You've added code to the VerSig
program to
PublicKey
named pubKey
sigToVerify
You can now proceed to do the verification.
Initialize the Signature Object for Verification
As with signature generation, a signature is verified by using an instance of the Signature
class. You need to create a Signature
object that uses the same signature algorithm as was used to generate the signature. The algorithm used by the GenSig
program was the SHA1withDSA algorithm from the SUN provider.
Signature sig = Signature.getInstance("SHA1withDSA", "SUN");
Next, you need to initialize the Signature
object. The initialization method for verification requires the public key.
sig.initVerify(pubKey);
Supply the Signature Object With the Data to be Verified You now need to supply the Signature
object with the data for which a signature was generated. This data is in the file whose name was specified as the third command line argument. As you did when signing, read in the data one buffer at a time, and supply it to the Signature
object by calling the update
method.
FileInputStream datafis = new FileInputStream(args[2]); BufferedInputStream bufin = new BufferedInputStream(datafis); byte[] buffer = new byte[1024]; int len; while (bufin.available() != 0) { len = bufin.read(buffer); sig.update(buffer, 0, len); }; bufin.close();
Verify the Signature
Once you have supplied all of the data to the Signature
object, you can verify the digital signature of that data and report the result. Recall that the alleged signature was read into a byte array called sigToVerify
.
boolean verifies = sig.verify(sigToVerify); System.out.println("signature verifies: " + verifies);
The verifies
value will be true
if the alleged signature (sigToVerify
) is the actual signature of the specified data file generated by the private key corresponding to the public key pubKey
.