keystore is created whenever you use a
-genkey, -import,
or -identitydb
command to add data to a keystore that doesn't yet exist.
More specifically, if you specify, in the -keystore option,
a keystore that doesn't yet exist, that keystore
will be created.
If you don't specify a -keystore option, the default keystore
is a file named .keystore in your home directory. If that file
does not yet exist, it will be created.
The KeyStore class provided in the
java.security package supplies
well-defined interfaces to access and modify the information
in a keystore. It is possible for there to be
multiple different concrete implementations, where each
implementation is that for a particular type of keystore.
Currently, two command-line tools (keytool and jarsigner)
and a GUI-based tool named Policy Tool make use of
keystore implementations.
Since KeyStore is publicly available, JDK users can
write additional security applications that use it.
There is a built-in default implementation, provided by
Sun Microsystems. It implements the keystore as a file, utilizing
a proprietary keystore type (format) named "JKS".
It protects each private key with its individual password, and also protects
the integrity of the entire keystore with a
(possibly different) password.
Keystore implementations are provider-based. More specifically,
the application interfaces supplied by KeyStore are
implemented in terms of a "Service Provider Interface" (SPI).
That is, there is a corresponding abstract KeystoreSpi class,
also in the java.security package, which defines the Service
Provider Interface methods that "providers" must implement.
(The term "provider" refers to a package or a set of packages that supply
a concrete implementation of a subset of services that can be accessed
by the Java Security API.)
Thus, to provide a keystore implementation, clients must implement a
"provider" and supply a KeystoreSpi subclass implementation, as described in
How to Implement a
Provider for the Java Cryptography Architecture.
Applications can choose different types of keystore implementations
from different providers, using the "getInstance" factory method supplied
in the KeyStore class.
A keystore type defines the storage and data format of the keystore
information, and the algorithms used to
protect private keys in the keystore and the integrity of the keystore
itself. Keystore implementations of different types are not compatible.
keytool works on any file-based keystore
implementation. (It treats the keytore location that is passed to
it at the command line as a filename and converts it to a
FileInputStream, from which it loads the keystore information.)
The jarsigner and policytool tools, on the other hand,
can read a keystore from any location that can be specified
using a URL.
For keytool and jarsigner, you can specify a keystore
type at the command line, via the -storetype option. For
Policy Tool, you can specify a keystore type via the "Change Keystore"
command in the Edit menu.
If you don't explicitly specify a keystore type,
the tools choose a keystore implementation based simply on
the value of the keystore.type
property specified in the security properties file.
The security properties file is called java.security, and
it resides in the JDK security properties directory,
java.home/lib/security, where java.home is
the runtime environment's directory (the jre directory in
the SDK or the top-level directory of the Java 2 Runtime Environment).
Each tool gets the keystore.type value and then examines all
the currently-installed providers until it finds one that implements
keystores of that type. It then uses the keystore implementation
from that provider.
The KeyStore class defines a static method named
getDefaultType that lets applications and applets
retrieve the value of the keystore.type property.
The following line of code creates an instance of the default
keystore type (as specified in the keystore.type property):
The default keystore type is "jks" (the proprietary type of the
keystore implementation provided by Sun). This is specified by
the following line in the security properties file:
keystore.type=jks
To have the tools utilize a keystore implementation other
than the default, you can change that line to specify a different
keystore type.
For example, if you have a provider package that supplies a
keystore implementation for a keystore type called "pkcs12",
change the line to
keystore.type=pkcs12
Note: case doesn't matter in keystore type designations. For example,
"JKS" would be considered the same as "jks".
keytool allows users to specify any key pair generation and signature
algorithm supplied by any of the registered cryptographic service
providers. That is, the keyalg and sigalg options for various
commands must be supported by a provider implementation. The default
key pair generation algorithm is "DSA". The signature algorithm is
derived from the algorithm of the underlying private key: If the
underlying private key is of type "DSA", the default signature
algorithm is "SHA1withDSA", and if the underlying private key is of
type "RSA", the default signature algorithm is "MD5withRSA".
When generating a DSA key pair, the key size must be in the range
from 512 to 1024 bits, and must be a multiple of 64. The default key
size for any algorithm is 1024 bits.
A certificate (also known as a public-key certificate)
is a digitally signed statement from one entity (the issuer), saying that
the public key (and some other information)
of another entity (the subject) has some specific value.
Let us expand on some of the key terms used in this sentence:
Public Keys
These are numbers associated with a particular entity, and
are intended to be known to everyone who needs to have trusted interactions
with that entity. Public keys are used to verify signatures.
