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Security Features in Java SE
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Generating and Verifying Signatures
Generate Public and Private Keys
In order to be able to create a digital signature, you need a private
key. (Its corresponding public key will be needed in order to verify
the authenticity of the signature.)
In some cases the key pair (private
key and corresponding public key) are already available
in files. In that case the program can import and use the private key
for signing, as shown in
Weaknesses and Alternatives.
In other cases the program needs to generate the key pair.
A key pair is generated by using the KeyPairGenerator class.
In this example you will generate a public/private key pair for the
Digital Signature Algorithm (DSA). You will generate keys
with a 1024-bit length.
Generating a key pair requires several steps:
Create a Key Pair Generator
The first step is to get a key-pair generator object for generating
keys for the DSA signature algorithm.
As with all engine classes, the way to get a
KeyPairGenerator object for a particular type of algorithm
is to call the getInstance static factory method on the
KeyPairGenerator class. This method has two forms,
both of which hava a String algorithm first argument;
one form also has a String provider second argument.
A caller may thus optionally specify the name of a provider,
which will guarantee that the implementation of the algorithm
requested is from the named provider.
The sample code of this lesson always specifies the
default SUN provider built into the JDK.
Put the following statement after the
else try {
line in the file created in the previous step,
Prepare Initial Program Structure:
KeyPairGenerator keyGen =
KeyPairGenerator.getInstance("DSA", "SUN");
Initialize the Key-Pair Generator
The next step is to initialize the key-pair generator.
All key-pair generators share the concepts of a keysize and a
source of randomness. The KeyPairGenerator class has an
initialize method that takes these two types of arguments.
The keysize for a DSA key generator is the key length (in bits), which
you will set to 1024.
The source of randomness must be an instance of the SecureRandom
class. This example requests one that uses the SHA1PRNG
pseudo-random-number generation algorithm, as provided by
the built-in SUN provider. The example then passes this SecureRandom
instance to the key-pair generator initialization method.
SecureRandom random =
SecureRandom.getInstance("SHA1PRNG", "SUN");
keyGen.initialize(1024, random);
Note: The SecureRandom implementation attempts to completely randomize
the internal state of the generator itself unless the caller follows the call to the
getInstance method with a call to the setSeed
method. So if you had a specific seed value that you wanted used, you would
call the following prior to the initialize call:
random.setSeed(seed);
Generate the Pair of Keys
The final step is to generate the key pair and to store the
keys in PrivateKey and PublicKey objects.
KeyPair pair = keyGen.generateKeyPair();
PrivateKey priv = pair.getPrivate();
PublicKey pub = pair.getPublic();