I am using Java keytool
. I have exported a self-signed .pem
certificate from my keystore. Is there a command to view the certificate details directly from the .pem
file (not of the certificate in the keystore)?
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Portecle is also very useful for that: portecle.sourceforge.net– endo64Dec 28, 2018 at 7:30
4 Answers
An alternative to using keytool
, you can use the command
openssl x509 -in certificate.pem -text
This should work for any x509 .pem file provided you have openssl
installed.
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7Actually,
keytool
errored out withjava.lang.Exception: Failed to parse input
for some pems, but this worked for all of them Apr 13, 2018 at 18:23 -
10In my case I had to change "x509" with "rsa" so I guess it depends on the .pem contents. I used
file
command to know that it was "rsa" and not "x509" (e.g.file xyz.pem
).– MegaTuxMay 22, 2019 at 19:40 -
11@megatux a PEM file can contain a few different types of data
x509
is the format for certificates,rsa
is the format for a public/private key pair.– alfwattJun 7, 2019 at 22:46 -
8For shorter text-output try:
openssl x509 -in certificate.pem -text -noout
- This will omit the last ~ 40 lines of text from the output ( BEGIN CERTIFICATE ... END CERTIFICATE stuff)– knbOct 22, 2020 at 12:28 -
2to get only the subject:
openssl x509 -noout -subject -in file.pem
– user2053904Oct 23, 2020 at 7:23
Use the -printcert
command like this:
keytool -printcert -file certificate.pem
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44
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15@Maximilian it may happen on APNS certificates, which combines private key & certificate into one
.pem
. Separate them into 2 files using text editor and the above command will work. (Hint: copy-- BEGIN CERTIFICATE --
line to-- END CERTIFICATE --
line to new file)– RaptorJan 2, 2015 at 4:13 -
3
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In Windows, no external tools needed, just powershell:
Import cert file to variable $cert
$fpath = "path-to-file"
$cert = New-Object Security.Cryptography.X509Certificates.X509Certificate2([string]$fpath)
To view all content of certificate, type
$cert | select *
Should work for other cert extensions as well.
In Powershell it is sufficient to go to the folder with the crt creticifate. Type in the name of the certificate. Hit enter. Next you will see a dialog box with details of the certificate/