Digitally Signed
If some data is digitally signed it has been stored with the
"identity" of an entity, and a signature that proves that entity knows about
the data. The data is rendered unforgeable by signing with the entity's
private key.
Identity
A known way of addressing an entity. In some systems the identity is
the public key, in others it can be anything from a Unix UID to an Email address
to an X.509 Distinguished Name.
Signature
A signature is computed over some data using the private key
of an entity (the signer, which in the case of a certificate is
also known as the issuer).
Private Keys
These are numbers, each of which is
supposed to be known only to the particular entity whose private
key it is (that is, it's supposed to be kept secret).
Private and public keys exist in pairs in all public key cryptography systems
(also referred to as "public key crypto systems").
In a typical public key crypto system,
such as DSA, a private key corresponds to exactly one public key.
Private keys are used to compute signatures.
Entity
An entity is a person, organization, program, computer, business,
bank, or something else you are trusting to some degree.
Basically, public key cryptography requires access to users' public keys.
In a large-scale networked environment it is impossible to guarantee that prior
relationships between communicating entities have been established or that a
trusted repository exists with all used public keys.
Certificates were invented as a solution to this public key distribution problem.
Now a Certification Authority (CA) can act as a
trusted third party.
CAs are entities (for example, businesses) that are trusted to sign (issue)
certificates for other entities. It is assumed that CAs will only create
valid and reliable certificates, as they are bound by legal agreements.
There are many public Certification Authorities, such as
VeriSign,
Thawte,
Entrust, and so on.
You can also run your own Certification Authority using products such as
the Netscape/Microsoft Certificate Servers or the Entrust CA product for
your organization.
Using keytool, it is possible to display, import, and export
certificates. It is also possible to generate self-signed certificates.
The X.509 standard defines what information can go into a certificate,
and describes how to write it down (the data format).
All X.509 certificates have the following data, in addition
to the signature:
Version
This identifies which version of the X.509 standard applies to
this certificate, which affects what information can be specified
in it. Thus far, three versions are defined.
keytool can import and export v1, v2, and v3
certificates. It generates v1 certificates.
Serial Number
The entity that created the certificate is responsible for
assigning it a serial number to distinguish it from other
certificates it issues.
This information is used in numerous ways, for example when a
certificate is revoked its serial number is placed in a Certificate
Revocation List (CRL).
Signature Algorithm Identifier
This identifies the algorithm used by the CA to sign the certificate.
Issuer Name
The X.500 Distinguished Name
of the entity that signed the certificate. This
is normally a CA. Using this certificate implies trusting the
entity that signed this certificate. (Note that in some cases,
such as root or top-level CA certificates, the issuer
signs its own certificate.)
Validity Period
Each certificate is valid only for a limited amount of time. This
period is described by a start date and time and an end date and time,
and can be as short as a few seconds or almost as long as a century.
The validity period chosen depends on a number of factors, such as the
strength of the private key used to sign the certificate or the amount
one is willing to pay for a certificate.
This is the expected period that entities can rely on the public value, if
the associated private key has not been compromised.
Subject Name
The name of the entity whose public key the certificate identifies.
This name uses the X.500 standard, so it is intended to be
unique across the Internet. This is the
X.500 Distinguished Name (DN) of
the entity, for example,
(These refer to the subject's Common Name, Organizational Unit,
Organization, and Country.)
Subject Public Key Information
This is the public key of the entity being named, together with an
algorithm identifier which specifies which public key crypto system this key
belongs to and any associated key parameters.
X.509 Version 1 has been available since 1988, is widely
deployed, and is the most generic.
X.509 Version 2 introduced the concept of subject and issuer
unique identifiers to handle the possibility of reuse of
subject and/or issuer names over time. Most certificate profile
documents strongly recommend that names not be reused, and
that certificates should not make use of unique identifiers.
Version 2 certificates are not widely used.
X.509 Version 3 is the most recent (1996) and supports the notion
of extensions, whereby anyone can define an extension and include
it in the certificate. Some common extensions in use today are:
KeyUsage (limits the use of the keys to particular
purposes such as "signing-only") and AlternativeNames (allows other
identities to also be associated with this public key, e.g. DNS names,
Email addresses, IP addresses). Extensions can be marked critical
to indicate that the extension should be checked and enforced/used.
For example, if a certificate has the KeyUsage extension marked
critical and set to "keyCertSign" then if this certificate is presented
during SSL communication, it should be rejected, as the certificate
extension indicates that the associated private key should only be used for
signing certificates and not for SSL use.
All the data in a certificate is encoded using two related
standards called ASN.1/DER.
Abstract Syntax Notation 1 describes data.
