Archiving transfers data from SPS to an external storage solution, cleanup removes (deletes) old files. Archived data can be accessed and searched, but cannot be restored (moved back) to the SPS appliance. Only those closed audit-trail files are archived where the retention time has already elapsed. To list the available Archive policies, use the following command.
curl --cookie cookies https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/policies/archive_cleanup_policies/
The following sections detail the properties of Archive/Cleanup policy objects.
GET https:<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/policies/archive_cleanup_policies/<object-id>
Cookie name | Description | Required | Values |
---|---|---|---|
session_id | Contains the authentication token of the user | Required |
The value of the session ID cookie received from the REST server in the authentication response, for example, a1f71d030e657634730b9e887cb59a5e56162860. For details on authentication, see Authenticate to the SPS REST API. Note that this session ID refers to the connection between the REST client and the SPS REST API. It is not related to the sessions that SPS records (and which also have a session ID, but in a different format). |
The following command lists the properties of a specific Archive/Cleanup policy object.
curl --cookie cookies -https:<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/policies/archive_cleanu_policies/<object-id>
The following is a sample response received, showing the properties of Archive/Cleanup policy objects.
For details of the meta object, see Message format.
{ "key": "99375192754364c2b1bd01", "body": { "name": "archive_all_with_filelist", "include_node_id_in_path": false, "notification_event": { "type": "all", "send_filelist": true, "file_count_limit": 123456 }, "target": { "type": "nfs", "server": { "selection": "ip", "value": "1.2.3.5" }, "path": "/data/backup" }, "start_times": [ "10:10" ], "template": "PROTOCOL/CONNECTION/ARCHIVEDATE/", "retention_days": 30 } }
Element | Type | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
name | string | Top level element, the name of the object. This name is also displayed on the SPS web interface. It cannot contain whitespace. | |
include_node_id_in_path | boolean | Include the Cluster Node ID in the path. Recommended to set to True if the SPS instance is a node in a cluster. This ensures that the ID of the node is included in the path of the relevant directory, which is required to prevent cluster nodes from archiving data to the same location, and so overwriting each other's data and resulting in data loss. | |
notification_event | Top level element | ||
type | string (all | errors-only | none) |
| |
send_filelist | boolean |
This is meaningful only if notification_event is set to all. True if the list of files are included in the notification e-mail. | |
file_count_limit | integer |
This is meaningful only if notification_event is set to all and send_filelist is set to True. The maximum number of files that are included in the notification e-mail. | |
target | Top level element | Defines the address of the archive server, which protocol to use to access it, and other parameters. SPS can be configured to use the SMB/CIFS, and NFS protocols to access the archive server. | |
type | string (smb | nfs | none) |
| |
server | Top level element | ||
domain | string |
Only if type is set to smb. The domain name of the target server | |
protocol_version | string |
Only if type is set to smb. The SMB protocol to use when SPS connects to the server. Servers are usually backwards compatible with earlier protocol versions (for example, a server that supports version 2.1 supports versions 2.0 and 1.0 as well). | |
share | string |
Only if type is set to smb. The name and directory path of the share in the following format: share_name/path/to/directory | |
authentication | Top level element |
Only if type is set to smb. | |
path | string | The path to the archive directory on the target server | |
start_times | list of strings | The time when the archive process starts in H:MM or HH:MM format. | |
template | string |
SPS organizes the audit trails into directories based on the date or the protocol. The subdirectories are created directly into the archive directory. The following subdirectory structures are possible:
| |
retention_days | integer (days) | Data older than this value is archived to the external server. The archived data is deleted from SPS. |
Elements of server | Type | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
server | Top level element | ||
selection | string (ip | fqdn) |
| |
value | string | The IP address or the hostname of the remote server |
The list of audit policies. An audit policy contains settings for encrypting, timestamping, and signing audit trails. To enable auditing for a connection, select an audit policy when configuring connections, and enable auditing for the appropriate protocol channels in the connection's channel policy.
|
NOTE:
The default audit policy is pre-selected when creating connection policies. Modify that audit policy with care. |
GET https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/policies/audit_policies
Cookie name | Description | Required | Values |
---|---|---|---|
session_id | Contains the authentication token of the user | Required |
The value of the session ID cookie received from the REST server in the authentication response, for example, a1f71d030e657634730b9e887cb59a5e56162860. For details on authentication, see Authenticate to the SPS REST API. Note that this session ID refers to the connection between the REST client and the SPS REST API. It is not related to the sessions that SPS records (and which also have a session ID, but in a different format). |
The following command lists the audit policies.
curl --cookie cookies https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/policies/audit_policies
The following command retrieves the properties of a specific policy.
curl --cookie cookies https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/policies/audit_policies/<policy-id>
The following is a sample response received when listing audit policies.
