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20:30
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A: How do I create self signed certificates that two tomcats will be happy with when using https between the tomcats?

BrunoFirstly, you're not actually making server-to-server connections: these are still client-to-server connections. It just happens that your client is a webapp running within a servlet container. It matters because it's the client trust settings that are going to be used to establish the connection...

Great reply. I'm going to add an update #3 section that describes some of the details you've pointed out that are relevant.
I've updated with more information. Your statement about IP address and RFC 2818 triggered my memory. I found in our low level class that makes the connection, that we overload the hostname verifier class to always return true. So perhaps that's how we have always bypassed that requirement. Not a great practice I'm sure...
The reason for picking "server to server" communication is so people would stop thinking in terms of a web browser client. I agree with you that the client here is a HttpURLConnection request being made from within the master tomcat's servlet.
By the way, are you trying to use client-certificate authentication for these connections, or do the client webapps perform other type of authentication (if required) independently of SSL/TLS?
The tomee+ that is exposed to the outside world uses OpenAM SSO, while all of the Tomee+ servers hidden behind each company's firewall, use just https (for now). IF we could figure out how to do client certificate authorization, we might do that, except, as far as I can determine, every time we add a new server, we would need to add a certificate to the Head Tomee+. That isn't something we wish to do if we can help it. If it is the only choice, then perhaps. For now, we are just trying to get plain https communications with our own CA to work.
I meant, how do the backend servers know the connections from the head server to the backend servers actually come from the head server?
They have no idea. The head server simply makes a httpUrlConnection (as outlined in update #4) to a specific slave tomcat. Which server is ultimately determined by the user. I should backup. We used to have this working with tomcat5.5, when we moved to tomee+, we broke something. The only thing common in the working 5.5 version of this was a truststore entry. I'm looking at one of the working ones now. RSA 2048, MD5 with RSA, Fingerprint SHA-1. CN=CompanyName. That entry is identical in ALL servers.
20:30
The slave nodes need to have their keystore configured in their connector configurations, but not in JAVA_OPTS (you'd need it there if you wanted them to be using client-certificates, as clients). The CN is ignored when there's a SAN for the IP address (but you can set it to the IP address if you want, various tools use the CN to identify the cert in a list).
When I export the certificate for one of the slaves into PKCS#12 format, do I pick the option "with Certificate Chain"? So inside of "X Certificate" i'm looking at a tree, with the top node being the CA and the first leaf being my "10.93.101.33" cert. I'm right clicking on this leaf and exporting. Right?
I think I've figured out that I don't want to export the chain
Exporting with or without the chain doesn't matter here, since there's no intermediate cert. In doubt, export with the chain in general.
Ok, I'll export the chain, thank you.
It doesn't matter here, but if you were configuring a certificate from a commercial CA, you'd want the chain.
When I export the chain, I see the top node as the CA entry followed by the leaf which is the slave's cert with the CN of it
20:42
Where do you see that?
and it shows me a tree view
Yes, that would make sense.
The other small tidbit that had me confused for a bit, is that the file I end up with from "X Certificate" IS the keystore file
when I finish the export
as you can tell all of this was outside of my domain knowledge...
Remember, for it to work with IP addresses, you must have put the IP address in a Subject Alternative Name (in the extensions tab), with Type "IP".
I read that DNS: is also used?
20:47
Yes, you should use DNS for host names (but not IP addresses).
Indeed, the PKCS#12 file (.p12) is the keystore, but you must set the keystore type to "PKCS12" in Java (it defaults to JKS).
I will set the PCKS12 type in the connector. Do I need to do it within the /etc/init.d/tomee script first?
as well
Ok, just thinking out loud here. For the slave, I'm removing the truststore related entries.
I'm not 100% certain if the -Djava.next.ssl.keystore entries are needed within the startup shell script /etc/init.d/tomee for the slave. I'll leave it for now
But it looks like I need to tell it (if I'm keeping the entry) to use PCKS12 within that file. I don't currently
-Djava.net.ssl.keystore is only if you want them to be using client certificates for their outgoing connections.
Use java.net.ssl.keystoreType=PKCS12 when needed (if you're using a PKCS#12 file for java.net.ssl.keystore).
You'll need that keystoreType="PKCS12" in the connector config.
Ok. Keep in mind, that for the moment I'm configuring a slave.
he should be serving his cert
so I'm assuming that's in this keystore file I just generated. And from what you say, I don't need the entry within the startup script -D... keystore. Only within the connector.
Yes, you do that in the connector config, not via -D java.net.ssl.keystore.
Ok thanks. Working on it
Ok the slave is setup and restarted, I'm finishing up on the master
For the master, do I need the -D... truststore entries or do I only need the connector? I haven't grasped the difference
20:59
If you can connect directly to your slave node via a browser, you should be able to check its certificate.
KeyStore Explorer has a neat ability to examine an SSL connection. It shows my chained cert.
so it is there
Yes, for the master, you'll need the -D...trusstore entries. The connector entries are different, they're for the configuration of the server connector itself. The -Djava.net.ssl are going to be used by your client application within that. Of course, if your head node is also accessible with HTTPS from outside via the connector, it should be configured with its own certificate, independently.
ah and it is
the master server has a domain name
and is exposed
So I need both
the -D and connector config. Working on it now
If its connector settings are working (i.e. you can access that externally as you'd like), keep them as they are.
I need to remove the connector's keystore entries. We have a lot of legacy stuff in place... mainly because the people who still work here don't know enough about it. Thus, you have me
21:04
No, keep the connector's keystore entry, otherwise it won't have its own cert to use.
oh?
This is the master. So I need to create his own.. oh yes
this is so that browsers will work
crap
ok. Back to "X Certificate" then
Simple rule:
- keystore: your key/cert material
- truststore: the certs with which you want to verify other certs.

