How can I get an Android keystore file's "SHA1 fingerprint"? - google-play-services

Okay, I need some serious help. So I want to use some Google Play Services in my game that's not yet released. I made my game using the Unreal Engine. I followed this documentation to generate the keystore file, but I need the SHA1 fingerprint and I can't get it.
I tried following this website, but I keep getting this error:
keytool error: java.io.IOException: Keystore was tampered with, or password was incorrect
java.io.IOException: Keystore was tampered with, or password was incorrect
Does anyone know about this error, because I'm beginning to get pretty pissed off with this stupid key stuff.

Your Android keystore usually has a password (eg. production keystores), when you call keytool -list -v ...., there should have been a prompt that asks for the password of the keystore selected. If correct, it will give out the necessary information of that keystore (SHA-1, etc.). You can refer to this stackoverflow question

Related

Signed and Time stamped Executable failed executing and does not show proper details

Please note that this issue is only applicable for Windows Server 2008 SP2
I have developed one windows application. Prior distributing it I have signed and time stamped it using SHA1 and SHA256. This application is formed with multiple DLLs. I am signing each DLL during build process. I have used certificate from VeriSign. At the time of execution, when application is launched it verify the signature and time stamp of each DLL to ensure integrity using WinVerifyTrust API. I am getting "E_CERT_EXPIRED - Signer's Certificate was expired" error during validation.
Also, I am not able to see the time stamping details in property page of the executable. Please see below -
Now, that certificate is expired but according to this SO article What happens when a code signing certificate expires?. The executable should run perfectly without any problem.
I have also checked for this KB suspecting the cause but fix related to this KB is already applied. Can anybody share more light on this?
You cannot sign with expired certificate, it not works (you see results yourself).
What you can do is to sign with valid certificate and then signed application will not expire because of valid timestamp at the time of signing.

Error: unable to verify the first certificate / How to trust all certificates?

When I try to install an extension I get this error:
unable to verify the first certificate
I already know that the problem is our internal network structure, which wraps every SSL Certificate with our own and not every application trusts our certificate.
Is it possible to set the property Trust all SSL certificates in Visual Studio Code?
Thanks
Had the same problem.
Adding environment variable
NODE_TLS_REJECT_UNAUTHORIZED=0
fixed it.
Took this answer from here:
Ignore invalid self-signed ssl certificate in node.js with https.request?
My solution was to add the following to user settings ( File -> Preferences -> User Settings)
"http.proxyStrictSSL": false

Signtool error: No certificates were found that met all given criteria with a Windows Store App?