For details of the meta object, see Message format.
{ "items": [ { "key": "78101850949e47437dd91d", "meta": { "href": "/api/configuration/policies/audit_policies/78101850949e47437dd91d" } }, { "key": "9161063345713f11489305", "meta": { "href": "/api/configuration/policies/audit_policies/9161063345713f11489305" } }, { "key": "1e089e2a-76b4-4079-94e3-c83ebc74dc2e", "meta": { "href": "/api/configuration/policies/audit_policies/1e089e2a-76b4-4079-94e3-c83ebc74dc2e" } } ], "meta": { "first": "/api/configuration/policies/audit_policies", "href": "/api/configuration/policies/audit_policies", "last": "/api/configuration/policies/usermapping_policies", "next": "/api/configuration/policies/content_policies", "parent": "/api/configuration/policies", "previous": null, "transaction": "/api/transaction" } }
When retrieving the endpoint of a specific audit policy, the response is the following.
{ "body": { "encryption": { "certificates": [ { "certificate": "<cert1>", "four_eyes_certificate": "<cert2>" } ], "different_certificates_for_upstream": { "certificates": [ { "certificate": "<cert3>", "four_eyes_certificate": "<cert4>" } ], "enabled": true }, "enabled": true }, "name": "<policy-name>", "signing": { "enabled": true, "x509_identity": { "key": "ec0b6604-37f6-4df6-bd2f-d7879a75b324", "meta": { "href": "/api/configuration/x509/ec0b6604-37f6-4df6-bd2f-d7879a75b324" } } }, "timestamping_enabled": true }, "key": "1e089e2a-76b4-4079-94e3-c83ebc74dc2e", "meta": { "first": "/api/configuration/policies/audit_policies/78101850949e47437dd91d", "href": "/api/configuration/policies/audit_policies/1e089e2a-76b4-4079-94e3-c83ebc74dc2e", "last": "/api/configuration/policies/audit_policies/1e089e2a-76b4-4079-94e3-c83ebc74dc2e", "next": null, "parent": "/api/configuration/policies/audit_policies", "previous": "/api/configuration/policies/audit_policies/9161063345713f11489305", "transaction": "/api/transaction" } }
Element | Type | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
key | string | Top level element, contains the ID of the policy. | ||
body | Top level element (string) | The configuration elements of the policy. | ||
encryption | Top level element | Audit trail encryption settings. | ||
name | string | The name of the policy. This name is also displayed on the SPS web interface. It cannot contain whitespace. | ||
signing | Top level element | Audit trail signing settings. | ||
enabled | boolean |
Set to true to enable audit trail signing. If signing is enabled, the x509_identity element is also required. | ||
x509_identity | string |
Required for signing audit trails. References the identifier of the X.509 certificate stored on SPS. You can configure certificates at the /api/configuration/x509/ endpoint. To modify or add an X.509 host certificate, use the value of the returned key as the value of the x509_identity element, and remove any child elements (including the key). | ||
timestamping | boolean | Set to true to timestamp the audit trail. |
Elements of encryption | Type | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
certificates | Top level list | Contains the encrypting certificates. | ||
certificate | string | The encrypting certificate. You can replay an encrypted audit trail with the private key of the encrypting certificate. | ||
four_eyes_certificate | string | Additional certificate for joint (4-eyes) encryption. You can only replay a jointly encrypted audit trail with the private keys of both certificates. | ||
different_certificates_for_upstream | Top level item | Configures encrypting upstream traffic separately. | ||
certificates | Top level list | The certificates for encrypting upstream traffic. | ||
certificate | string | The encrypting certificate. You can replay an encrypted upstream with the private key of the encrypting certificate. | ||
four_eyes_certificate | string | Additional certificate for joint (4-eyes) encryption. You can only replay a jointly encrypted upstream with the private keys of both certificates. | ||
enabled | boolean |
Set to true to encrypt the upstream traffic with separate certificate(s). If upstream encryption is enabled, the certificates element is required. | ||
enabled | boolean |
Set to true to enable encrypting audit trails. If encryption is enabled, the certificates and different_certificates_for_upstream elements are required. |
Disable encryption, signing, and timestamping.
