36

I follow many links on stackoverflow and tried many solutions, but none of them worked for me. I'm using WSO2 API manager version 1.9.1. I am facing following error:

Exception in thread "main" javax.net.ssl.SSLPeerUnverifiedException: Host name 'XXXXXXXXX' does not match the certificate subject provided by the peer (CN=localhost, O=WSO2, L=Mountain View, ST=CA, C=US)
    at org.apache.http.conn.ssl.SSLConnectionSocketFactory.verifyHostname(SSLConnectionSocketFactory.java:465)
    at org.apache.http.conn.ssl.SSLConnectionSocketFactory.createLayeredSocket(SSLConnectionSocketFactory.java:395)
    at org.apache.http.conn.ssl.SSLConnectionSocketFactory.connectSocket(SSLConnectionSocketFactory.java:353)
    at org.apache.http.impl.conn.DefaultHttpClientConnectionOperator.connect(DefaultHttpClientConnectionOperator.java:134)
    at org.apache.http.impl.conn.PoolingHttpClientConnectionManager.connect(PoolingHttpClientConnectionManager.java:353)
    at org.apache.http.impl.execchain.MainClientExec.establishRoute(MainClientExec.java:380)
    at org.apache.http.impl.execchain.MainClientExec.execute(MainClientExec.java:236)
    at org.apache.http.impl.execchain.ProtocolExec.execute(ProtocolExec.java:184)
    at org.apache.http.impl.execchain.RetryExec.execute(RetryExec.java:88)
    at org.apache.http.impl.execchain.RedirectExec.execute(RedirectExec.java:110)
    at org.apache.http.impl.client.InternalHttpClient.doExecute(InternalHttpClient.java:184)
    at org.apache.http.impl.client.CloseableHttpClient.execute(CloseableHttpClient.java:82)
    at org.apache.http.impl.client.CloseableHttpClient.execute(CloseableHttpClient.java:107)
    at com.java.pushNotifications.WSO2DemoClient.main(WSO2DemoClient.java:49)

I developed the following Java code. Please help me what's going wrong here. I need to connect insecure way and allow connections to SSL sites without certs.

public static void main(String[] args) throws ClientProtocolException, IOException, NoSuchAlgorithmException, KeyStoreException, KeyManagementException {
        SSLContextBuilder builder = new SSLContextBuilder();
        builder.loadTrustMaterial(null, new TrustSelfSignedStrategy());
        SSLConnectionSocketFactory sslsf = new SSLConnectionSocketFactory(builder.build());

        Registry<ConnectionSocketFactory> registry = RegistryBuilder.<ConnectionSocketFactory>create()
                .register("http", new PlainConnectionSocketFactory())
                .register("https", sslsf)
                .build();

        PoolingHttpClientConnectionManager cm = new PoolingHttpClientConnectionManager(registry);
        cm.setMaxTotal(2000);//max connection

    CloseableHttpClient httpclient = HttpClients.custom().setSSLSocketFactory(sslsf)
                .setConnectionManager(cm).build();

        HttpGet httpGet = new HttpGet("https://XXXXXXXXXX:8243/token");
        CloseableHttpResponse response = httpclient.execute(httpGet);

        String json =" {\"data\":\"grant_type=password&username=test&password=test123\"}";

        try {
            HttpPost httpost = new HttpPost(url);
            httpost.setHeader("Content-Type", "application/x-www-form-urlencoded");
            httpost.setHeader("Authorization", "Basic XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX");

            httpost.setEntity(new StringEntity(json));

            HttpResponse httpResponse = httpclient.execute(httpost);

            System.out.println(httpResponse.getStatusLine());
        }
        finally {
            response.close();
        }

        String responseString1 = new BasicResponseHandler().handleResponse(response);
        System.out.println("Response : "+responseString1);
    }
3
  • You need to compare the host name in the certificate plus the subject alternate names within it + the host name that you call in your code (above "XXXXXXXXXXXXXX"). Those do not seem to match. The concept behind it is the http hostname verification, see link Jan 7, 2016 at 12:29
  • This only works because you are using the "-k" option which is the same as "--insecure". Then the certificate verification is not done. Jan 7, 2016 at 12:38
  • See link Jan 7, 2016 at 12:54

5 Answers 5

55

I have spent an hour trying to fix the same issue. This is what I come up with:

final SSLConnectionSocketFactory sslsf;
try {
    sslsf = new SSLConnectionSocketFactory(SSLContext.getDefault(),
            NoopHostnameVerifier.INSTANCE);
} catch (NoSuchAlgorithmException e) {
    throw new RuntimeException(e);
}

final Registry<ConnectionSocketFactory> registry = RegistryBuilder.<ConnectionSocketFactory>create()
        .register("http", new PlainConnectionSocketFactory())
        .register("https", sslsf)
        .build();

final PoolingHttpClientConnectionManager cm = new PoolingHttpClientConnectionManager(registry);
cm.setMaxTotal(100);
httpClient = HttpClients.custom()
        .setSSLSocketFactory(sslsf)
        .setConnectionManager(cm)
        .build();

Hopefully, it works and does not use any deprecated code (httpclient 4.4.1).

