Is it possible to sanely create an X509 Certificate in Java code without using the Bouncy Castle X509V*CertificateGenerator
classes?
Yes, but not with publicly documented classes. I've documented the process in this article.
import sun.security.x509.*;
import java.security.cert.*;
import java.security.*;
import java.math.BigInteger;
import java.util.Date;
import java.io.IOException
/**
* Create a self-signed X.509 Certificate
* @param dn the X.509 Distinguished Name, eg "CN=Test, L=London, C=GB"
* @param pair the KeyPair
* @param days how many days from now the Certificate is valid for
* @param algorithm the signing algorithm, eg "SHA1withRSA"
*/
X509Certificate generateCertificate(String dn, KeyPair pair, int days, String algorithm)
throws GeneralSecurityException, IOException
{
PrivateKey privkey = pair.getPrivate();
X509CertInfo info = new X509CertInfo();
Date from = new Date();
Date to = new Date(from.getTime() + days * 86400000l);
CertificateValidity interval = new CertificateValidity(from, to);
BigInteger sn = new BigInteger(64, new SecureRandom());
X500Name owner = new X500Name(dn);
info.set(X509CertInfo.VALIDITY, interval);
info.set(X509CertInfo.SERIAL_NUMBER, new CertificateSerialNumber(sn));
info.set(X509CertInfo.SUBJECT, new CertificateSubjectName(owner));
info.set(X509CertInfo.ISSUER, new CertificateIssuerName(owner));
info.set(X509CertInfo.KEY, new CertificateX509Key(pair.getPublic()));
info.set(X509CertInfo.VERSION, new CertificateVersion(CertificateVersion.V3));
AlgorithmId algo = new AlgorithmId(AlgorithmId.md5WithRSAEncryption_oid);
info.set(X509CertInfo.ALGORITHM_ID, new CertificateAlgorithmId(algo));
// Sign the cert to identify the algorithm that's used.
X509CertImpl cert = new X509CertImpl(info);
cert.sign(privkey, algorithm);
// Update the algorith, and resign.
algo = (AlgorithmId)cert.get(X509CertImpl.SIG_ALG);
info.set(CertificateAlgorithmId.NAME + "." + CertificateAlgorithmId.ALGORITHM, algo);
cert = new X509CertImpl(info);
cert.sign(privkey, algorithm);
return cert;
}