{ "encryption": { "enabled": false }, "name": "default", "signing": { "enabled": false }, "timestamping_enabled": false }
Encrypt upstream traffic only (single certificate).
{ "encryption": { "certificates": [], "different_certificates_for_upstream": { "certificates": [ { "certificate": "<cert>", "four_eyes_certificate": null } ], "enabled": true }, "enabled": true }, "name": "Upstream_only", "signing": { "enabled": false }, "timestamping_enabled": false }
Enable signing and timestamping, no traffic encryption.
{ "encryption": { "enabled": false }, "name": "Sign_and_timestamp", "signing": { "enabled": true, "x509_identity": { "key": "9508db81-4a3f-45a7-a2b1-a86f71c56416", "meta": { "href": "/api/configuration/x509/9508db81-4a3f-45a7-a2b1-a86f71c56416" } } }, "timestamping_enabled": true }
Enable signing and timestamping, and encrypt traffic with a single certificate (no separate upstream encryption).
{ "encryption": { "certificates": [ { "certificate": "<cert>", "four_eyes_certificate": null } ], "different_certificates_for_upstream": { "enabled": false }, "enabled": true }, "name": "API_audit_pol", "signing": { "enabled": true, "x509_identity": { "key": "d0286f64-41aa-45e1-ab19-830ac2f99f57", "meta": { "href": "/api/configuration/x509/d0286f64-41aa-45e1-ab19-830ac2f99f57" } } }, "timestamping_enabled": true }
Encrypting certificates must not contain any metadata. SPS uses only the key part of the certificate, no other data (expiry, etc.) are relevant for encryption.
To use a certificate with the SPS API, remove all metadata, and substitute line breaks with \n.
The following is an example certificate, as used on the SPS web interface:
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- MIIDnDCCAoQCCQDc536Ob5tPQTANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQUFADCBjzELMAkGA1UEBhMC Q0ExEDAOBgNVBAgTB09udGFyaW8xEDAOBgNVBAcTB1Rvcm9udG8xEDAOBgNVBAoT B0JhbGFiaXQxFjAUBgNVBAsTDURvY3VtZW50YXRpb24xEDAOBgNVBAMTB2JhbGFi aXQxIDAeBgkqhkiG9w0BCQEWEWNhdGFpbEBiYWxhYml0Lmh1MB4XDTE2MDQyMjE2 MDAyNloXDTE3MDQyMjE2MDAyNlowgY8xCzAJBgNVBAYTAkNBMRAwDgYDVQQIEwdP bnRhcmlvMRAwDgYDVQQHEwdUb3JvbnRvMRAwDgYDVQQKEwdCYWxhYml0MRYwFAYD VQQLEw1Eb2N1bWVudGF0aW9uMRAwDgYDVQQDEwdiYWxhYml0MSAwHgYJKoZIhvcN AQkBFhFjYXRhaWxAYmFsYWJpdC5odTCCASIwDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEBBQADggEPADCC AQoCggEBAOGa9I2jmVlVdVWEI/Wy7ahTeyaIjK52FQUXqxG8okOSD+nV74ZFUuiS 59X+2Ow1aDqVGrDMgPNhSVpYXUvDUAUOILJW4rAIoxDY6vDU9/4v9dDiQfEPlauw 0qNRjPS1MLzjSOQDSKqPkdivkS6HKZeX3+TFq3OxO+vIrF9zFfp9T+eDG2oSobPc 3mV2zkvtD61CXzbezAVdArDl6WnysRyzxyH8WEhFwZepWxFD9Y5N1dzKody7Hncs X5kVIv0+Z6bBHfg/7wHWysJdwNuLr0ByTOvPM6WdA83k3Fy2gYNk7Rc0BbRFbQTX hJVfUzSUWHVhFQtAb4diKU5voqepfNMCAwEAATANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQUFAAOCAQEA R5DIwOHsEKoGkiI3cHC2VMnxP2rRhpTneh6El+DFnQPdjrXa+tnqV4TdnNaD+FvP AB1kqbmC4hJAsjMLU2b1ne6m+SLmzhRuMxcA6x+fnYvcQT57IbRdq2E/4oJGeyuy 0jQE+nmoVD3lDytIOxCfQvZhl1tcbBE5hp5USme4PmNhY6QfUlgjsFjPfoVG7XDB uNaUoWS6RvZPmL5IuvF9tqe96ES6DTjC8rBfQYvSoVNjjPnUMx0C8xstRSEG7oJc N5+4ImYnFNxSG20hZpFy0OFDf2g7Fx+W50/NtXamUF1Sf8WlPZc03oVl1/Fzo7mt qYyyD1ld89OUEYZ+aJQd/A== -----END CERTIFICATE-----
The same certificate, as accepted by the SPS API:
