On Fri, Jul 1, 2016 at 6:14 PM, Daniel Savard <daniel.sav...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 2016-07-01 16:08 GMT-04:00 Christopher Schultz < > ch...@christopherschultz.net > >: > > > > > > > > > Thank you for the reply. How would I go about specifying the alias > > > of the certificate? > > > > You may have to re-import it, but I've had bad experiences with Java > > keystores so ALWAYS keep a backup in case you host something. > > > > The first item in your keystore certainly looks like a certificate to > > me. It's the *second* item that is a private key. > > > > What if you add these attributes to your connector: > > > > keyAlias="root" > > > > ? > > > > If that doesn't work, try using a tool like Portecle to try to adjust > > some things (like the "aliases"). It's much better and safer than > > using keytool IMO. Remember ALWAYS KEEP A BACKUP! > > > > > Chris, > > in a keystore, the entry with the certificate created using the private key > from that keystore is a single entry identified as PrivateKey. If you have > a single certificate created from a private key in that keystore you will > have only one entry, not two and it will be labeled as private key. > > In fact, it can be checked using the -v option to print details about each > entry. This should be enough to identify without ambiguity which entry is > what. This is what I recommend to do in order to understand what really is > in the keystore. I doubt the alias root with the first entry in the > keystore is actually the certificate needed here. > > Sean, > > print the details and you will have the alias and Common Name clearly > identified on the output in a verbose format. Use the -v option to the > keytool command for this. No need to post everything here if you are > unsure. > > ----------------- > Daniel Savard > Hello Daniel and all Here is the output.. the full output http://pastebin.com/AQckw6ig