android-selfsigned
A simple library for supporting self-signed certificates in Android
- Integrate with services that use self-signed certificates.
- Preserve existing security measures on the mobile device.
- Ideal for prototyping and testing using secure protocols.
NOTE. We strongly recommend that you purchase a certificate from a trusted authority when you move to production.
Installation
Gradle
buildscript {
repositories {
maven {
url "https://jitpack.io"
}
}
}
dependencies {
# Only include if using HttpsURLConnection
compile com.github.onehilltech.android-selfsigned:android:x.y.z
# Otherwise, use appropriate module for framework in use
compile com.github.onehilltech.android-selfsigned:android-volley:x.y.
}
Getting Started
Manually define the list of hostnames/IP addresses that are using self-signed certificates. It is best to define the list as a resource so you can have different list for different Gradle configurations:
<resources>
<string-array name="hostnames">
<!-- localhost on the Android emulator -->
<item>10.0.2.2</item>
</string-array> </resources>
Define an Application
class to initialize the DefaultHostnameVerifier
, which is used by HttpsURLConnection
.
public class TheApplication extends Application {
@Override
public void onCreate ()
{
super.onCreate ();
String [] hostnames = this.getResources ().getStringArray (R.array.hostnames);
SelfSigned.getDefaultHostnameVerifier ().addAll (Arrays.asList (hostnames));
}
}
Make sure you add the TheApplication
class to AndroidManifest.xml
.
<application
android:name="[package].TheApplication"
>
</application>
Add the public certificate to the application's assets. For example, if the certificate is in a file named server.crt
, then it must be added to main/assets/server.crt
(or the assets folder for the target configuration).
Now, determine the method for making secure requests:
android-volley
Volley uses HttpsURLConnection
under the hood. If you do not set the default SSLSocketFactory
, as explained above, then you can use the helper class to create a RequestQueue
that supports self-signed certificates:
VolleySelfSigned.newRequestQueue (context, "server.crt")
Now, requests executed on the returned RequestQueue
that interact with an hostname/IP address defined in the resources above will not throw the usual security exceptions.
HttpsURLConnection
First, create a SSLContext
that uses the public certificate bundled as an asset:
SSLContext sslContext = AndroidSelfSigned.newSSLContext (context, "server.crt");
Attach the SSLContext
to a HttpsURLConnection
:
URL url = new URL ("https://10.0.2.2");
HttpsURLConnection conn = (HttpsURLConnection)url.openConnection ();
conn.setSSLSocketFactory (sslContext.getSocketFactory ());
You can even set the SSLContext
as the default so you do not have to initialize the SSLSocketFactory
for each HttpsURLConnection
:
HttpsURLConnection.setDefaultSSLSocketFactory (sslContext.getSocketFactory ());
If you use this approach, it is best to do so in the Application
class for your application.