In Tomcat:
- connector settings will apply to the server itself
- the -Djavax.net.ssl settings in catalina.sh will apply to the JVM by default (including clients in webapps)
Ok so i'm in the Subject page of the "Create x509 Certificate" dialog. I'm going to place the DNS entry within the commonName "apps-srini.emplocal.lan"
Did you not have a cert on your head node issued by a well known CA?
21:08
Yes, that would make sense, if that's the host name. It must be the host name as used by the clients.
This whole product chain is something that sits within places like Comcast, and british telcom and only the head server is exposed to their internal support people
so a trusted cert is an option
but only if they decide to do it
This product started life 10 years ago, with an old version of openssl and a lot of bash shell scripts
for changing and rebuilding certs
Question:
They probably haven't changed that much, although Java support for PKCS#12 files has probably improved (not sure how good support was 10 years ago), otherwise, you'd have to convert the p12 file into JKS (yet another step).
can I use the private key i used for the slave?
It's bad practice to share private keys. Use one per cert.
ah ok
Oh, i don't even get the option to use the old one
21:13
I think in XCA you can select other private keys, I can't remember.
The old scripts used 2048 everything, I'm assuming that's ok
So for the master server that IS going to be accessed by browsers, should I export "PKCS #12 with Certificate chain"?
would this affect how people import the cert on their browsers?
2048 should still be OK, but it's the minimal requirement these days.
really. Hmm.
That's what commercial CAs tend to issue by default as far as I'm aware.
The cert chain?
ok
21:17
If people are going to access it from their browsers, you should give them your CA certificate (and only the certificate of course).
It's often less trouble to get a cert from a commercial CA to avoid this CA cert distribution problem.
Ok so the way I'm reading that, is that for the master, I really should pick the option that does NOT export the certificate chain.
it exports JUST the certificate
Neither, just export the certificate, not the private key (certificate only, in PEM format).
... and it's the CA certificate you'll probably want to export.
You'd need to discuss that with those connecting to your head node.
Ok, unfortunately, that confused me. I had thought that for the master, I need a keystore file that contains a cert. Now what that cert is seems to be where I'm confused. Here is what I have done so far.
I went into "X Certificate" and generated a new Certificate using the CA I've created to sign it
I put in the details such as the domain name of this master server
now I have underneath my CA root node, a leaf
that is the apps-srini.emplocal.lan
I had planned on clicking on that leaf and exporting either the whole chain or just the cert
Yes, you need a keystore that contains the cert, but you'll also need to give your CA cert to your users, so that they can import it into their browsers. Of course, never give them any private key.
ah ok
well in this case what we usually do
is tell them to just accept and import where possible through the browser options
they know who we are
and how ugly the browser can get
21:30
Yes, but they may not know what your cert is.
again these are people that work within the company itself
you are absolutely correct, but.. we just tell them to import / accept through the browsers dialog, and in the past, they could still get to our content
The point is for your head server to prove its identity to them. That's the point of the certificate.
agreed
In that case, whenever they're bypassing that warning, they're vulnerable to a MITM attack.
Ok.
I understand
For now, I'm going to take the cert that I signed with my own CA, and use the version of it that wasn't exported with the whole chain. I'll place that as the connector keystore
21:38
Exporting with the chain only matters when you have intermediate certificates. You don't have any here, so whether you export the chain or not is more or less the same.
I screwed up the keystoretype string
is the string "PKCS#12"
or just PKCS12
PKCS12
or ... the connector can't handle that type :(
ah good ok thanks
PKCS#12 is the standard name, but I guess they don't allow non alphanumeric characters in possible identifiers.
Hot damn! It works. The Master can send https messages from the servlet to the slave
Now I'll have to figure out the corresponding openssl commands so this can be scripted
Thanks Bruno, I'm going to award you the points, and change the question, once I figure out the openssl equivalents
thanks !!
21:46
Look at the question I've linked to for the OpenSSL params (for the IP address SAN). You can use CA.pl for a CA with OpenSSL (see "man CA.pl").
Will do Bruno. I'm going to close this page for now and get busy.
Good luck

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