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To start the creation of our example application:
- Create a text file named
testSig.java
.
- Add
import
statements.The methods for signing data are in the
java.security
package, so we import everything from that package. We also need to import thejava.io
package since it contains the methods we need to input the file data to be signed.import java.io.*; import java.security.*;- Start the class definition:
class testSig {- Type the signature for the
main
method (which we need, since this is an application), and write a comment about what this program does:public static void main(String[] args) { /* Test generating and verifying a DSA signature */- Write the exception-handling blocks.
These are needed because many methods called by the program throw exceptions that we must catch. Note: The code we write in subsequent steps of this lesson to generate and verify a signature will go between the
try
andcatch
blocks.try { } catch (Exception e) { System.err.println("Caught exception " + e.toString()); }- Write the closing braces for the main method and the testSig class:
} }What We've Got So Far
Now we've got the basic structure of our program. It looks like this:
import java.io.*; import java.security.*; class testSig { public static void main(String[] args) { /* Test generating and verifying a DSA signature */ try { } catch (Exception e) { System.err.println("Caught exception " + e.toString()); } } }
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