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There are many problems out there about SSLHandshakeException but still I am facing one of them. I am an absolute beginner regarding SSL/TLS, actually security in general.

My problem:

I am using the Java Eclipse Paho mqtt library (windows7, oracle jdk1.8.0_65). My mqtt client is supposed to connect to a mqtt broker using a secured channel. I am basically using this solution with small adaptations to make use of the latest Bouncy Castle library from here. There I read in the received files I got from IT (*.pem CA certificate, a *.crt client certificate and *.key file) to set up the TrustManagerFactory, KeyManagerFactory and eventually create the SSLContext to set the SocketFactory in the MqttConnectionOptions.

When switching on SSL debugging, and trying to connect I observe the following handshake operation:

ssl://myserver.org:8883
adding as trusted cert:
...

***
found key for : private-key
chain[0]
...

Client sends its hello:

*** ClientHello, TLSv1.2
RandomCookie:  GMT: 1447336773 bytes = { .. , .. }
...

Server send its hello:

*** ServerHello, TLSv1.2
RandomCookie:  GMT: 572699079 bytes = { .. , .. } -- (strange time stamp here)
Cipher Suite: TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA
Compression Method: 0
Extension renegotiation_info, renegotiated_connection: <empty>
Extension elliptic_curves, curve names: {secp256r1}
Extension ec_point_formats, formats: [uncompressed]  
***
%% Initialized:  [Session-1, TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA]
** TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA
MQTT Con: TESTCLIENT1, READ: TLSv1.2 Handshake, length = 6544
*** Certificate chain
chain [0] = [
...

Now after the server passed its certificate chain I just get the following:

***
%% Invalidated:  [Session-1, TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA]
MQTT Con: TESTCLIENT1, SEND TLSv1.2 ALERT:  fatal, description = certificate_unknown
MQTT Con: TESTCLIENT1, WRITE: TLSv1.2 Alert, length = 2
MQTT Con: TESTCLIENT1, called closeSocket()
MQTT Con: TESTCLIENT1, handling exception: 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
MQTT Con: TESTCLIENT1, called close()
MQTT Con: TESTCLIENT1, called closeInternal(true)
...
Allow unsafe renegotiation: false
Allow legacy hello messages: true
Is initial handshake: true
Is secure renegotiation: false
MQTT Con: TESTCLIENT1, setSoTimeout(30000) called

After that it seems there is just another try, and the client just sends another *** ClientHello, TLSv1.2 where the server answers again with *** ServerHello, TLSv1.2. But I do not receive the expected *** ServerHelloDone.

Solutions I tried:

1.) Using the Java keytool -importcert -alias ca-file.alias -file myPem.pem I imported the *.pem into my truststore cacerts (I don't even know if this is needed).

2.) I tried to follow up on this solution which just removes the TrustManager, and does get me a bit further:

***
MQTT Con: TESTCLIENT1, READ: TLSv1.2 Handshake, length = 333
*** ECDH ServerKeyExchange
Signature Algorithm SHA1withRSA
...
*** CertificateRequest
Cert Types: RSA
Supported Signature Algorithms: SHA1withRSA, SHA256withRSA, SHA384withRSA, SHA512withRSA
Cert Authorities:
<Empty>
MQTT Con: TESTCLIENT1, READ: TLSv1.2 Handshake, length = 4
*** ServerHelloDone
matching alias: private-key
*** Certificate chain
chain [0] = [
...
*** ECDHClientKeyExchange
...
*** CertificateVerify
...
*** Finished

It really seems that it does get me through but 1.) that's not how it should be and 2.) then the mqtt client just does not return after the first publish call.

My questions are now:

  1. How do I handle certificates and key files correctly in Java using the TrustManagerFactory, KeyManagerFactory, etc.?
  2. What in general could be the problem with my connection setup?
2
  • What is correct depends on what cert is actually in *.pem and whether it is a root/anchor for the server's cert chain, or an intermediate or root/anchor for the client, or maybe both. Use keytool -printcert -file (filename) to see the "Owner" (Subject) and "Issuer" for that cert, compared to the Issuer in *.crt (which I presume you loaded with *.key into your keystore somehow) and the Owners and Issuers for the cert(s) used by the server with keytool -printcert -sslserver (host):(port). ... Nov 13, 2015 at 17:27
  • ... A TrustManager (from factory or not) should have only certs not keys; a KeyManager should have privatekey and matching cert chain, and need not have other certs, although if you load them both from the same file that file can have both. Also I don't understand why you care about "latest" BouncyCastle or how you are using it; BC doesn't provide SSL/TLS protocol through JCE (only lightweight) and doesn't provide any primitives for SSL/TLS that Oracle/openjdk 8 providers don't. (Many years ago in Java 6 BC did provide ECC when Sun didn't.) Nov 13, 2015 at 17:34

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