"certificate": "-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----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\nqYyyD1ld89OUEYZ+aJQd/A==\n-----END CERTIFICATE-----\n"
To add an audit policy, you have to:
For details, see Open a transaction.
POST the JSON object to the https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/policies/audit_policies endpoint. You can find a detailed description of the available parameters listed in Element .
If the POST request is successful, the response includes the key of the new audit policy. For example:
{ "key": "1e089e2a-76b4-4079-94e3-c83ebc74dc2e", "meta": { "href": "/api/configuration/policies/audit_policies/1e089e2a-76b4-4079-94e3-c83ebc74dc2e", "parent": "/api/configuration/policies/audit_policies", "transaction": "/api/transaction" } }
For details, see Commit a transaction.
To modify an audit policy, you have to:
For details, see Open a transaction.
PUT the modified JSON object to the https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/policies/audit_policies/<policy-key> endpoint. You can find a detailed description of the available parameters listed in Element .
For details, see Commit a transaction.
The following table lists the typical status and error codes for this request. For a complete list of error codes, see Application level error codes.
Code | Description | Notes |
---|---|---|
201 | Created | The new resource was successfully created. |
401 | Unauthenticated | The requested resource cannot be retrieved because the client is not authenticated and the resource requires authorization to access it. The details section contains the path that was attempted to be accessed, but could not be retrieved. |
401 | AuthenticationFailure | Authenticating the user with the given credentials has failed. |
404 | NotFound | The requested object does not exist. |
Backup policies define the address of the backup server, which protocol to use to access it, and other parameters. To list the available Backup policies, use the following command.
curl --cookie cookies https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/policies/backup_policies/
The following sections detail the properties of Backup policy objects.
GET https:<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/policies/backup_policies/<object-id>
Cookie name | Description | Required | Values |
---|---|---|---|
session_id | Contains the authentication token of the user | Required |
The value of the session ID cookie received from the REST server in the authentication response, for example, a1f71d030e657634730b9e887cb59a5e56162860. For details on authentication, see Authenticate to the SPS REST API. Note that this session ID refers to the connection between the REST client and the SPS REST API. It is not related to the sessions that SPS records (and which also have a session ID, but in a different format). |
The following command lists the properties of a specific Backup policy object.
curl --cookie cookies -https:<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/policies/backup_policies<object-id>
The following is a sample response received, showing the properties of Backup policy objects.
For details of the meta object, see Message format.