The Definite Encoding Rules describe a single
way to store and transfer that data.
X.500 Distinguished Names are used to identify entities, such as those
which are named by the subject and issuer (signer)
fields of X.509 certificates. keytool supports
the following subparts:
commonName - common name of a person, e.g., "Susan Jones"
organizationUnit - small organization (e.g, department or
division) name, e.g., "Purchasing"
organizationName - large organization name, e.g., "ABCSystems, Inc."
stateName - state or province name, e.g., "California"
country - two-letter country code, e.g., "CH"
When supplying a distinguished name string as the value of a
-dname option, as for the -genkey or
-selfcert commands, the string must be in the following
format:
Case does not matter for the keyword abbreviations. For example, "CN",
"cn", and "Cn" are all treated the same.
Order matters; each subcomponent must appear in the designated
order. However, it is not necessary to have all the subcomponents.
You may use a subset, for example:
CN=Steve Meier, OU=SunSoft, O=Sun, C=US
If a distinguished name string value contains a comma, the
comma must be escaped by a "\" character when you specify the string
on a command line, as in
It is never necessary to specify a distinguished name string
on a command line. If it is needed for a command, but not supplied
on the command line, the user is prompted for each of the
subcomponents. In this case, a comma does not need to be
escaped by a "\".
Certificates are often stored using the printable encoding format
defined by the Internet RFC 1421 standard, instead of their binary encoding.
This certificate format, also known as "Base 64 encoding",
facilitates exporting certificates to other applications
by email or through some other mechanism.
Certificates read by the -import and
-printcert commands can be in either this format or
binary encoded.
The -export command
by default outputs a certificate in binary encoding, but will instead
output a certificate in the printable encoding format, if the
-rfc option is specified.
The -list command by default prints the MD5 fingerprint
of a certificate. If the -v option is specified, the
certificate is printed in human-readable format, while if the
-rfc option is specified, the certificate is output
in the printable encoding format.
In its printable encoding format, the encoded
certificate is bounded at the beginning by
keytool can create and manage keystore "key" entries that
each contain a private key and an
associated certificate "chain". The first certificate in the chain
contains the public key corresponding to the private key.
When keys are first generated (see the
-genkey command), the chain starts off
containing a single element, a self-signed certificate.
A self-signed certificate is one for
which the issuer (signer) is the same as the subject (the entity
whose public key is being authenticated by the certificate).
Whenever the -genkey command is called to generate
a new public/private
key pair, it also wraps the public key into a self-signed
certificate.
Later, after a Certificate Signing Request (CSR)
has been generated (see the -certreq command)
and sent to a Certification Authority (CA),
the response from the CA is imported (see
-import), and
the self-signed certificate is replaced by a chain
of certificates. At the bottom of the chain is the certificate
(reply) issued by the CA authenticating the subject's public key.
The next certificate
in the chain is one that authenticates the CA's public key.
In many cases, this is a self-signed certificate (that is,
a certificate from the CA authenticating its own public key)
and the last certificate in the chain.
In other cases, the CA may return a chain of certificates. In this case,
the bottom certificate in the chain is the same (a certificate
signed by the CA, authenticating the public key of the key
entry), but the second
certificate in the chain is a certificate signed by a different
CA, authenticating the public key of the CA you sent the CSR to.
Then, the next certificate in the chain will be a
certificate authenticating the second CA's key, and so on,
until a self-signed "root" certificate is reached.
Each certificate in the chain (after the first)
thus authenticates the public key of
the signer of the previous certificate in the chain.
Many CAs only return the issued certificate,
with no supporting chain, especially when there is a flat hierarchy
(no intermediates CAs). In this case, the certificate
chain must be established
from trusted certificate information already stored in the
keystore.
A different reply format (defined by the PKCS#7 standard) also
includes the supporting certificate chain, in addition to the
issued certificate. Both reply formats can be handled by keytool.
The top-level (root) CA certificate is self-signed.
However, the trust into the root's public key does not come from
the root certificate itself (anybody could generate a self-signed
certificate with the distinguished name of say, the VeriSign root CA!),
but from other sources like a newspaper. The root CA public
key is widely known. The only reason it is stored in a certificate
is because this is the format understood by most tools, so the
certificate in this case is only used as a "vehicle" to transport
the root CA's public key. Before you add the root CA certificate
to your keystore, you should view it (using the
-printcert option) and compare
the displayed fingerprint with the well-known fingerprint (obtained
from a newspaper, the root CA's webpage, etc.).
