The following commands were used to generate the test key pairs:
development/tools/make_key testkey '/C=US/ST=California/L=Mountain View/O=Android/OU=Android/CN=Android/emailAddress=android@android.com'
development/tools/make_key platform '/C=US/ST=California/L=Mountain View/O=Android/OU=Android/CN=Android/emailAddress=android@android.com'
development/tools/make_key shared '/C=US/ST=California/L=Mountain View/O=Android/OU=Android/CN=Android/emailAddress=android@android.com'
development/tools/make_key media '/C=US/ST=California/L=Mountain View/O=Android/OU=Android/CN=Android/emailAddress=android@android.com'
The following standard test keys are currently included:
testkey -- a generic key for packages that do not otherwise specify a key.
platform -- a test key for packages that are part of the core platform.
shared -- a test key for things that are shared in the home/contacts process.
media -- a test key for packages that are part of the media/download system.
These test keys are used strictly in development, and should never be assumed
to convey any sort of validity. When $BUILD_SECURE=true, the code should not
honor these keys in any context.
signing using the openssl commandline (for boot/system images)
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1. convert pk8 format key to pem format
% openssl pkcs8 -inform DER -nocrypt -in testkey.pk8 -out testkey.pem
2. create a signature using the pem format key
% openssl dgst -binary -sha1 -sign testkey.pem FILE > FILE.sig
extracting public keys for embedding
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it's a Java tool
but it generates C code
take a look at commands/recovery/Android.mk
you'll see it running $(HOST_OUT_JAVA_LIBRARIES)/dumpkey.jar