{ "key": "99275192754364c2b1bd01", "body": { "name": "backup_all_with_filelist", "include_node_id_in_path": false, "notification_event": { "type": "all", "send_filelist": true, "file_count_limit": 123456 }, "target": { "type": "nfs", "server": { "selection": "ip", "value": "1.2.3.5" }, "path": "/data/backup" }, "start_times": [ "10:10" ] } }
Element | Type | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
name | string | Top level element, the name of the object. This name is also displayed on the SPS web interface. It cannot contain whitespace. | |
include_node_id_in_path | boolean | Include the Cluster Node ID in the path. Recommended to set to True if the SPS instance is a node in a cluster. This ensures that the ID of the node is included in the path of the relevant directory, which is required to prevent cluster nodes from backing up data to the same location, and so overwriting each other's data and resulting in data loss. | |
notification_event | Top level element | ||
type | string (all | errors-only | none) |
| |
send_filelist | boolean |
This is meaningful only if notification_event is set to all. True if the list of files are included in the notification e-mail. | |
file_count_limit | integer |
This is meaningful only if notification_event is set to all and send_filelist is set to True. The maximum number of files that are included in the notification e-mail. | |
target | Top level element | Defines the address of the backup server, which protocol to use to access it, and other parameters. SPS can be configured to use the Rsync, SMB/CIFS, and NFS protocols to access the backup server. | |
type | string (rsync | smb | nfs) |
| |
server | Top level element | ||
domain | string |
Only if type is set to smb. The domain name of the target server | |
protocol_version | string |
Only if type is set to smb. The SMB protocol to use when SPS connects to the server. Servers are usually backwards compatible with earlier protocol versions (for example, a server that supports version 2.1 supports versions 2.0 and 1.0 as well). | |
share | string |
Only if type is set to smb. The name and directory path of the share in the following format: share_name/path/to/directory | |
authentication | Top level element |
Only if type is set to smb. | |
username | string |
Only if type is set to rsync. The username used to log on to the remote server | |
path | string | The path to the backup directory on the target server | |
auth_key | JSON object |
Only if type is set to rsync. This key will be used to authenticate SPS on the remote server. The public key of this keypair must be imported to the remote server. For details on private keys, see Private keys stored on SPS. For example: "auth_key": { "key": "XXXXXXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXXXXXXXXXX", "meta": { "href": "/api/configuration/private_keys/XXXXXXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXXXXXXXXXX" } }, | |
host_key | Top level element or string |
Only if type is set to rsync. | |
port | integer |
Only if type is set to rsync. The port number of the SSH server running on the remote machine | |
start_times | list of strings | The time when the archive process starts in H:MM or HH:MM format. |
Elements of server | Type | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
server | Top level element | ||
selection | string (ip | fqdn) |
| |
value | string | The IP address or the hostname of the remote server |
When the query is the following:
curl --cookie cookies "https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/policies/backup_policies/99275192754364c2b1bd04"
The response is the following:
{ "key": "99275192754364c2b1bd04", "body": { "name": "backup_rsync", "include_node_id_in_path": true, "notification_event": { "type": "none", "send_filelist": true, "file_count_limit": 10240 }, "target": { "type": "rsync", "server": { "selection": "ip", "value": "192.168.122.1" }, "username": "user1", "path": "/data/backup", "auth_key": { "key": "XXXXXXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXXXXXXXXXX", "meta": { "href": "/api/configuration/private_keys/XXXXXXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXXXXXXXXXX" } }, "host_key": { "selection": "rsa", "value": "AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAADAQABAAAAYQCsU80IBrJbOlqCi03qZK+FtgS783VKE1TVZBtDQlsXJ9FXu6KNBvqvSAjcXiWY+izqn+P14UVRY1vOdz7WwLIWOUoTKHfPMqv3bdjwM4Bhd26POWSFyDf46yx1YzvMwgc=" }, "port": 1122 }, "start_times": [ "8:00" ] } }
You can monitor the traffic of certain connections in real time, and execute various actions if a certain pattern (for example, a particular command or text) appears in the command line or on the screen, or if a window with a particular title appears in a graphical protocol. Since content-monitoring is performed real-time, One Identity Safeguard for Privileged Sessions (SPS) can prevent harmful commands from being executed on your servers. SPS can also detect numbers that might be credit card numbers. The patterns to find can be defined as regular expressions. In case of ICA, RDP, and VNC connections, SPS can detect window title content.
The following actions can be performed:
Log the event in the system logs.
Immediately terminate the connection.
Send an e-mail or SNMP alerts about the event.
Store the event in the connection database of SPS.
