619

Edit : I tried to format the question and accepted answer in more presentable way at my blog.

Here is the original issue.

I am getting this error:

detailed message sun.security.validator.ValidatorException: PKIX path building failed:
sun.security.provider.certpath.SunCertPathBuilderException: unable to find valid certification path to requested target

cause javax.net.ssl.SSLHandshakeException: sun.security.validator.ValidatorException: PKIX path building failed: sun.security.provider.certpath.SunCertPathBuilderException: unable to find valid certification path to requested target

I am using Tomcat 6 as webserver. I have two HTTPS web applications installed on different Tomcats on different ports but on the same machine. Say App1 (port 8443) and App2 (port 443). App1 connects to App2. When App1 connects to App2 I get the above error. I know this is a very common error so came across many solutions on different forums and sites. I have the below entry in server.xml of both Tomcats:

keystoreFile="c:/.keystore" 
keystorePass="changeit"

Every site says the same reason that certificate given by app2 is not in the trusted store of app1 jvm. This seems to be true also when I tried to hit the same URL in IE browser, it works (with warming, There is a problem with this web site's security certificate. Here I say continue to this website). But when same URL is hit by Java client (in my case) I get the above error. So to put it in the truststore I tried these three options:

Option 1

System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.trustStore", "C:/.keystore");
System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword", "changeit");

Option 2

Setting below in environment variable

CATALINA_OPTS -- param name
-Djavax.net.ssl.trustStore=C:\.keystore -Djavax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword=changeit ---param value

Option 3

Setting below in environment variable

JAVA_OPTS -- param name
-Djavax.net.ssl.trustStore=C:\.keystore -Djavax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword=changeit ---param value

Result

But nothing worked.

What at last worked is executing the Java approach suggested in How to handle invalid SSL certificates with Apache HttpClient? by Pascal Thivent i.e. executing the program InstallCert.

But this approach is fine for devbox setup but I can not use it at production environment.

I am wondering why three approaches mentioned above did not work when I have mentioned the same values in server.xml of App2 server and same values in truststore by setting

System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.trustStore", "C:/.keystore") and System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword", "changeit");

in App1 program.

For more information this is how I am making the connection:

URL url = new URL(urlStr);

URLConnection conn = url.openConnection();

if (conn instanceof HttpsURLConnection) {

  HttpsURLConnection conn1 = (HttpsURLConnection) url.openConnection();
  
  conn1.setHostnameVerifier(new HostnameVerifier() {
    public boolean verify(String hostname, SSLSession session) {
      return true;
    }
  });

  reply.load(conn1.getInputStream());
6
  • possible duplicate of HttpClient and SSL
    – user207421
    Mar 9, 2012 at 0:28
  • Odly enough I got this error when communicating between clustered servers that had no SSL problems individually. Once I properly set domainname in my RHEL servers the problem was gone. Hope it helps someone.
    – DavidGamba
    Jun 18, 2014 at 19:35
  • One other thing to check is that you have the latest version of Java - I was getting a similar error because of this.
    – Redzarf
    May 24, 2016 at 19:54
  • stackoverflow.com/questions/2893819/… - also relevant and a fantastic answer.
    – Siddhartha
    Apr 6, 2018 at 22:15
  • First of all import you'r crt file into {JAVA_HOME}/jre/security/cacerts, if you still faced with this exception, change you'r jdk version. For example from jdk1.8.0_17 to jdk1.8.0_231 Feb 2, 2021 at 12:33

38 Answers 38

1
2
-1
  • Make sure of your JVM location. There can be half a dozen JREs on your system. Which one is your Tomcat really using? Anywhere inside code running in your Tomcat, write println(System.getProperty("java.home")). Note this location. In <java.home>/lib/security/cacerts file are the certificates used by your Tomcat.
  • Find the root certificate that is failing. This can be found by turning on SSL debug using -Djavax.net.debug=all. Run your app and note from console ssl logs the CA that is failing. Its url will be available. In my case I was surprised to find that a proxy zscaler was the one which was failing, as it was actually proxying my calls, and returning its own CA certificate.
  • Paste url in browser. Certificate will get downloaded.
  • Import this certificate into cacerts using keytool import.
-1

I ran into this issue while making REST calls from my app server running in AWS EC2. The following Steps fixed the issue for me.

  1. curl -vs https://your_rest_path
  2. echo | openssl s_client -connect your_domain:443
  3. sudo apt-get install ca-certificates

curl -vs https://your_rest_path will now work!

-1

I also have the same problem on Apache Tomcat/7.0.67 and Java JVM Version: 1.8.0_66-b18. With upgrading Java to JRE 1.8.0_241 and it seems that the issue was solved.

