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Note

This page has been superceded by http://www.ja-sig.org/products/cas/server/ssl/index.html and will eventually be removed.

CAS Server requires SSL. Newcomers to deploying secure web applications (and even old hands) sometimes have difficulty configuring the SSL certificates. This page is intended to provide links and help with troubleshooting SSL in the context of deploying an instance of the Central Authentication Service server.

Generating a certificate

I am guessing that you have a certificate that is either not properly generated or is not installed in your jks keystore.

I am assuming you are using 1.4.x, otherwise you'd have to install JSSE separately.

To generate the certificate you could do this (substitute argument values as it suits your system).

%JAVA_HOME%\bin\keytool -delete -alias tomcat -keypass changeit

%JAVA_HOME%\bin\keytool -genkey -alias tomcat -keypass changeit -keyalg RSA

%JAVA_HOME%\bin\keytool -export -alias tomcat -keypass changeit  -file server.crt

%JAVA_HOME%\bin\keytool -import -file server.crt -keypass changeit -keystore %JAVA_HOME%/jre/lib/security/cacerts

%JAVA_HOME%\bin\keytool -import -file server.crt -keystore %JAVA_HOME%\jre\lib\security\cacerts

Expiration Date of Certificate

If you want the certificate to be valid for longer than the default amount of time, you can provide an option parameter in the following format:

-validity numberOfDays

which allows you specify the number of days a certificate is valid for. So in the above example you would use the following command to create the certificate and have it valid for 365 days:

%JAVA_HOME%\bin\keytool -genkey -alias tomcat -keypass changeit -keyalg RSA -validity 365

World-readability

Public certificate files must be world-readable, as noted in the README.

Some good threads

How do I configure Tomcat to use SSL?

Try these instructions.

How do I use a self-signed certificate?

A: Trusting the Self-Signed Certificate
DummyTrustManager for development
Joakim Recht suggested on the CAS list that in development you can avoid the need to install your self-signed CAS server certificate on your CAS clients (and your CAS client certificate on your CAS server when the clients need to be securely accessed for CAS to give them Proxy Tickets) by using the DummyTrustManager from here .

This accepts all certificates, including self-signed.

This would be neither secure nor appropriate in production, but it may be just the thing to get off the ground in development.

To use the DummyTrustManager, put the files DummySSLSocketFactory.java and DummyTrustManager.java into src/edu/yale/its/tp/cas/util and add

((HttpsURLConnection)uc).setSSLSocketFactory(new DummySSLSocketFactory());

to SecureURL.java just after

URLConnection uc = u.openConnection();

Where can I learn more about the keytool?

At the keytool page.

Thanks to Joakim Rect for originally suggesting DummyTrustManager on the CAS list.

A readme

You could try the readme included in this zip, which accompanies this article about CAS.

When all else fails

More than one CAS deployer has suggested: When all else fails, start over again with a clean Tomcat and JDK.

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