To import a certificate from a file, use the
-import command, as in
keytool -import -alias joe -file jcertfile.cer
This sample command imports the certificate(s) in the file jcertfile.cer
and stores it in the keystore entry identified by the alias joe.
You import a certificate for two reasons:
to add it to the list of trusted certificates, or
to import a certificate reply received from a CA as the result of submitting
a Certificate Signing Request (see the -certreq command)
to that CA.
Which type of import is intended is indicated by the value of the
-alias
option. If the alias exists in the database, and identifies an entry with
a private key, then it is assumed you want to import a certificate reply.
keytool checks whether the public key in the certificate reply matches
the public key stored with the alias, and exits if they are different.
If the alias identifies the other type of keystore entry, the certificate
will not be imported.
If the alias does not exist, then it will be created and associated
with the imported certificate.
IMPORTANT: Be sure to check a certificate
very carefully before importing it as a trusted certificate!
View it first (using the -printcert command, or the
-import command without the -noprompt option),
and make sure that the displayed certificate fingerprint(s) match the
expected ones. For example, suppose someone sends or emails you a
certificate, and you put it in a file named /tmp/cert.
Before you consider adding the certificate to your list of
trusted certificates, you can execute a -printcert command
to view its fingerprints, as in
Then call or otherwise contact the person who sent the certificate,
and compare the fingerprint(s) that you see with the ones that they show.
Only if the fingerprints are equal is it guaranteed that
the certificate has not been replaced in transit with
somebody else's (for example, an attacker's) certificate.
If such an attack took place, and you did not check the certificate
before you imported it, you would end up trusting anything the
attacker has signed (for example, a JAR file with
malicious class files inside).
Note: it is not required that you execute a -printcert
command prior to importing a certificate, since
before adding a certificate to the list of trusted certificates in the
keystore, the -import command prints out the certificate
information and prompts you to verify it. You then have the option of
aborting the import operation. Note, however, this is only the case if you
invoke the -import command without the
-noprompt option.
If the -noprompt option is given, there is no
interaction with the user.
To export a certificate to a file, use the -export
command, as in
keytool -export -alias jane -file janecertfile.cer
This sample command exports jane's certificate to the file
janecertfile.cer. That is, if jane is the alias
for a key entry, the command exports the certificate at
the bottom of the certificate chain in that keystore entry.
This is the certificate that
authenticates jane's public key.
If, instead, jane is the alias for a trusted certificate
entry, then that trusted certificate is exported.
A self-signed certificate is one for
which the issuer (signer) is the same as the subject (the entity
whose public key is being authenticated by the certificate).
Whenever the -genkey command is called to generate
a new public/private
key pair, it also wraps the public key into a self-signed
certificate.
You may occasionally wish to generate a new self-signed certificate.
For example, you may want to use the same key pair under
a different identity (distinguished name). For example,
suppose you change departments. You can then:
copy (clone) the original key entry.
See -keyclone.
generate a new self-signed certificate for the cloned entry, using
your new distinguished name.
See below.
generate a Certificate Signing Requests for the cloned entry,
and import the reply certificate or certificate chain.
See the -certreq and
-import commands.
delete the original (now obsolete) entry.
See -delete.
To generate a self-signed certificate, use the
-selfcert command, as in
The generated certificate is stored as a single-element certificate chain
in the keystore entry identified by the specified alias (in this case
"dukeNew"), where it replaces the
existing certificate chain.
The various commands and their options are listed and described
below . Note:
All command and option names are preceded by a minus sign (-).
The options for each command may be provided in any
order.
All items not italicized or in braces or square brackets are required
to appear as is.
Braces surrounding an option generally signify that a
default value will be used if the option
is not specified on the command line. Braces are also used around the
-v, -rfc, and -J options,
which only have meaning if
they appear on the command line (that is, they don't have any "default"
values other than not existing).
Brackets surrounding an option signify that
the user is prompted for the value(s) if the option is not specified
on the command line. (For a -keypass option, if
you do not specify the option on the command
line, keytool will first attempt to use the keystore password
to recover the private key, and if this fails, will then prompt you
for the private key password.)
Items in italics (option values) represent the actual values
that must be supplied. For example, here is the format of the
-printcert command:
keytool -printcert {-file cert_file} {-v}
When specifying a -printcert command, replace
cert_file with the actual file name, as in:
keytool -printcert -file VScert.cer
Option values must be quoted if they contain a blank (space).
The -help command is the default. Thus, the command line
-alias "mykey"
-keyalg "DSA"
-keysize 1024
-validity 90
-keystore the file named .keystore in the user's home directory
-file stdin if reading, stdout if writing
The signature algorithm (-sigalg option) is derived from the
algorithm of the underlying private key: If the underlying private key
is of type "DSA", the -sigalg option defaults to "SHA1withDSA",
and if the underlying private key is of type "RSA", -sigalg
defaults to "MD5withRSA".
