Java 7 Update 11 - Install failure
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Posted on 01-17-2013 09:32 AM
Hello JAMF Nation - I recently started deploying Java 7 Update 11, and I've been experiencing some errors on a few machines. The machines seem to all be 10.7.4 workstations (the package seems to install OK on 10.8.2 - but has also been successful on 10.7.4 and 10.7.5 workstations). I am using the vendor package. Here is the error received:
Installation failed. The installer reported: installer: Package name is Java 7 Update 11
installer: Certificate used to sign package is not trusted. Use -allowUntrusted to override
Is anyone else experiencing this issue? Thanks for any help!

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Posted on 01-17-2013 09:47 AM
Try stepping through the installer interactively on a machine that you've gotten this error on. During the installation, the Installer window should have a lock icon in the upper right corner. Click it to see the installer's certificate details. It should show you where along the certificate verification chain it's having a problem.
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Posted on 01-17-2013 10:07 AM
I am not sure of the timing, but I am wondering if it's...
At one point Apple released an update, to "Apple Software Updater", which allowed it to use Apple's 'new certificates' - because the old ones were no longer valid...
If that Target machine did not get this update - then it would reject all (other) Apple updates.
If that is the case ( ?), then the solution would be to apply the Update to "Apple Software Update" first, and then the other updates would be accepted... Since their certificates would then be valid.
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Posted on 01-17-2013 11:57 AM
@jarednichols - I will try this out on a clients machine...

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Posted on 01-18-2013 01:13 PM
Yeah, I saw this a lot in the August/September timeframe, not since. CLI installs would fail, but going through the GUI was fine. Probably something like the above...

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Posted on 01-18-2013 01:35 PM
are you seeing this issue when the deployment is through an HTTPS distribution point?

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Posted on 01-18-2013 01:57 PM
Mine was http.

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Posted on 01-22-2013 11:07 AM
I am having a similar problem. How do you step through the installer process interactively?
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Posted on 01-22-2013 12:07 PM
I stepped through the installer manually on the users machine, using the same .pkg that is being deployed via JSS and the installation is failing. I checked the installation cert, and it is a trusted/verified cert from Oracle. I noticed the following error in the system log after i attempted the installation manually:
1/22/13 12:40:34.606 PM com.apple.SecurityServer: Failed to authorize right 'system.install.app-store-software' by client '/System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/PackageKit.framework/Versions/A/Resources/installd' [48860] for authorization created by '/System/Library/CoreServices/Installer.app' [48681]
Maybe the disk permissions have been corrupted? I'm going to try a repair and see if that helps...
*Update: Repaired permissions and the same error is received* What would be the easiest way to integrate the -allowUntrusted command into the package? hmm...
Kristd - You can step through the installer process interactively by executing the .pkg manually on a client workstation. I just copied my .pkg from the distribution point and downloaded it locally on the machine.
tdurdan - I am not using HTTP or HTTPS distribution points... SMB only.
Thanks all.
JS

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Posted on 02-27-2013 01:34 PM
HI,
I am seeing this issue with the SMART Notebook Interactive Viewer.pkg.
It was working perfectly well last week, and today it fails with error:
Installation failed. The installer reported: installer: Package name is SMART Notebook Interactive Viewer
installer: Certificate used to sign package is not trusted. Use -allowUntrusted to override.
This from multiple distribution points, to multiple targets.
Probably not coincidentally, the SmartTech website never seems to finish loading...
Anything I can do other than wait for SMART to fix?
S

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Posted on 02-27-2013 01:47 PM
@Sandy, if you really want to it sounds like you can do a custom deployment that would use command line installer on a target package and use the -allowUntrusted flag to get around the issue.
I would check in with someone at SMART on it though, if possible. They may have an answer as to why its failing with a bad certificate error. That process is there to ensure you're not installing a compromised pkg, but I doubt you are in this case.

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Posted on 02-27-2013 02:54 PM
Thanks Mike!
I just sent a request through to SMART
Sandy

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Posted on 03-25-2013 08:04 AM
Sandy: we just ran into this ourselves. The problem is that the developer 'SMART Technologies' has signed their package with a certificate that expired earlier this year. Oops.
However, since the jamf binary will happily install an *unsigned* package (just not a signed package with an expired certificate), you can use these instructions to strip the certificate from the package, after which it should install just fine: http://managingosx.wordpress.com/2012/03/24/fixing-packages-with-expired-signatures/
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Posted on 03-28-2013 06:32 AM
Josaxo, did you find a resolution for this? I'm having the same problem with Java 7 update 17 and 10.7.4.
Thanks,
Luke

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Posted on 10-11-2013 11:25 AM
I had the same problem with a Toshiba driver package I was attempting to install today. Thanks for posting that link, Robo - pkgutil worked great.