I'm trying to sign a Windows 8 appx package with a pfx file I have. I'm using a command like so:
signtool.exe sign /fd sha256 /f "key.pfx" "app.appx"
And from this, I get:
SignTool Error: No certificates were found that met all the given criteria.
What "criteria" am I not meeting? This is only for testing so these are self-signed certificates. I've tried importing the key and then signing it, but it always results in the same error. How do I fix this?
When getting this error through Visual Studio it was because there was a signing certificate setup to match the computer it was originally developed on.
You can check this by going to the project properties > signing tab and checking the certificate details.
You can uncheck "Sign the ClickOnce manifests" to disable signing.
If you don't want to turn this option off you will have to install the certificate.
Try with /debug.1,2 As in :
signtool sign /debug /f mypfxfile.pfx /p <password> (mydllexectuable).exe
It will help you find out what is going on. You should get output like this:
The following certificates were considered:
Issued to: <issuer>
Issued by: <certificate authority> Class 2 Primary Intermediate Server CA
Expires: Sun Mar 01 14:18:23 2015
SHA1 hash: DD0000000000000000000000000000000000D93E
Issued to: <certificate authority> Certification Authority
Issued by: <certificate authority> Certification Authority
Expires: Wed Sep 17 12:46:36 2036
SHA1 hash: 3E0000000000000000000000000000000000000F
After EKU filter, 2 certs were left.
After expiry filter, 2 certs were left.
After Private Key filter, 0 certs were left.
SignTool Error: No certificates were found that met all the given criteria.
You can see what filter is causing your certificate to not work, or if no certificates were considered.
I changed the hashes and other info, but you should get the idea.
1 Please note: signtool is particular about where the /debug option is placed. It needs to go after the sign statement.
2 Also note: the /debug option only works with some versions of signtool. The WDK version has the option, whereas the Windows SDK version does not.
I got the same problem in my console application development and as a quick workaround,
go to project properties then,
click on signing tab and uncheck "Sign the ClickOnce Manifest".
Image Description:
FYI You can also see this less one minute video solution. The above picture is taken form the video.
Please always check your certificate expiry date first because most of the certificates have an expiry date. In my case certificate has expired and I was trying to build project.
If you do not have to sign the app, right click on your project
Project Properties -> Signing -> uncheck "Sign the ClickOnce Manifest"
Also as this MS article suggests,
If you are using Visual Studio 2008 and are targeting .NET 3.5 and using automatic updates, you can just change the certificate and deploy a new version,
In my case I have the wrong type of certificate that I am trying to associate. I had "Server Authentication" rather than "Code signing".
You should be able to see this in Certificate snap in the Intended Purpose section. After that, it just work fine.
Got the same issue, turned out that the private key to the certificate had no permission.
To fix - open the certifacte management, find your certificate, right click -> Manage Private Keys and then in security on top be sure that your user is added and given permissions, that fixed it for me.
In case anyone else runs into this: My problem ended up being that I needed to run the command prompt as administrator before using the signtool.exe app. Then everything works wonderfully.
just uncheck the 'Sign the click once manifests' from the signing tab in project properties,it will remove the error and you can create a new one as from there.
I had this problem and I'm not entirely sure which step below made it work, but hope this helps somebody else...this is what I did:
Install the downloaded certificate (.crt) into certificates (I put it into “personal” store) - right click on .crt file and click Install Certificate.
Run certmgr.msc and export the certificate (found in whichever store you used in the 1st step) as a pfx file including private key and extended properties
Use the exported .pfx file when signing your project
Example signtool: signtool sign /f "c:\mycert.pfx" /p mypassword /d "description" /t http://timestamp.verisign.com/scripts/timstamp.dll $(TargetPath)
where the password is the same as provided during Export
I solved this by using the /sm flag to specify to look in the machine store instead of the default, which is My (Local User) store. Also, it can help to turn on debug for signtool by using /debug.
I'm having the same problem, reading some answers (posted here), I saw my certificate expired.
Just create a new one from my start project. Then at certificates manager deleted the expired certificate.
Now everything compiles fine.
The criteria include account name (whose private key it is associated with), domain, company, expiration date, intended purposes, among other things.
There are many different possible reasons for this error to occur, some have been listed already. Here is another tip: When importing a certificate, be sure you work with the original file received from the certificate authority (CA), or else some of the properties might be lost.
Example: recently I tried to import a certificate exported from a different account on the same machine. The certificate became visible to my account but was not associated with my account, and as a result signtool refused to recognize it without explicitly providing the file name and a password. Which, when done as part of the build process and written out explicitly in a batch file or source file, may not be sufficiently secure. (Importing the original CA-issued certificate solved it.)
I had the same "After Private Key filter, 0 certs were left" message and spent too much of my life trying to figure out what the message meant.
The problem was that I had installed the certificate incorrectly in the Windows Certificate store so there was no private key associated with the code signing certificate.
What I should have done was this:
Using either Firefox or Internet Explorer, submit the
request to the issuer. This generates a PRIVATE KEY which is stored silently by the browser (a dialog appears for a fraction of a second in Firefox). Note that other browsers may not work: your life is too short to find out if they do.
Submit the request, jump through the issuer's validation hoops and loops, sacrifice a goat, pray to the gods, submit a signed statement from your great grandparents, etc.
Download the certificate (.crt) and import it into the same browser. The browser now has both the private key and the certificate.
Export the certificate from the browser as a Personal Information Exchange (.p12) file. You will be asked to supply a password to protect this file.
Keep a backup copy of the .p12 file.
Run the Certificate Manager (certmgr.msc), right click on the Personal certificate store, select All Tasks/Import... and import the .p12 file into Windows. You will be asked for the password you used to protect the file. At this point, depending upon your security requirements, you can mark the key as exportable so you can restore a copy from the Windows store. You can also mark that a password is required before use if you want to break batch scripts.
Run signtool successfully, breathe a sigh of relief, and ponder how much of your life you have wasted due to bad error messages and poor or missing documentation.
My problem ended up being that I did not understand the signtool options. I had provided the /n option with something that did not match my certificate. When I removed that it stopped complaining.
I have had this issue too, tried a lot. Used SDK as well as Visual Studio signing, but everywhere I got "No certificates were found that met all the given criteria".
Solution:
Be aware that, if "after private key filter": '0 left' shows up with option signtool sign /debug..., the cause is your PC doesn't has the CA itself in the store. To solve this, install the CA first (in my case a .crt file), then run the sign again. It should work right now!
Signtool only can be used with a CA which is requested ánd owned by the same PC.
I had a similar problem my computer name had change and the certificate had expired. I was able to resolve this issue by creating a new test certificate.
In Visual Studio, right click on project in solution explorer. Select properties. Select Signing in properties window. Click "Create Test Certificate....". Enter password information for test certificate and click ok.
With /debug, when you get this message "After Private Key filter, 0 certs were left.", one reason could be that the pfx file doesn't have the private key.
When you export the installed certificate to pfx file ensure to enable the check box to also include the private key.
Go to project properties and uncheck all fields from the Firm before init the compilation
The digicert Token I use, must be recognized as "Microsoft Usbccid-Smartcard-Leser(WUDF)".
In case not, I get this error message 'No certificates were found that met all given criteria ...'.
That kept me searching in SignTool options and the properties of the certificates quite long with no effort at all. So I hope it helps someone :-)
I got this error when using Git Bash.
Using PowerShell succeeded.
If it helps anyone.

