/** * Callback method from _scanKeychain. If a trusted certificate is found, this method will be * called. */ private void createTrustedCertEntry( String alias, long keychainItemRef, long creationDate, byte[] derStream) { TrustedCertEntry tce = new TrustedCertEntry(); try { CertificateFactory cf = CertificateFactory.getInstance("X.509"); InputStream input = new ByteArrayInputStream(derStream); X509Certificate cert = (X509Certificate) cf.generateCertificate(input); input.close(); tce.cert = cert; tce.certRef = keychainItemRef; // Make a creation date. if (creationDate != 0) tce.date = new Date(creationDate); else tce.date = new Date(); int uniqueVal = 1; String originalAlias = alias; while (entries.containsKey(alias.toLowerCase())) { alias = originalAlias + " " + uniqueVal; uniqueVal++; } entries.put(alias.toLowerCase(), tce); } catch (Exception e) { // The certificate will be skipped. System.err.println("KeychainStore Ignored Exception: " + e); } }
/** * Callback method from _scanKeychain. If an identity is found, this method will be called to * create Java certificate and private key objects from the keychain data. */ private void createKeyEntry( String alias, long creationDate, long secKeyRef, long[] secCertificateRefs, byte[][] rawCertData) throws IOException, NoSuchAlgorithmException, UnrecoverableKeyException { KeyEntry ke = new KeyEntry(); // First, store off the private key information. This is the easy part. ke.protectedPrivKey = null; ke.keyRef = secKeyRef; // Make a creation date. if (creationDate != 0) ke.date = new Date(creationDate); else ke.date = new Date(); // Next, create X.509 Certificate objects from the raw data. This is complicated // because a certificate's public key may be too long for Java's default encryption strength. List<CertKeychainItemPair> createdCerts = new ArrayList<>(); try { CertificateFactory cf = CertificateFactory.getInstance("X.509"); for (int i = 0; i < rawCertData.length; i++) { try { InputStream input = new ByteArrayInputStream(rawCertData[i]); X509Certificate cert = (X509Certificate) cf.generateCertificate(input); input.close(); // We successfully created the certificate, so track it and its corresponding // SecCertificateRef. createdCerts.add(new CertKeychainItemPair(secCertificateRefs[i], cert)); } catch (CertificateException e) { // The certificate will be skipped. System.err.println("KeychainStore Ignored Exception: " + e); } } } catch (CertificateException e) { e.printStackTrace(); } catch (IOException ioe) { ioe.printStackTrace(); // How would this happen? } // We have our certificates in the List, so now extract them into an array of // Certificates and SecCertificateRefs. CertKeychainItemPair[] objArray = createdCerts.toArray(new CertKeychainItemPair[0]); Certificate[] certArray = new Certificate[objArray.length]; long[] certRefArray = new long[objArray.length]; for (int i = 0; i < objArray.length; i++) { CertKeychainItemPair addedItem = objArray[i]; certArray[i] = addedItem.mCert; certRefArray[i] = addedItem.mCertificateRef; } ke.chain = certArray; ke.chainRefs = certRefArray; // If we don't have already have an item with this item's alias // create a new one for it. int uniqueVal = 1; String originalAlias = alias; while (entries.containsKey(alias.toLowerCase())) { alias = originalAlias + " " + uniqueVal; uniqueVal++; } entries.put(alias.toLowerCase(), ke); }
/** * Checks if the given alias exists in this keystore. * * @param alias the alias name * @return true if the alias exists, false otherwise */ public boolean engineContainsAlias(String alias) { permissionCheck(); return entries.containsKey(alias.toLowerCase()); }