SSL/TLS Certificates - Old Sha-1 AAA Root CA results in Weak Signature or Algorithm constraints check failed errors
AAA Sha-1 Root CA Error and how to fix it
Issue: Various errors result from InCommon/Sectigo issued SSL/TLS certificates that have an old AAA Root CA signed with the Sha-1 algorithm
- Errors:
- java.security.cert.CertPathValidatorException: Algorithm constraints check failed on signature algorithm: SHA1withRSA
 - Error: Provided certificate <cert file name> using the weak signature algorithm. Please provide the strong signature algorithm certificate.
 - Error occurred while fetching tls: Provided certificate using the weak signature algorithm. Please provide the strong signature algorithm certificate
 - uses unsafe digest algorithm
dir-cli failed. Error 90022: Certificate's signature algorithm is weak - References: VMWare vSphere & vCenter v. 8.x: https://knowledge.broadcom.com/external/article?legacyId=90281 https://knowledge.broadcom.com/external/article?legacyId=89424
 - Etc.
 
 
- Cause:
- Certificates requested here through the Server Certificates Service and issued by InCommon/Sectigo are cross signed
 - There are 2 paths through the certificate chain through Intermediate Certificates to the Root Certificate Authorities
 - One of the paths contains a total of 4 certificates, 2 intermediates and a Root CA cert for AAA Certificate Services, which is an older certificate expiring in 2028, but is signed using the old Sha-1 algorithm. Reference: Trust Chain Path B detailed in this Sectigo Knowledge Base article.
 - The Sha-1 certificate remains for compatibility reasons, as there are many older clients that might not have the newer Root CA certificates installed, especially if the client is incapable of or has been restricted from downloading new Root CA certs.
 - The other path contains a total of 3 certificates, 1 intermediate and a Root CA cert for USERTrust RSA Certification Authority signed using a Sha-2 algorithm (sha384WithRSAEncryption)
 - Certain clients appear not capable of navigating, or exploring multiple certification paths and choosing for themselves which path is the best and most secure for them. This results in some clients throwing an error. Most browser clients have the highest compatibility, capability and error handling, while programmatic clients inside of Java, and command line clients like curl and wget might have a lower level of compatibility, capability and error handling.
 - For more information on this issue:
 
 
- Solution:
- Force the client to use the shorter path by removing the AAA certificate from the chain file altogether.
 - Download using the link titled "Certificate (w/ chain), PEM encoded"
 - Check the existing file in txt editor or using openssl:
openssl crl2pkcs7 -nocrl -certfile <certfilename> | openssl pkcs7 -print_certs -noout
(prints a little bit of info about each cert in the chain)openssl verify -verbose -purpose sslserver <certfilename>
(should return an OK at the end) - Then in the <certfilename> file delete the following SHA-1 AAA Certificate Services Root
 
 
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----MIIEMjCCAxqgAwIBAgIBATANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQUFADB7MQswCQYDVQQGEwJHQjEbMBkGA1UECAwSR3JlYXRlciBNYW5jaGVzdGVyMRAwDgYDVQQHDAdTYWxmb3JkMRowGAYDVQQKDBFDb21vZG8gQ0EgTGltaXRlZDEhMB8GA1UEAwwYQUFBIENlcnRpZmljYXRlIFNlcnZpY2VzMB4XDTA0MDEwMTAwMDAwMFoXDTI4MTIzMTIzNTk1OVowezELMAkGA1UEBhMCR0IxGzAZBgNVBAgMEkdyZWF0ZXIgTWFuY2hlc3RlcjEQMA4GA1UEBwwHU2FsZm9yZDEaMBgGA1UECgwRQ29tb2RvIENBIExpbWl0ZWQxITAfBgNVBAMMGEFBQSBDZXJ0aWZpY2F0ZSBTZXJ2aWNlczCCASIwDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEBBQADggEPADCCAQoCggEBAL5AnfRu4ep2hxxNRUSOvkbIgwadwSr+GB+O5AL686tdUIoWMQuaBtDFcCLNSS1UY8y2bmhGC1Pqy0wkwLxyTurxFa70VJoSCsN6sjNg4tqJVfMiWPPe3M/vg4aijJRPn2jymJBGhCfHdr/jzDUsi14HZGWCwEiwqJH5YZ92IFCokcdmtet4YgNW8IoaE+oxox6gmf049vYnMlhvB/VruPsUK6+3qszWY19zjNoFmag4qMsXeDZRrOme9Hg6jc8P2ULimAyrL58OAd7vn5lJ8S3frHRNG5i1R8XlKdH5kBjHYpy+g8cmez6KJcfA3Z3mNWgQIJ2P2N7Sw4ScDV7oL8kCAwEAAaOBwDCBvTAdBgNVHQ4EFgQUoBEKIz6W8Qfs4q8p74Klf9AwpLQwDgYDVR0PAQH/BAQDAgEGMA8GA1UdEwEB/wQFMAMBAf8wewYDVR0fBHQwcjA4oDagNIYyaHR0cDovL2NybC5jb21vZG9jYS5jb20vQUFBQ2VydGlmaWNhdGVTZXJ2aWNlcy5jcmwwNqA0oDKGMGh0dHA6Ly9jcmwuY29tb2RvLm5ldC9BQUFDZXJ0aWZpY2F0ZVNlcnZpY2VzLmNybDANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQUFAAOCAQEACFb8AvCb6P+k+tZ7xkSAzk/ExfYAWMymtrwUSWgEdujm7l3sAg9g1o1QGE8mTgHj5rCl7r+8dFRBv/38ErjHT1r0iWAFf2C3BUrz9vHCv8S5dIa2LX1rzNLzRt0vxuBqw8M0Ayx9lt1awg6nCpnBBYurDC/zXDrPbDdVCYfeU0BsWO/8tqtlbgT2G9w84FoVxp7Z8VlIMCFlA2zs6SFz7JsDoeA3raAVGI/6ugLOpyypEBMs1OUIJqsil2D4kF501KKaU73yqWjgom7C12yxow+ev+to51byrvLjKzg6CYG1a4XXvi3tPxq3smPi9WIsgtRqAEFQ8TmDn5XpNpaYbg==-----END CERTIFICATE-----
- 
- Save that file, and check it again (txt editor or openssl):
openssl crl2pkcs7 -nocrl -certfile <certfilename_edit> | openssl pkcs7 -print_certs -noout
(prints a little bit of info about each cert in the chain)openssl verify -verbose -purpose sslserver <certfilename_edit>
(should return an OK at the end) - You may also need to restructure the certificate file so that it is in the following order:
- End Entity/Leaf
 - Intermediate
 - Root
 
 - Note: this example was checked with OpenSSL 3.1.4
 - When you have updated the Certificate file, it should only have the following of the two Root CA Certificates: SHA-2 UserTrust RSA Certification Authority Root Certificate
 
 - Save that file, and check it again (txt editor or openssl):
 
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----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-----END CERTIFICATE-----
