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Save pwlin/8a0d01e6428b7a96e2eb to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=32696#c5 | |
If you have a certificate that is not | |
trusted by Android, when you add it, it goes in the personal cert store. | |
When you add a cert in this personal cert store, the system requires a | |
higher security level to unlock the device. But if you manage to add your | |
cert to the system store then you don't have this requirement. Obviously, | |
root is required to add a certificate to the system store, but it is quiet | |
easy. | |
Here is how to do it : | |
1 - add your cert normally, it will be stored in your personal store and | |
android will ask you a pin/password... Proceed | |
2 - With a file manager with root capabilities, browse files | |
in /data/misc/keychain/cacerts-added. You should see a file here, it's the | |
certificate you have added at step 1. If you can not find it in that path, look in /data/misc/user/0/cacerts-added/ | |
3 - Move this file to system/etc/security/cacerts (you will need to mount | |
the system partition r/w) | |
4 - Reboot the phone | |
5 - You are now able to clear the pin/password you have set to unlock the | |
device. | |
I Think that this will only work for Root or Intermediate CA. | |
I got the idea by reading this : | |
http://nelenkov.blogspot.fr/2011/12/ics-trust-store-implementation.html |
Good news: Adguard found a solution to make their custom cert work on Android 14 i.e. /apex/com.android.conscrypt/cacerts
.
See here: AdguardTeam/adguardcert/module/post-fs-data.sh#L50-L73
Just replace Adguard's certificate with your own certificate in this module and you're good to go.
See also this module for an alternative: nccgroup/ConscryptTrustUserCerts
It didn't work for me but it may work for you (or could be fixed in the future).
Good news: Adguard found a solution to make their custom cert work on Android 14 i.e.
/apex/com.android.conscrypt/cacerts
.See here: AdguardTeam/adguardcert/module/post-fs-data.sh#L50-L73 Just replace Adguard's certificate with your own certificate in this module and you're good to go.
See also this module for an alternative: nccgroup/ConscryptTrustUserCerts It didn't work for me but it may work for you (or could be fixed in the future).
@devnoname120
pls tell me how to replace adguard module to reqable and httpcanary ca certificate
i tried but didn't understand anything
@Things22 I did it brother.
For httpcanary, I did it hurray!
Just download the zip from here https://github.com/AdguardTeam/adguardcert/releases/
Then open it and go post-fs-data.sh
and you need to just change two things. Look for something like this AG_CERT_HASH
, AG_CERT_FILE
and edit both of them to this.
AG_CERT_HASH=87bc3517 AG_CERT_FILE=/data/local/tmp/87bc3517.0
Make sure to copy your root certificate to /data/local/tmp
And then install that zip to magisk as you do for modules.
Reboot and done.
+1 Thanks a bunch.
This helped a lot with Let's Encrypt rolling over to their ISRG Root X1 cert and old android machines.
@Nattle @RevealedSoulEven could you tell how it worked for you
i am testing on android 14 samsung real device i followed the steps and edit the both variable but getting Error
unZip Error
@Nattle @RevealedSoulEven could you tell how it worked for you i am testing on android 14 samsung real device i followed the steps and edit the both variable but getting Error unZip Error
this: https://xdaforums.com/t/magisk-module-unzip-error.4503395/ works for me.
You need to be careful to not include an dir in the zip file, after editing, only zip files in unzipped dir instead of zip the dir.
@Sudo989 No.
I adopted the Adguard module and wrote Cert-Fixer for installing custom CA certificates.
The module copies user certificates installed on the phone to system certificate store during boot. I've tested and verified it on an AVD emulator Pixel 8, Android 15 (API 35)
and Pixel 8, Android 14 (API 34)
.
No intense testing was done on this. So if you get an error, copy the logs from /data/local/tmp/cert-fixer.log
and ping me.
Yeah this thing is ancient by now. With system-as-root, the only way to install your own system level certificates is with the magisk overlay. But nothing accepts them anymore because they don't have a trusted verification server, which is nigh impossible to get without getting your root ca fully trusted anyway. You can still install them as user certs without root, but then you have to deal with the 'network may be monitored' warning.
I abandoned my personal CA and just switched all my stuff over to letsencrypt.