SPS currently supports content monitoring in SSH session-shell connections, Telnet connections, RDP and Citrix ICA Drawing channels, and in VNC connections.
|
NOTE:
Command, credit card and window detection algorithms use heuristics. In certain (rare) situations, they might not match the configured content. In such cases, contact our Support Team to help analyze the problem. Real-time content monitoring in graphical protocols is not supported for Arabic and CJK languages. |
To list the available Content policies, use the following command.
curl --cookie cookies https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/policies/content_policies
The following sections detail the properties of Content policy objects.
GET https:<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/policies/content_policies/<object-id>
Cookie name | Description | Required | Values |
---|---|---|---|
session_id | Contains the authentication token of the user | Required |
The value of the session ID cookie received from the REST server in the authentication response, for example, a1f71d030e657634730b9e887cb59a5e56162860. For details on authentication, see Authenticate to the SPS REST API. Note that this session ID refers to the connection between the REST client and the SPS REST API. It is not related to the sessions that SPS records (and which also have a session ID, but in a different format). |
The following command lists the properties of a specific Content policy object.
curl --cookie cookies -https:<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/policies/content_policies/<object-id>
The following is a sample response received, showing the properties of Content policy objects.
For details of the meta object, see Message format.
{ "body": { "name": "example-content-policy-window-title", "rules": [ { "actions": { "log": true, "notify": true, "store_in_connection_database": true, "terminate": false }, "event": { "ignore": [], "match": [ "mmc.exe" ], "selection": "window_title" }, "gateway_groups": [], "remote_groups": [] } ] } }
Element | Type | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
name | string | Top level element, the name of the object. This name is also displayed on the SPS web interface. It cannot contain whitespace. | |
rules | JSON object | Top level element, contains the configuration properties of the object. | |
actions | JSON object | The list of actions to perform when the Content policy matches the analyzed traffic. All actions are boolean values (true or false) | |
event | JSON object | Specifies the event that triggers an action. | |
gateway_groups | list |
To apply the Content policy only for users belonging to specific groups, list those groups in the gateway_groups or remote_groups fields. If the gateway_groups or remote_groups field is set, the content policy is applied only to connections of these usergroups. For example: "gateway_groups": ["group1", "group2"], | |
remote_groups | list |
To apply the Content policy only for users belonging to specific groups, list those groups in the gateway_groups or remote_groups fields. If the gateway_groups or remote_groups field is set, the content policy is applied only to connections of these usergroups. For example: "remote_groups": ["group1", "group3"], |
Element | Type | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
actions | JSON object | The list of actions to perform when the Content policy matches the analyzed traffic. All actions are boolean values (true or false) | |
log | boolean |
Log the event in the system logs. Possible values: true or false | |
terminate | boolean |
Immediately terminate the connection. Possible values: true or false | |
notify | boolean |
Send an e-mail or SNMP alerts about the event. Possible values: true or false | |
store_in_connection_database | boolean |
Store the event in the connection database of SPS. Possible values: true or false |
To add a content policy, you have to:
For details, see Open a transaction.
POST the JSON object to the https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/policies/content_policies endpoint. You can find a detailed description of the available parameters listed in Element .
If the POST request is successful, the response includes the key of the new policy. For example:
{ "key": "1e089e2a-76b4-4079-94e3-c83ebc74dc2e", "meta": { "href": "/api/configuration/policies/content_policies/1e089e2a-76b4-4079-94e3-c83ebc74dc2e", "parent": "/api/configuration/policies/content_policies", "transaction": "/api/transaction" } }
For details, see Commit a transaction.
To modify a content policy, you have to:
For details, see Open a transaction.
PUT the modified JSON object to the https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/policies/content_policies/<policy-key> endpoint. You can find a detailed description of the available parameters listed in Element .
For details, see Commit a transaction.
The following table lists the typical status and error codes for this request. For a complete list of error codes, see Application level error codes.
Code | Description | Notes |
---|---|---|
201 | Created | The new resource was successfully created. |
401 | Unauthenticated | The requested resource cannot be retrieved because the client is not authenticated and the resource requires authorization to access it. The details section contains the path that was attempted to be accessed, but could not be retrieved. |
401 | AuthenticationFailure | Authenticating the user with the given credentials has failed. |
404 | NotFound | The requested object does not exist. |
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