The -v option can appear for all commands except -help.
If it appears, it signifies "verbose" mode; detailed certificate
information will be output.
There is also a -Jjavaoption option that may appear
for any command. If it appears, the specified javaoption string is
passed through directly to the Java interpreter. (keytool is actually
a "wrapper" around the interpreter.)
This option should not contain any spaces. It is useful for adjusting
the execution environment or memory usage.
For a list of possible interpreter
options, type java -h or java -X at the command line.
There are three options that may appear for all commands operating on a
keystore:
-storetype storetype
This qualifier specifies the type of keystore to be instantiated. The
default keystore type is the one that is specified as the value of the
"keystore.type" property in the security properties file, which is
returned by the static getDefaultType method in
java.security.KeyStore.
-keystore keystore
The keystore (database file) location. Defaults to the file
.keystore in the user's home directory, as determined by the
"user.home" system property. On Solaris systems "user.home" defaults
to the user's home directory.
-storepass storepass
The password which is used to protect the integrity of the
keystore.
storepass must be at least 6 characters long.
It must be provided to all commands that access the keystore contents.
For such commands, if a -storepass option
is not provided at the command
line, the user is prompted for it.
When retrieving information from the keystore, the password is
optional; if no password is given, the integrity of the retrieved
information cannot be checked and a warning is displayed.
Most commands operating on a keystore require the store password.
Some commands require a private key password.
Passwords can be specified
on the command line (in the -storepass and
-keypass options,
respectively). However, a password should not be specified on a
command line or in a
script unless it is for testing purposes, or you are on a secure
system.
If you don't specify a required password option on a
command line, you will be prompted for it.
When typing in a password at the password prompt,
the password is currently echoed (displayed exactly as typed),
so be careful not to type it in front of anyone.
Generates a key pair (a public key and associated private key).
Wraps the public key into an X.509 v1 self-signed certificate, which is
stored as a single-element certificate chain. This certificate chain and the
private key are stored in a new keystore entry
identified by alias.
keyalg specifies the algorithm to be used to generate the key pair,
and keysize specifies the size of each key to be generated.
sigalg specifies the algorithm that should be used to sign the
self-signed certificate; this algorithm must be compatible with
keyalg. See
Supported Algorithms and Key Sizes.
dname specifies the X.500 Distinguished Name
to be associated with alias, and is used as the issuer
and subject fields in the self-signed certificate.
If no distinguished name is provided at the command line, the user will
be prompted for one.
keypass is a password used to protect the
private key of the generated key pair. If no password is provided,
the user is prompted for it. If you press RETURN at the prompt, the
key password is set to the same password as that used for the
keystore. keypass must be at least 6 characters long.
Be careful with passwords - see
Warning Regarding Passwords.
valDays tells the number of days for which the certificate
should be considered valid.
Reads the certificate or certificate chain (where the latter is
supplied in a PKCS#7 formatted reply) from the file cert_file, and
stores it in the keystore entry identified by alias. If no file is
given, the certificate or PKCS#7 reply is read from stdin.
keytool can import X.509 v1, v2, and v3 certificates, and PKCS#7
formatted certificate chains consisting of certificates of that
type. The data to be imported must be provided either in binary
encoding format, or in printable encoding format (also known as Base64
encoding) as defined by the
Internet RFC 1421 standard. In the latter
case, the encoding must be bounded at the beginning by a string that
starts with "-----BEGIN", and bounded at the end by a string that
starts with "-----END".
When importing a new trusted certificate, alias must not yet
exist in the keystore. Before adding the certificate to the keystore,
keytool tries to verify it by attempting to construct a chain of trust
from that certificate to a self-signed certificate (belonging to a root
CA), using trusted certificates that are already available in the
keystore.
If the -trustcacerts option has been specified, additional
certificates are considered for the chain of trust, namely the
certificates in a file named "cacerts", which resides in the JDK
security properties directory,
java.home/lib/security, where java.home is
the runtime environment's directory (the jre directory in
the SDK or the top-level directory of the Java 2 Runtime Environment). The "cacerts" file represents a
system-wide keystore with CA certificates. System administrators can
configure and manage that file using keytool, specifying "jks" as
the keystore type. The "cacerts" keystore file ships with five
VeriSign root CA certificates with the following X.500
distinguished names:
1. OU=Class 1 Public Primary Certification Authority, O="VeriSign, Inc.",
C=US
2. OU=Class 2 Public Primary Certification Authority, O="VeriSign,
Inc.", C=US
3. OU=Class 3 Public Primary Certification Authority,
O="VeriSign, Inc.", C=US
4. OU=Class 4 Public Primary Certification
Authority, O="VeriSign, Inc.", C=US
5. OU=Secure Server Certification
Authority, O="RSA Data Security, Inc.", C=US
The initial password of the "cacerts" keystore file is
"changeit". System administrators should change that password and the
default access permission of that file upon installing the JDK.
