Debug Java SSL/HTTPS WebService with man in the middle proxy

In this article I will be showing how to debug WebServices HTTPS/SSL requests by using a Man in the Middle proxy, this can especially be useful when dealing with WebServices errors since all request will go through the proxy we will be able to see all the content that is sent back and forward

There are several proxies out there that support HTTPS/SSL queries but my favorite by far is mitmproxy and this is the one I will be showing in this post.

The installation instructions detailed here for mitmproxy are for MacOSX but can easily be adapted to Linux distributions; please note that a lot of the instructions detailed here apply to Java applications

1. Install mitmproxy

Personally I use home-brew for my package management; so I assume you have it installed (otherwise you'll have to install mitmproxy manually)

Run the following command to install mitmproxy :

brew install mitmproxy

Your output should look something similar to this

==> Installing dependencies for mitmproxy: libpng, freetype, jpeg
==> Installing mitmproxy dependency: libpng
==> Downloading https://homebrew.bintray.com/bottles/libpng-1.6.21.el_capitan.bottle.tar.gz
######################################################################## 100,0%
==> Pouring libpng-1.6.21.el_capitan.bottle.tar.gz
🍺  /usr/local/Cellar/libpng/1.6.21: 25 files, 1.2M
==> Installing mitmproxy dependency: freetype
==> Downloading https://homebrew.bintray.com/bottles/freetype-2.6.3.el_capitan.bottle.tar.gz
######################################################################## 100,0%
==> Pouring freetype-2.6.3.el_capitan.bottle.tar.gz
🍺  /usr/local/Cellar/freetype/2.6.3: 61 files, 2.5M
==> Installing mitmproxy dependency: jpeg
==> Downloading https://homebrew.bintray.com/bottles/jpeg-8d.el_capitan.bottle.2.tar.gz
######################################################################## 100,0%
==> Pouring jpeg-8d.el_capitan.bottle.2.tar.gz
🍺  /usr/local/Cellar/jpeg/8d: 19 files, 713.7K
==> Installing mitmproxy
==> Downloading https://homebrew.bintray.com/bottles/mitmproxy-0.16.el_capitan.bottle.1.tar.gz
######################################################################## 100,0%
==> Pouring mitmproxy-0.16.el_capitan.bottle.1.tar.gz
🍺  /usr/local/Cellar/mitmproxy/0.16: 1,317 files, 19.8M

2. Add the appropriate SSL certificates to the keystore and truststore

Before anything you will need to add at least the 2 following certificates to your truststore and keystore :

  • The SSL certificate of the site your invoking through your web service
  • The mitmproxy certificate

Please note that I assume you already have a truststore and keystore already configured on your environment

Add the website certificate

   keytool -import -file mywebsite.com -alias mtimproxy -keystore truststore
   keytool -import -file mywebsite.com -alias mtimproxy -keystore keystore

When prompted provide the appropriate password

The mitmproxy certificate can be found under ~/.mitmproxy/ (if the folder does not exist yet it might be necessary to run once the mitmproxy so it will be created)

   keytool -import -file ~/.mitmproxy/mitmproxy-ca-cert.pem -alias mtimproxy -keystore truststore
   keytool -import -file ~/.mitmproxy/mitmproxy-ca-cert.pem -alias mtimproxy -keystore keystore

3. Start mitmproxy

Here I'm starting the proxy and making it listen on port 8080

   mitmproxy --app-port 8080

Once the command executed you should see the console open on your terminal and you will start seeing the request going through the proxy

4. Configure Java proxy and keystore / truststore paths

        System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.trustStore", "./truststore");
        System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword", "password");
        System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.keystore", "./keystore");
        System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.keyStorePassword", "password");
        System.getProperties().put("http.proxyHost", "localhost");
        System.getProperties().put("http.proxyPort", "8080");
        System.getProperties().put("https.proxyHost", "localhost");
        System.getProperties().put("https.proxyPort", "8080");

5. Check mitmproxy output

Once the request start going through the proxy you should be able to see them on the console and click on the ones you would like more detail

As you can see from the screenshots you have multiple tabs containing a lot of info

Linux change timezone and force ntpd synchronization

This short article shows how to change the timezone of the Linux distribution as well as forcing the synchronisation of date/time with the ntpd servers

This applies specifically applies to CentOS so some changes might be possible depending on the distribution
1.Change timezone
cp /etc/localtime /root/old.timezone
rm /etc/localtime
ln –s /usr/share/zoneinfo/Europe/Zurich /etc/localtime
2.Add ntpd servers to you configuration file (optional)

Edit (or create) the /etc/ntpd.conf and add the appropriate ntpd servers :

server xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
server xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
note: xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx is the ip or domain name of the server
3.Stop the ntpd daemon

/etc/init.d/ntpd stop

4.Force the date update

Force the update of the date with the new timezone and eventually the ntpd servers


ntpdate xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx

5.Stop the ntpd daemon

/etc/init.d/ntpd start

6.Stop the ntpd daemon

date

OSX show used ports or listening applications with their PID

On OSX you can display applications listening on a given port using the lsof the commands described below will show listening application...