-1

Watch out for great answer for @NDeveloper. I did copy-paste of course, changing the values and I was getting

Illegal option:  ?import

I did checkout the hyphens and I saw that on that answer was the hyphen using the ASCII

– 8211

If you are getting problems check that the ASCII code that did the trick for me was this code = 45

- 45

My code

keytool -import -noprompt -trustcacerts -alias Certificado -file "C:\Users\JavIut\Desktop\Company\Certificados\Certificado.cer" -keystore "C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.8.0_121\jre\lib\security\cacerts"
-1

For OkHttpClient, this solution worked for me. It might help someone using the library...

try {

            String proxyHost = "proxy_host";
            String proxyUsername = "proxy_username";
            String proxyPassword = "proxy_password";

            Proxy proxy = new Proxy(Proxy.Type.HTTP, new InetSocketAddress(proxyHost, "port goes here"));

            // Create a trust manager that does not validate certificate chains
            TrustManager[] trustAllCerts = new TrustManager[]{
                new X509TrustManager() {
                    @Override
                    public java.security.cert.X509Certificate[] getAcceptedIssuers() {
                        return new java.security.cert.X509Certificate[]{};
                    }
                    @Override
                    public void checkClientTrusted(
                            java.security.cert.X509Certificate[] certs, String authType) {
                    }
                    @Override
                    public void checkServerTrusted(
                            java.security.cert.X509Certificate[] certs, String authType) {
                    }
                }
            };

            // Install the all-trusting trust manager
            final SSLContext sslContext = SSLContext.getInstance("SSL");
            sslContext.init(null, trustAllCerts, new java.security.SecureRandom());
            // Create an ssl socket factory with our all-trusting manager
            final SSLSocketFactory sslSocketFactory = sslContext.getSocketFactory();

            OkHttpClient client = new OkHttpClient().newBuilder()
                    .sslSocketFactory(sslSocketFactory, (X509TrustManager) trustAllCerts[0])
                    .hostnameVerifier((hostname, session) -> true)
                    .connectTimeout(timeout, TimeUnit.SECONDS)
                    .proxy(proxy)
                    .proxyAuthenticator((route, response) -> {
                        String credential = Credentials.basic(proxyUsername, proxyPassword);
                        return response.request().newBuilder()
                                .header("Proxy-Authorization", credential)
                                .build();
                    })
                    .build();

            MediaType mediaType = MediaType.parse("application/json");
            RequestBody requestBody = RequestBody.create(payload, mediaType);

            Request request = new Request.Builder()
                    .url(url)
                    .header("Authorization", "authorization data goes here")
                    .method(requestMethod, requestBody)
                    .build();

            Response response = client.newCall(request).execute();

            resBody = response.body().string();

            int responseCode = response.code();

        } catch (Exception ex) {
        }
-1

I have been searching about similar problem, because I need to serve angular application on local domain like as example.com as securely.

To create certificate,

openssl req  -newkey rsa:2048 -x509 -nodes -keyout server.key -new -out server.crt  -config ./openssl-custom.cnf -sha256  -days 3650

openss-custom.cnf

[req]
default_bits = 2048
prompt = no
default_md = sha256
x509_extensions = v3_req
distinguished_name = dn

[dn]
C = TR
ST = Ankara
L = Ankara
O = Example
OU = Angular
emailAddress = [email protected]
CN = *.example.com

[v3_req]
subjectAltName = @alt_names

[alt_names]
DNS.1 = *.example.com

Evenif I import this certificate to cacerts of the active jre, Spring boot application didn't work properly. And "trustAnchor must be non empty" error was throwed. Because jvm didn't contain my truststore. To solve this problem, truststore should be given to jvm parameter.

Set this parameters at spring boot side

@Configuration
public class SSLConfig {
    @Autowired
    private Environment env;

    @PostConstruct
    private void configureSSL() {
      //load the 'javax.net.ssl.trustStore' and
      //'javax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword' from application.properties
      System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.trustStore", env.getProperty("server.ssl.trust-store")); 
      System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword",env.getProperty("server.ssl.trust-store-password"));
    }
}
application.properties:

server.ssl.trust-store: YOUR_TRUST_STORE_PATH
server.ssl.trust-store-password: YOUR_TRUST_STORE_PASSWORD

or set jvm parameter when run java application

-Djavax.net.ssl.trustStore
-Djavax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword
-1

I am running java code on Mac, Visual Code Studio. I tried all the options, the only thing that worked for me was replacing the alias with the website url.

after (worked)

sudo keytool -import -noprompt -trustcacerts -alias https://central.sonatype.com -file "" -keystore "/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/temurin-17.jdk/Contents/Home/lib/security/cacerts"

before

sudo keytool -import -noprompt -trustcacerts -alias CentralSonaType -file "" -keystore "/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/temurin-17.jdk/Contents/Home/lib/security/cacerts"

I created a launch configuration

 "vmArgs": [
                "-Djavax.net.debug=ALL",
                "-Djavax.net.ssl.keyStore=/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/temurin-17.jdk/Contents/Home/lib/security/cacerts",
                "-Djavax.net.ssl.keyStorePassword=changeit",
                "-Djavax.net.ssl.trustStore=/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/temurin-17.jdk/Contents/Home/lib/security/cacerts", 
                "-Djavax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword=changeit"
  ]
0
-3

In a pinch, you can disable SSL entirely, or per connection (note this is not recommended for production!) see https://stackoverflow.com/a/19542614/32453

2
  • 2
    Code-only answers are generally frowned upon on this site. Could you please edit your answer to include some comments or explanation of your code? Explanations should answer questions like: What does it do? How does it do it? Where does it go? How does it solve OP's problem?
    – mypetlion
    Oct 17, 2019 at 19:35
  • 6
    add this to your code No. Do not add this to your code. Creating an SSLContext in this manner removes all security checks that verify the identity of the server you are connecting to. The answer to the problem of losing your keys is NOT to remove all the locks from everything you own. Feb 10, 2020 at 10:49
1
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