If keytool fails to establish a trust path from the certificate to be
imported up to a self-signed certificate (either from the keystore or
the "cacerts" file), the certificate information is printed out, and
the user is prompted to verify it, e.g., by comparing the displayed
certificate fingerprints with the fingerprints obtained from some
other (trusted) source of information, which might be the certificate
owner himself/herself. Be very careful to ensure the certificate is
valid prior to importing it as a "trusted" certificate! -- see
WARNING Regarding Importing Trusted Certificates.
The user then has the option of
aborting the import operation. If the -noprompt option
is given, however, there will be no interaction with the user.
When importing a certificate reply, the certificate reply is validated
using trusted certificates from the keystore, and optionally using the
certificates configured in the "cacerts" keystore file (if the
-trustcacerts option was specified).
If the reply is a single X.509 certificate, keytool attempts to
establish a trust chain, starting at the certificate reply and ending
at a self-signed certificate (belonging to a root CA). The certificate
reply and the hierarchy of certificates used to authenticate the
certificate reply form the new certificate chain of alias.
If the reply is a PKCS#7 formatted certificate chain, the chain is
first ordered (with the user certificate first and the self-signed
root CA certificate last), before keytool attempts to match the root
CA certificate provided in the reply with any of the trusted
certificates in the keystore or the "cacerts" keystore file (if the
-trustcacerts option was specified). If no match can be found, the
information of the root CA certificate is printed out, and the user is
prompted to verify it, e.g., by comparing the displayed certificate
fingerprints with the fingerprints obtained from some other (trusted)
source of information, which might be the root CA itself. The user
then has the option of aborting the import operation. If the
-noprompt
option is given, however, there will be no interaction with the user.
The new certificate chain of alias replaces the old certificate chain
associated with this entry. The old chain can only be replaced if a
valid keypass, the password used to protect the private key of the
entry, is supplied. If no password is provided, and the private key
password is different from the keystore password, the user is prompted
for it. Be careful with passwords - see
Warning Regarding Passwords.
Generates an X.509 v1 self-signed certificate,
using keystore information including the private key and
public key associated with alias. If dname is
supplied at the command line, it is used as the
X.500 Distinguished Name for
both the issuer and subject of the
certificate. Otherwise, the X.500 Distinguished Name associated
with alias (at the bottom of its existing certificate
chain) is used.
The generated certificate is stored as a single-element certificate chain
in the keystore entry identified by alias, where it replaces the
existing certificate chain.
In order to access the private key, the appropriate password must be
provided, since private keys
are protected in the keystore with a password. If keypass is not
provided at the command line, and is different from the password used to
protect the integrity of the keystore, the user is prompted for it.
Be careful with passwords - see
Warning Regarding Passwords.
valDays tells the number of days for which the certificate
should be considered valid.
Reads the JDK 1.1.x-style identity database from the file
idb_file, and adds its entries to the keystore.
If no file is given, the identity database is read from stdin.
If a keystore does not exist, it is created.
Only identity database entries ("identities") that were marked as
trusted will
be imported in the keystore. All other identities will be ignored.
For each trusted identity, a keystore entry will be created.
The identity's name is used as the "alias" for the keystore entry.
The private keys from trusted identities will all be encrypted
under the same password, storepass. This is the same password that
is used to protect the keystore's integrity.
Users can later assign individual passwords to those private keys
by using the "-keypasswd" keytool command option.
An identity in an identity database may hold more than one
certificate, each certifying the same public key. But a keystore
key entry for a private key has that private key and
a single "certificate chain" (initially just a single certificate),
where the first certificate in the chain
contains the public key corresponding to the private key.
When importing the information from an identity, only the first
certificate of the identity is stored in the keystore.
This is because an identity's name in an
identity database is used as the alias for
its corresponding keystore entry, and alias names are unique
within a keystore,
Generates a Certificate Signing Request (CSR), using the PKCS#10
format.
A CSR is intended to be sent to a certificate authority (CA).
The CA will authenticate the certificate requestor (usually off-line)
and will return a certificate or certificate chain, used to replace the
existing certificate chain (which initially consists of a self-signed
certificate) in the keystore.
