I'm trying to set up a connection with an https url, but since it's still in testing, the url redirects to the test environment, causing a browser to prompt the user with a message saying roughly that the certificate is trusted, valid, but doesn't match the domainname, and if they want to continue. I'm having a hard time dealing with this in Java. All the answers I've found suggest using a TrustManager like this
TrustManager[] trustAllCerts = new TrustManager[] { new X509TrustManager() {
public X509Certificate[] getAcceptedIssuers() {
return null;
}
public void checkClientTrusted(X509Certificate[] certs, String authType) {
return;
}
public void checkServerTrusted(X509Certificate[] certs, String authType) {
return;
}
}};
sslContext.init(kmf.getKeyManagers(), trustAllCerts, new SecureRandom());
But this doesn't change anything.
The authentication involves entering a password on reading the client certificate's private key, and this works identically and correctly both from a browser and my application, it's after this authentication that either the prompt pops up in the browser or the connection returns a 'bad_certificate' error in my application. Is there some other way to either ignore the domain validation entirely or make the same prompt appear?
For clarity, my application doesn't cause the password prompt to appear because I programmed it in or anything, I think it just originates from windows detecting my application trying to access the certificate's private key, so I would assume that the second prompt would work in a similar fashion, but I haven't found any parameters to make that happen yet.