Since nobody answers, I will try to post my views on this:
Where is Certificate Authority file? Do i need to generate one? Do i need one?
You don't need to get your certificate signed by CA as long as the only server that your Android (or any other) client is going to use, is your own server. Server-side certificate is used by the server to prove its identity (i.e. to prove that it is really the one it pretends to be) to the clients, for example web browsers. So as long as your client connects to the same host (certificate of which it possesses beforehand), you don't need any signature (neither by CA nor self-signed)
Are they enough to test my app, to make it ready for a release?
Since you have used the most secure RSA (4096 bits), I can't see any other improvement that could be done to the certificate that you have generated, so yes you may consider it as ready for the release
How do i turn my simple android socket into a secure socket? (kotlin preferred)
I never used Kotlin, but in the Java environment, it is as easy as:
import javax.net.ssl.*;
import java.security.*;
SSLSocketFactory factory = (SSLSocketFactory)SSLSocketFactory.getDefault();
SSLSocket socket = (SSLSocket)factory.createSocket("host", port);
Can i trust my self signed certificate programmatically (and only that one) or do i need to install it on my device (and any other device like a friend's device)
You may add cert.pem
into a keystore file (assuming store type is JKS and password is passw
):
keytool -importcert -file cert.pem -keystore keystore.jks -storetype JKS -alias "alias" -storepass passw
and then put keystore.jks
into raw
folder of your app thus making it accessible as R.raw.keystore
from within your code:
KeyStore trusted = KeyStore.getInstance("JKS");
InputStream in = context.getResources().openRawResource(R.raw.keystore); //open inputstream for keystore file in "raw" folder
trusted.load(in, "passw".toCharArray()); //load the keystore from file (using password specified when certificate was imported into keystore)
in.close(); //close inputstream
KeyManagerFactory kmf = KeyManagerFactory.getInstance(KeyManagerFactory.getDefaultAlgorithm());
kmf.init(trusted, "passw".toCharArray());
SSLContext sslContext = SSLContext.getInstance("TLSv1.2"); //configure SSL Context to use TLS v1.2
sslContext.init(kmf.getKeyManagers(),null,null);
SSLSocketFactory factory = sslContext.getSocketFactory();
and then you use factory
in the way described above to open secure sockets
SHOULD i use my self signed certificate on my server? Do i need to create a CA? Pros and Cons of using self signed certificate?
See answer 1
Can i use free certificates like from letsencrypt forever? Pros and Cons?
It all depends on how big is the risk of a particular CA to get compromised i.e. sign a fraudulent certificate. It is always better to use a trustworthy CA though at a higher cost
Do i need a certificate for Client too? Do i need to provide some sort of key[s] to Android app?
Client certificate is just another way of authenticating the end user. If you already use a password for authentication, you don't need to use a client certificate (you may actually add it for additional security but mostly it is not necessary, besides someone may steal it)
What can i do to protect my app from MITM (or protect my app from revealing what is being sent/received to and from server) for example THIS TYPE OF ATTACK
Well, it is fine as long as the device belongs to its original owner. The risk arises in case if it is stolen and the thief is aware of that proxy and may reveal the request/response contents. Nothing else comes to my mind other than the user changing his/her password as soon as possible