Acting as Ruth, you have now imported Stan's public key certificate into the exampleruthstore
keystore as a "trusted certificate." You can now use the jarsigner
tool to verify the authenticity of the JAR file signature.
When you verify a signed JAR file, you verify that the signature is valid and that the JAR file has not been tampered with. You can do this for the sContract.jar
file via the following command:
jarsigner -verify -verbose -keystore exampleruthstore sContract.jar
You should see something like the following:
183 Fri Jul 31 10:49:54 PDT 1998 META-INF/SIGNLEGAL.SF 1542 Fri Jul 31 10:49:54 PDT 1998 META-INF/SIGNLEGAL.DSA 0 Fri Jul 31 10:49:18 PDT 1998 META-INF/ smk 1147 Wed Jul 29 16:06:12 PDT 1998 contract s = signature was verified m = entry is listed in manifest k = at least one certificate was found in keystore i = at least one certificate was found in identity scope jar verified.
Be sure to run the command with the -verbose
option to get enough information to ensure the following:
s
signifies)k
signifies).