The private key and X.500 Distinguished Name associated with
alias are used to create the PKCS#10 certificate request.
In order to access the private key, the appropriate password must be
provided, since private keys
are protected in the keystore with a password. If keypass is not
provided at the command line, and is different from the password used to
protect the integrity of the keystore, the user is prompted for it.
Reads (from the keystore) the certificate associated with
alias, and stores it in the file cert_file.
If no file is given, the certificate is output to stdout.
The certificate is by default output in binary encoding, but will instead
be output in the printable encoding format,
as defined by the Internet RFC 1421 standard,
if the -rfc option is specified.
If alias refers to a trusted certificate, that certificate is
output. Otherwise, alias refers to a key entry with
an associated certificate chain. In that case, the first certificate
in the chain is returned. This certificate authenticates the public key
of the entity addressed by alias.
Prints (to stdout) the contents of the keystore entry identified by alias.
If no alias is specified, the contents of the entire keystore are
printed.
This command by default prints the MD5 fingerprint
of a certificate. If the -v option is specified, the
certificate is printed in human-readable format, with
additional information such as the owner, issuer,
and serial number. If the
-rfc option is specified, certificate contents
are printed using the printable encoding format, as defined by the
Internet RFC 1421 standard
Reads the certificate from the file cert_file, and prints
its contents in a human-readable format.
If no file is given, the certificate is read from stdin.
The certificate may be either binary encoded or in printable encoding format,
as defined by the Internet RFC 1421 standard.
Note: This option can be used independently of a keystore.
Creates a new keystore entry, which has the same private key and
certificate chain as the original entry.
The original entry is identified by alias (which defaults
to "mykey" if not provided).
The new (destination) entry is identified by dest_alias.
If no destination alias is supplied at the command
line, the user is prompted for it.
If the private key password is different from the keystore password,
then the entry will only be cloned if a valid keypass is
supplied. This is the password used to protect the private key
associated with alias. If no key password is supplied at the command
line, and the private key password is different from the keystore password,
the user is prompted for it.
The private key in the cloned entry
may be protected with a different password, if desired. If no
-new option is supplied at the command line, the
user is prompted for the new entry's password (and may choose to
let it be the same as for the cloned entry's private key).
Changes the password used to protect the integrity of the
keystore contents. The new password is new_storepass,
which must be at least 6 characters long.
Changes the password under which the private key identified by
alias is protected, from old_keypass to
new_keypass.
If the -keypass option is not
provided at the command line, and the private key password is
different from the keystore password, the user is prompted for it.
If the -new option is not
provided at the command line, the user is prompted for it.
(Please note: This must be typed as a single line. Multiple lines
are used in the examples just for legibility purposes.)
This command creates the keystore named "mykeystore" in the "working"
directory (assuming it doesn't already exist), and assigns it the password
"ab987c".
It generates a public/private key pair for the entity whose "distinguished
name" has a
common name of "Mark Jones", organizational unit of "JavaSoft", organization of
"Sun" and two-letter country code of "US".
It uses the default "DSA" key generation algorithm to create the keys,
both 1024 bits long.
It creates a self-signed
certificate (using the default "SHA1withDSA" signature algorithm)
that includes the public key and
the distinguished name information. This certificate will be valid
for 180 days, and is associated
with the private key in a keystore entry referred to by the
alias "business". The private key is assigned the password "kpi135".
The command could be significantly shorter if option defaults were accepted.
As a matter of fact, no options are required; defaults are used for
unspecified options that have default values, and you are prompted for any
required values. Thus, you could simply have the following:
keytool -genkey
In this case, a keystore entry with alias "mykey" is created, with a
newly-generated key pair and a certificate that is valid for 90 days. This entry
is placed in the keystore named ".keystore" in your
home directory. (The keystore is created if it doesn't already exist.)
You will be prompted for the distinguished name information, the
keystore password, and the private key password.
The rest of the examples assume you executed the -genkey command
without options specified, and that you responded to the prompts with values
equal to those given in the first -genkey command, above (a private
key password of "kpi135", etc.)
Requesting a Signed Certificate from a Certification Authority
So far all we've got is a self-signed certificate.
A certificate is more likely to be trusted by others if
it is signed by a Certification Authority (CA).
To get such a signature, you first generate a Certificate
Signing Request (CSR), via the following:
keytool -certreq -file MarkJ.csr
This creates a CSR (for the entity identified by the default alias
"mykey") and puts the request in the file named "MarkJ.csr". Submit this
file to a CA, such as VeriSign, Inc.