2
  • You save my day! Don't know why this doesn't have much votes... Like 30 min lost with this.
    – camposer
    May 26, 2016 at 13:17
  • 1
    I've been reading about this topic closely since I came across this issue. Thanks for saving me time.
    – fndg87
    May 28, 2018 at 22:17
19

Replace this

CloseableHttpClient httpclient = HttpClients.custom().setSSLSocketFactory(sslsf)
            .setConnectionManager(cm).build();

with

CloseableHttpClient httpclient = HttpClients.custom()
            .setSSLSocketFactory(sslsf)
            .setConnectionManager(cm)
            .setHostnameVerifier(SSLConnectionSocketFactory.ALLOW_ALL_HOSTNAME_VERIFIER)
            .build();

If the certificate isn't signed (not even self-signed), then you can do

import java.security.cert.CertificateException;
import java.security.cert.X509Certificate;

public class TrustAllStrategy implements TrustStrategy {
    @Override
    public boolean isTrusted(X509Certificate[] chain, String authType)
            throws CertificateException {
        return true;
    }
}

Then

builder.loadTrustMaterial(new TrustAllStrategy());

EDIT: this

SSLConnectionSocketFactory sslsf = new SSLConnectionSocketFactory(
            sslcontext, //for you this is builder.build()
            SSLConnectionSocketFactory.ALLOW_ALL_HOSTNAME_VERIFIER
);
9
  • Which version of HttpClient you're suggesting to use for above?
    – user5268786
    Jan 7, 2016 at 20:10
  • 2
    Ah. In that case, it didn't work yet. You need to also give SSLConnectionSocketFactory.ALLOW_ALL_HOSTNAME_VERIFIER) to your SSLConnectionSocketFactory that you create with new, it's one of the parameters for the constructor. Jan 8, 2016 at 13:07
  • 1
    I am not clear in this? Its not allowing me to add SSLConnectionSocketFactory.ALLOW_ALL_HOSTNAME_VERIFIER in sslsf
    – user5268786
    Jan 8, 2016 at 17:39
  • 6
    This is deprecated now, but one can use org.apache.http.conn.ssl.NoopHostnameVerifier
    – crusy
    May 18, 2017 at 8:21
  • 4
    use NoopHostnameVerifier.INSTANCE instead of the deprecated SSLConnectionSocketFactory.ALLOW_ALL_HOSTNAME_VERIFIER)
    – user666
    Jan 15, 2019 at 8:50
17
Answer recommended by WSO2 Collective

Thanks to all the solutions. I have been trying all the solutions available online for 1.5 days now and finally it worked now. Here is the working code

 SSLContextBuilder builder = new SSLContextBuilder();
 builder.loadTrustMaterial(null, new TrustSelfSignedStrategy());
 SSLConnectionSocketFactory sslConnectionSocketFactory = new SSLConnectionSocketFactory(builder.build(), NoopHostnameVerifier.INSTANCE);
 Registry<ConnectionSocketFactory> registry = RegistryBuilder.<ConnectionSocketFactory>create()
            .register("http", new PlainConnectionSocketFactory())
            .register("https", sslConnectionSocketFactory)
            .build();

 PoolingHttpClientConnectionManager cm = new PoolingHttpClientConnectionManager(registry);
 cm.setMaxTotal(100);
 CloseableHttpClient httpclient = HttpClients.custom()
            .setSSLSocketFactory(sslConnectionSocketFactory)
            .setConnectionManager(cm)
            .build();
 HttpPost httpPost = new HttpPost(url);
 httpPost.setEntity(postEntity);
 httpPost.expectContinue();
 CloseableHttpResponse response = httpclient.execute(httpPost);
6

This is what I came up with:

 SSLContextBuilder sslcontext = new SSLContextBuilder();
 sslcontext.loadTrustMaterial(null, new TrustSelfSignedStrategy());
 httpclient = HttpAsyncClients.custom().setSSLContext(sslcontext.build()).setSSLHostnameVerifier(NoopHostnameVerifier.INSTANCE)
      .build();
4

After trying most of the solution suggested on this page and other related stackoverflow discussions, I found AJC's response above works with apache httpclient version 4.5.

Reason: While creating SSLConnectionSocketFactory if the HostVerifier is not specified in the constructor, it does not get set and the DefaultHostVerifier is used. So line 3 of AJC's solutionmakes the difference.

(Atleast this is the behavior in apache httpclient 4.5.3 )

2
  • 2
    I presume you simply would've commented on AJC's solution, had you enough rep to do so. Nice touch to add the reason to enhance what otherwise could've been accomplished by simply upvoting AJC's solution.
    – leanne
    Oct 27, 2017 at 19:26
  • Thanks for this answer. It got me thinking about the reason for the failure. In my case, the server was using a Wildcard certificate and therefore, using the "BrowserCompatHostnameVerifier" fixed the issue for me. The "BrowserCompatHostnameVerifier" allows wildcard certificates just like a Browser would.
    – buzz
    Dec 24, 2017 at 19:23

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