If a code signer does not yet have a suitable private key for signing the code, the key must first be generated, along with a corresponding public key that can be used by the code receiver's runtime system to verify the signature.
Since this lesson assumes that you don't yet have such keys,
you are going to create a keystore named examplestore
and
create an entry with a newly generated public/private key pair
(with the public key in a certificate).
Type the following command in your command window to create a
keystore named examplestore
and to
generate keys:
keytool -genkey -alias signFiles -keystore examplestore
You will be prompted to enter passwords for the key and keystore.
Let's look at what each of the keytool
subparts mean.
Note: For security reasons you should not set your key or keystore passwords on the command line, because they can be intercepted more easily that way.
If you use the preceding keystore
command,
you will be prompted for your distinguished-name information.
Following are the prompts; the bold indicates
what you should type.
What is your first and last name? [Unknown]: Susan Jones What is the name of your organizational unit? [Unknown]: Purchasing What is the name of your organization? [Unknown]: ExampleCompany What is the name of your City or Locality? [Unknown]: Cupertino What is the name of your State or Province? [Unknown]: CA What is the two-letter country code for this unit? [Unknown]: US Is <CN=Susan Jones, OU=Purchasing, O=ExampleCompany, L=Cupertino, ST=CA, C=US> correct? [no]: y
The keytool
command creates the keystore named
examplestore
(if it doesn't already exist) in the
same directory in which the command is executed.
The command generates a public/private key pair for the entity
whose distinguished name has a
common name of Susan Jones and the organizational unit of Purchasing.
The command creates a self-signed certificate that includes
the public key and the distinguished-name information.
(The distinguised name you supply will be used as the "subject" field in the certificate.)
This certificate will be valid
for 90 days, the default validity period if you don't specify a
-validity option. The certificate is associated
with the private key in a keystore entry referred to by the
alias signFiles
.
Note: The command could be shorter if option defaults
are accepted or you wish to be prompted for various values.
Whenever you execute a keytool
command, defaults are used for
unspecified options that have default values, and you are prompted for any
required values. For the genkey
command, options with default
values include alias (whose default is mykey
),
validity (90 days), and keystore
(the file named .keystore
in your home directory).
Required values include dname, storepass, and keypass.