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This lesson illustrates the use of the security-related tools (
keytool
,jarsigner
, and Policy Tool). It also shows use of thejar
tool to place files in JAR (Java ARchive) files for subsequent signing by thejarsigner
tool.In this lesson you first execute steps to create an application, put it in a JAR file, sign the JAR file, and export the public key certificate corresponding to the private key used to sign the JAR file. For convenience, you pretend to be Susan Jones, and you supply information about her when you generate the keys.
Then you act as the recipient of the signed JAR file and the certificate. For convenience, you pretend to be Ray. You see how the signed application cannot normally read a file when it is run under a security manager. Then you use
keytool
to import the certificate into Ray's keystore in an entry aliased bysusan
, and the Policy Tool to create an entry in Ray's policy file to permit code signed bysusan
to read the specified file. Finally, you see how the application running under a security manager can now read the file, since it has been granted permission to do so.For further information about digital signatures, certificates, keystores, and the tools, see the API and Tools Use for Secure Code and File Exchanges lesson.
Important Note: You need to do everything in this lesson while working in the directory in which you store the sample application, but you should store the data file needed by the application in a different directory. All of the examples assume that you are working in theC:\Test
directory, and that the data file is in theC:\TestData
directory. If you are working on a UNIX system, substitute your own directory names.Here are the steps:
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