Jun 24, 2015 13:02
@KevinB Getting reasonably fair questions re-open is actually quite hard. I had voted to re-open this question last week, but my reopen vote expired (and I can't cast a new one for another few days). There's nothing wrong with the question. I also think there's a "pack" effect (down/close votes attracting down/close votes, by people who might not have thought there was anything wrong with the question otherwise if they hadn't seen the down/close votes in the first place).
 

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Jun 23, 2015 18:26
@TylerH, I think my point is that it wasn't really too broad.
Jun 23, 2015 16:11
I think it's a fair question, tbh.
Jun 23, 2015 16:10
It's also quite subtle since you do indeed need Python 2.7.9 or above (quite recent).
Jun 23, 2015 16:09
It's certainly not too broad, and it's quite answerable.
Jun 23, 2015 16:06
Any thoughts on why this question was closed? I voted to re-open it a few days ago, but it's now gone: stackoverflow.com/q/30809051/372643
 
Jun 2, 2014 13:07
I've just edited mine here: stackoverflow.com/a/23986037/372643
Jun 2, 2014 13:00
I have to go, nice talking to you.
Jun 2, 2014 12:41
I you use the PKIX or NewSunX509 KMF algorithm, you should then use the implementation I was pointing at, otherwise, by default it's SunX509, and it's the one you've just mentioned. github.com/openjdk-mirror/jdk7u-jdk/blob/master/src/share/…
Jun 2, 2014 12:40
Yes, that's what I would do.
Jun 2, 2014 12:35
This depends on the KMF algorithm https://github.com/openjdk-mirror/jdk7u-jdk/blob/master/src/share/classes/sun/security/ssl/SSLContextImpl.java
but that's going to be SunX509 by default indeed.
Jun 2, 2014 12:34
Indeed, I was just looking at that. You're right.
Jun 2, 2014 12:26
It might be worth looking into it with a debugger, but I don't really have time to set up such an environment at the moment.
Jun 2, 2014 12:25
It looks like it depends on key usage, extended key usage and the date.
Jun 2, 2014 12:25
Jun 2, 2014 12:22
It might be worth trying without any plain ku.
Jun 2, 2014 12:20
... but you should have that in your example indeed...
Jun 2, 2014 12:18
I'm not sure, I haven't tried. This might have something to do with the plain (non-extended) key usage too.
Jun 2, 2014 12:05
Having these extensions doesn't mean it won't get selected, it just means it won't be preferred if there's a better match. Do you test with just that cert or others better matching certs in your keystore too?
Jun 2, 2014 12:05
If you look at what's done with CheckType in getAliases, itself called by chooseAlias, it looks like certificates with the right EKU will be preferred.
Jun 2, 2014 12:05
The key usage (if present in potential client certs) is also used to make the choice.
 
Feb 21, 2014 21:51
Good luck
Feb 21, 2014 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").
Feb 21, 2014 21:41
PKCS#12 is the standard name, but I guess they don't allow non alphanumeric characters in possible identifiers.
Feb 21, 2014 21:40
PKCS12
Feb 21, 2014 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.
Feb 21, 2014 21:32
In that case, whenever they're bypassing that warning, they're vulnerable to a MITM attack.
Feb 21, 2014 21:31
The point is for your head server to prove its identity to them. That's the point of the certificate.
Feb 21, 2014 21:30
Yes, but they may not know what your cert is.
Feb 21, 2014 21:29
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.
Feb 21, 2014 21:26
You'd need to discuss that with those connecting to your head node.
Feb 21, 2014 21:25
... and it's the CA certificate you'll probably want to export.
Feb 21, 2014 21:25
Neither, just export the certificate, not the private key (certificate only, in PEM format).
Feb 21, 2014 21:18
It's often less trouble to get a cert from a commercial CA to avoid this CA cert distribution problem.
Feb 21, 2014 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).
Feb 21, 2014 21:16
That's what commercial CAs tend to issue by default as far as I'm aware.
Feb 21, 2014 21:15
2048 should still be OK, but it's the minimal requirement these days.
Feb 21, 2014 21:13
I think in XCA you can select other private keys, I can't remember.
Feb 21, 2014 21:12
It's bad practice to share private keys. Use one per cert.
Feb 21, 2014 21:12
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).
Feb 21, 2014 21:08
Yes, that would make sense, if that's the host name. It must be the host name as used by the clients.
Feb 21, 2014 21:07
Did you not have a cert on your head node issued by a well known CA?
Feb 21, 2014 21:07
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)
Feb 21, 2014 21:04
No, keep the connector's keystore entry, otherwise it won't have its own cert to use.
Feb 21, 2014 21:02
If its connector settings are working (i.e. you can access that externally as you'd like), keep them as they are.
Feb 21, 2014 21:01
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.
Feb 21, 2014 20:59
If you can connect directly to your slave node via a browser, you should be able to check its certificate.
Feb 21, 2014 20:55
Yes, you do that in the connector config, not via -D java.net.ssl.keystore.
Feb 21, 2014 20:53
You'll need that keystoreType="PKCS12" in the connector config.
Feb 21, 2014 20:53
Use java.net.ssl.keystoreType=PKCS12 when needed (if you're using a PKCS#12 file for java.net.ssl.keystore).