59

How do I go about getting the details of the certificate an apk was signed with. I have a bunch of apks signed with different certificates and I am trying to group them based on their certificate.

I can get the certificate expiry details using the jarsigner and complete my task but I was curious if I can get any more details or extract the public key ( I believe it stored in META-INF/cert.RSA but it's not readable )

3

5 Answers 5

63

Try the following:

openssl pkcs7 -inform DER -in CERT.RSA -noout -print_certs -text
3
  • 11
    You can get some info also with java's keytool: keytool -printcert -file CERT.RSA, but openssl is more verbose, that's why I prefer it.
    – pevik
    Jul 1, 2014 at 22:09
  • Thank you. Out of curiosity, which part of the output is the fingerprint? I tried this with the Signal APK (signal.org/android/apk) by extracting META-INF/CERTIFIC.RSA but cannot find a value in the output that matches the Signal fingerprint listed on their site.
    – iangetz
    Jan 10, 2021 at 20:50
  • 1
    @iangetz see this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/54782328/…
    – Yury
    Jan 12, 2021 at 9:21
51

unzip -p Name-of-apk.apk META-INF/CERT.RSA | keytool -printcert is what I used .

It produces information such as the owner, issuer, serial number, valid through, certificate fingerprints, signature algorithms and version.

36

The easiest of all:

keytool -printcert -jarfile file.apk

This also works for Android App Bundles (.aab)

4
  • I have been using this command since long time now. Recently I have noticed that keytool has stopped showing MD5 in output. Any guesses why is it so ? Tried searching a lot but no success. Jun 25, 2019 at 11:18
  • Add -v to get MD5 as well. Jun 25, 2019 at 18:32
  • same output. no MD5 visible. :( This is so strange. Earlier I used to get MD5 as well. I am simply clueless about why this is happening now. Jun 26, 2019 at 6:31
  • I also tried asking question regarding this but again no success. stackoverflow.com/questions/55336382/… Jun 26, 2019 at 6:33
25

Based on the existing answers, here's the command line for on-the-fly usage of openssl (unzip & pipe the cert instead of defining an -infile option):

unzip -p App.apk META-INF/CERT.RSA |openssl pkcs7 -inform DER -noout -print_certs -text
1
  • there is no SHA1
    – HendraWD
    Sep 18, 2017 at 8:04
20

without unpacking you can use ApkSigner from Android SDK and following:

apksigner.jar verify --print-certs myApplication.apk
3
  • 5
    Great answer. Note that starting from Android 7, a new signing scheme was introduced (V2) that will produce APK files without CERT.RSA. So the old methods (that use openssl / keytool) will not work. (see: source.android.com/security/apksigning/v2 )
    – David Lev
    Feb 6, 2018 at 9:48
  • 1
    Also be aware that you have to run it from your tools lib dir: java -jar ~/android-sdk/build-tools/28.0.0-rc1/lib/apksigner.jar
    – kenyee
    Jun 4, 2018 at 15:13
  • @DavidLev So, this command gives us the value we can compare, right? But I think I'm a bit lost.. What should I do with this value with the resulting byte[] value from "msgDigest.digest(sigs[0].toByteArray())"?.
    – Jenix
    May 29, 2020 at 16:45

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.