Jenkins server failing to build because it lacks a certificate that already exists

I'm currently migrating a Jenkins server and I'm having trouble getting some projects to build. The problem projects are failing with this error (which I edited a little for readability):
error MSB3326: Cannot import the following key file: . The key file may be
password protected. To correct this, try to import the certificate again or
import the certificate manually into the current user's personal certificate
store.
C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v4.0.30319\Microsoft.Common.targets(1970,9):
error MSB3321: Importing key file "MyCertificate-LP.pfx" was canceled.
[D:\Jenkins\jobs\keyword_addin\workspace\KeywordOptimization\
KeywordOptimization.AddIn\KeywordOptimization.AddIn.csproj]
The thing is, I've gone and added this certificate to the store of the local system account, which I believe is what Jenkins is running under, and I'm still getting this same error. Furthermore, what I execute
sn -i MyCertificate-LP.pfx personal
and enter in the password on a command prompt running under the System account. I get
Failed to install keypair -- Object already exists
What's even more confusing is that when I run MSBuild from the command line as the Administrative user I'm signed in as, the build succeeds.
I'm not really sure how to trouble shoot this further. If I can't figure out the certificate situation with the System account, is there a way to tell Jenkins to run MSBuild as a user other than 'System'?

An internal error occurred. the private key that you are importing might require a cryptographic service provider that is not installed on your system

When I compile my application , I get following compile error.
Unable to find manifest signing certificate in the certificate store.
Then I find the resolution for the above error and then try to import certificate, I am getting following error.
An internal error occurred. the private key that you are importing might require a cryptographic service provider that is not installed on your system.
I also check the folder option of MachineKeys in C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Microsoft\Crypto\RSA
I've solved this problem by importing the PFX certificate in Firefox and export it using the same key.
The new file will have the .p12 extension and will import ok into USER store with just a double-click.
In the folder C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Microsoft\Crypto\RSA, make sure you have no zero-length files. Delete any you find.
In our case, client certificates were issued for server authentication purpose instead of client authentication purpose. Instead of having purpose to prove your identity to a remote computer
client certificates have purpose to ensure the identity of a remote computer
Certificate's property "Enhanced Key Usage" was "Server Authentication (1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.1)", instead of "Client Authentication (1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.2)"
I was running into this issue exporting a certificate with mmc and trying to import it into the personal store. None of the other solutions were working for me, neither was anything on the Microsoft page about the error message. What ultimately resolved it for me was switching the export over to not exporting the private key.