The CA will authenticate you, the requestor (usually off-line),
and then will return a certificate, signed by them, authenticating
your public key. (In some cases, they will actually return a
chain of certificates, each one authenticating the public key of
the signer of the previous certificate in the chain.)
Importing a Certificate for the CA
You need to replace your self-signed certificate with a certificate
chain, where each certificate in the chain authenticates the public key of
the signer of the previous certificate in the chain, up to a "root" CA.
Before you import the certificate reply from a CA, you need
one or more "trusted certificates" in your keystore or in the
cacerts keystore file (which is described in
import command):
If the certificate reply is a certificate chain,
you just need the top certificate of the chain (that is, the "root" CA
certificate authenticating that CA's public key).
If the certificate reply is a single certificate, you need a
certificate for the issuing CA (the one that signed it), and if that certificate is not
self-signed, you need a certificate for its signer, and so on,
up to a self-signed "root" CA certificate.
The "cacerts" keystore file ships with five VeriSign root CA
certificates, so you probably won't need to import a VeriSign
certificate as a trusted certificate in your keystore. But if
you request a signed certificate from a different CA, and a
certificate authenticating that CA's public key hasn't been
added to "cacerts", you will need to import a certificate
from the CA as a "trusted certificate".
A certificate from a CA is usually either
self-signed, or signed by another CA (in which case you also need a
certificate authenticating that CA's public key). Suppose company
ABC, Inc., is a CA, and you obtain a
file named "ABCCA.cer" that is purportedly a self-signed certificate from
ABC, authenticating that CA's public key.
Be very careful to ensure the certificate is
valid prior to importing it as a "trusted" certificate!
View it first (using the keytool-printcert command, or the
keytool-import command
without the -noprompt option),
and make sure that the displayed certificate fingerprint(s) match the
expected ones. You can call the person who sent the certificate,
and compare the fingerprint(s) that you see with the ones that they show
(or that a secure public key repository shows).
Only if the fingerprints are equal is it guaranteed that the certificate has not been
replaced in transit with somebody else's (for example, an attacker's) certificate.
If such an attack took place, and you did not check the certificate
before you imported it, you would end up trusting anything the
attacker has signed.
If you trust that
the certificate is valid, then you can add it
to your keystore via the following:
keytool -import -alias abc -file ABCCA.cer
This creates a "trusted certificate" entry in the keystore, with
the data from the file "ABCCA.cer", and assigns the alias
"abc" to the entry.
Importing the Certificate Reply from the CA
Once you've imported a certificate authenticating the public key of
the CA you submitted your certificate signing request to (or there's
already such a certificate in the "cacerts" file),
you can import the certificate reply and thereby
replace your self-signed certificate with a certificate
chain. This chain is the one returned by the CA in response to
your request (if the CA reply is a chain), or one constructed (if the
CA reply is a single certificate) using
the certificate reply and trusted certificates that are already available
in the keystore where you import the reply or in the
"cacerts" keystore file.
For example, suppose you sent your certificate signing request to
VeriSign. You can then import the reply via
the following, which assumes the returned certificate is named "VSMarkJ.cer":
keytool -import -trustcacerts -file VSMarkJ.cer
Exporting a Certificate Authenticating Your Public Key
Suppose you have used the jarsigner tool to sign a
Java ARchive (JAR) file.
Clients that want to use the file will want to authenticate your
signature.
One way they can do this is by first importing your public key
certificate into their keystore as a "trusted" entry.
You can export the certificate and supply it to your clients.
As an example, you can copy your certificate
to a file named MJ.cer via the following, assuming
the entry is aliased by "mykey":
keytool -export -alias mykey -file MJ.cer
Given that certificate, and the signed JAR file, a client can use
the jarsigner tool to authenticate your signature.
Changing Your Distinguished Name but Keeping your Key Pair
Suppose your distinguished name changes, for example because you have
changed departments or moved to a different city. If desired, you may
still use the public/private key pair you've previously used, and yet
update your distinguished name. For example, suppose your name is
Susan Miller, and you created your initial key entry with
the alias sMiller and the distinguished name
Suppose you change from the Finance Department to the Accounting Department.
You can still use the previously-generated public/private key pair
and yet update your distinguished name by doing the following.
First, copy (clone) your key entry:
keytool -keyclone -alias sMiller -dest sMillerNew
(This prompts for the store password and for the
initial and destination private key
passwords, since they aren't provided at the command line.)
Now you need to change the certificate chain associated with
the copy, so that the first certificate in the chain uses your
different distinguished name. Start by generating a self-signed
certificate with the appropriate name: