This endpoint references the certificates of SPS's internal Certificate Authority, Timestamping Authority, and the SSL certificate of the web and REST interface.
GET https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/management/certificates
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 internal certificates of SPS.
curl --cookie cookies https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/management/certificates
The following is a sample response received when listing the internal certificates of SPS.
For details of the meta object, see Message format.
{ "body": { "ca": { "selection": "identity", "x509_identity": { "key": "fbd684e1-e1ac-4f34-ad25-86c560c51e24", "meta": { "href": "/api/configuration/x509/fbd684e1-e1ac-4f34-ad25-86c560c51e24" } } }, "server": { "key": "fd1c73e8-bcb8-4d13-991f-722f492dc074", "meta": { "href": "/api/configuration/x509/fd1c73e8-bcb8-4d13-991f-722f492dc074" } }, "tsa": { "key": "20e72ede-78ef-460a-b843-68a35d994142", "meta": { "href": "/api/configuration/x509/20e72ede-78ef-460a-b843-68a35d994142" } } }, "key": "certificates", "meta": { "first": "/api/configuration/management/certificates", "href": "/api/configuration/management/certificates", "last": "/api/configuration/management/webinterface", "next": "/api/configuration/management/disk_fillup_prevention", "parent": "/api/configuration/management", "previous": null, "transaction": "/api/transaction" } }
Element | Type | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
key | string | The ID of the endpoint. | ||
body | Top level element (string) | Contains the internal certificates of SPS. | ||
ca | Top level item | Contains the certificate of SPS's internal Certificate Authority. | ||
selection | string | Must be set to identity. | ||
x509_identity | string |
References the certificate of SPS's internal Certificate Authority. You can configure certificates at the /api/configuration/x509/ endpoint. To modify or add an X.509 certificate, use the value of the returned key as the value of the x509_identity element, and remove any child elements (including the key). For details, see Certificates stored on SPS. | ||
server | string |
References the SSL certificate of SPS's web interface. You can configure certificates at the /api/configuration/x509/ endpoint. To modify or add an X.509 certificate, use the value of the returned key as the value of the x509_identity element, and remove any child elements (including the key). For details, see Certificates stored on SPS. | ||
tsa | string |
References the certificate of SPS's internal Timestamping Authority. You can configure certificates at the /api/configuration/x509/ endpoint. To modify or add an X.509 certificate, use the value of the returned key as the value of the x509_identity element, and remove any child elements (including the key). For details, see Certificates stored on SPS. |
To modify a certificate, you have to:
For details, see Open a transaction.
Have the value of the key element of a valid X.509 CA certificate stored on SPS.
Use the X.509 certificate's key as the value of the ca element. You can find a detailed description of the available parameters listed in Element . PUT the modified JSON object to the https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/management/certificates endpoint.
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. |
To create a new password, you have to POST the password or its hash as a JSON object to the https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/passwords endpoint. For details, see Create a new object. The body of the POST request must contain a JSON object with the parameters listed in Element . The response to a successful POST message is a JSON object that includes the reference ID of the created password in its key attribute. You can reference this ID in other parts of the configuration, for example, to set the password of a user account. Note that you can use a password object for only one purpose, that is, you cannot reference a password object twice.
POST https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/passwords
Note that the GET method is not permitted on this endpoint, you cannot list the existing passwords. However, if you know the reference ID of a password, you can display its properties:
GET https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/passwords/<reference-ID-of-the-password;>
You cannot directly delete or modify a password, the DELETE and PUT methods are not permitted on password objects. To update a password, create a new one, then update the object that uses the old password to reference the new password.
Header name | Description | Required | Values |
---|---|---|---|
Content-Type | Specifies the type of the data sent. SPS uses the JSON format | Required | application/json |
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. |
The following command creates a new password object.
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" --cookie cookies https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/passwords --data '{"plain": "newpassword"}'
If you do not want to include the actual password in the request, the SHA-256 hash of the password is enough:
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" --cookie cookies https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/passwords --data '{"hash": "$6$rounds=5000$If20/EFyQ4dW3dg/$xrECLfXgZlC2Xr1s257E2aZen42fM7R.sOGG9pkPy1x5ORTx6j03oPWexVlB3f5wnaZOQCBF.NjlDgyg2WEe./"}'
The response to a successful POST message is a JSON object that includes the reference ID of the created password in its key attribute.
For details of the meta object, see Message format.
{ "key": "faa96916-c85e-46ff-8697-f4cc5e596e7f", "meta": { "href": "/api/configuration/passwords/faa96916-c85e-46ff-8697-f4cc5e596e7f", "parent": "/api/configuration/passwords", "transaction": "/api/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. |
400 | InvalidQuery | The requested filter or its value is invalid. |
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. |
405 | MethodNotAllowed | The method <method> is not allowed for this node. |
You cannot directly delete or modify a password, the DELETE and PUT methods are not permitted on password objects. To update a password, create a new one, then update the object that uses the old password to reference the new password. After you commit the transaction, SPS will automatically delete the old password. For details, see Change the admin password.
To change the password of the admin user, complete the following steps.
For details, see Open a transaction.
POST a JSON object containing the password or the hash of the password to the https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/passwords endpoint. For details, see Element . For example:
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" --cookie cookies https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/passwords --data '{"plain": "mypassword"}'
If the operation is successful, the response includes a reference key to the new password object.
Modify the JSON object of the user to reference the key of the new password object, and PUT the modified JSON object to the https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/aaa/local_database/users/<key-of-the-user> endpoint. For example:
curl -X PUT -H "Content-Type: application/json" --cookie cookies https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/aaa/local_database/users/14322374245a7de542bbb04 --data '{"name": "admin", "password": "<key-of-the-new-password>"}'
For details, see Commit a transaction.
To change the password of the root user, complete the following steps.
For details, see Open a transaction.
POST a JSON object containing the password or the hash of the password to the https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/passwords endpoint. For details, see Element . For example:
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" --cookie cookies https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/passwords --data '{"plain": "mypassword"}'
If the operation is successful, the response includes a reference key to the new password object.
PUT the reference key of the new password object to the https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/management/root_password endpoint. For example:
curl -X PUT -H "Content-Type: application/json" --cookie cookies https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/management/root_password --data '"<key-of-the-new-password>"'
Note that you must PUT the reference key as a JSON string, enclosed in double-quotes.
For details, see Commit a transaction.
To create a new private key, you have to POST the private key as a JSON object to the https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/private_keys endpoint. For details, see Create a new object. The body of the POST request must contain a JSON object with the parameters listed in Element . The response to a successful POST message is a JSON object that includes the reference ID of the created private key in its key attribute. You can reference this ID in other parts of the configuration. Note that you can use a private-key object for only one purpose, that is, you cannot reference one object twice.
POST https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/private_keys
Note that the GET method is not permitted on this endpoint, you cannot list the existing private keys. However, if you know the reference ID of a private key, you can display its properties:
GET https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/private_keys/<reference-ID-of-the-private-key;>
You cannot directly delete or modify a private key, the DELETE and PUT methods are not permitted on private key objects. To update a private key, create a new one, then update the object that uses the old private key to reference the new private key.
Header name | Description | Required | Values |
---|---|---|---|
Content-Type | Specifies the type of the data sent. SPS uses the JSON format | Required | application/json |
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. |
The following command creates a new private key object. Note the following requirements:
The key must be in PKCS-1 PEM format.
Encrypted private keys are not supported.
The body of the POST message must be the private key as a single line, enclosed in double-quotes.
Replace line-breaks in the PEM file with \n
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" --cookie cookies https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/private_keys --data "-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----\nMIIEpAIBAAKCAQEAu3QMMhqeg9ZMLNfdvQoNN1deVRE2SR0VKY+ALnzPZF4fUoJy\n.....\nI2SchDibk/Xj/ZvuEQ23LvzayWOVVuVHtH3JZX3SU4Sa0vpaeC+3oddVTwQOWRq0\n ......... Qbn5W3xKz4vXDDQHEbEsvDQ9A7+uCEuHpO4s33IK9KEa0Zdp745AU0DSGXN4HFzc\n-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----\n"
Querying a specific key returns the following information about the key:
curl --cookie cookies https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/private_keys/<reference-ID-of-the-private-key;>
The response to a successful POST message is a JSON object that includes the reference ID of the created public key in its key attribute.
For details of the meta object, see Message format.
{ "key": "faa96916-c85e-46ff-8697-f4cc5e596e7f", "meta": { "href": "/api/configuration/private_keys/faa96916-c85e-46ff-8697-f4cc5e596e7f", "parent": "/api/configuration/private_keys", "transaction": "/api/transaction" } }
The response to querying a specific key is a JSON object that includes the parameters of the key, for example:
{ "body": { "public-key-fingerprint": { "digest": "ef:d3:8e:d0:81:4f:a2:8f:3b:8b:0c:dd:c7:8f:8c:7e", "hash_algorithm": "md5" }, "type": "rsa" }, "key": "6c4d1116-d79d-475b-bb37-9f844f085c14", "meta": { "first": "/api/configuration/private_keys/e5d13d18-07c5-43fa-89f4-c3d2ece17c71", "href": "/api/configuration/private_keys/6c4d1116-d79d-475b-bb37-9f844f085c14", "last": "/api/configuration/private_keys/6c4d1116-d79d-475b-bb37-9f844f085c14", "next": null, "parent": "/api/configuration/private_keys", "previous": "/api/configuration/private_keys/e5d13d18-07c5-43fa-89f4-c3d2ece17c71", "transaction": "/api/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. |
400 | SyntacticError | Syntax error: Could not load PEM key: Unsupported private key format, only PKCS-1 is supported. Encrypted private keys are not supported. |
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. |
405 | MethodNotAllowed | The method <method> is not allowed for this node. |
You cannot directly delete or modify a private key, the DELETE and PUT methods are not permitted on private key objects. To update a private key, create a new one, then update the object that uses the old private key to reference the new private key. After you commit the transaction, SPS will automatically delete the old private key.
To create a new certificate, you have to POST the certificate and its private key as a JSON object to the https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/x509 endpoint. For details, see Create a new object. The body of the POST request must contain a JSON object with the parameters listed in Element . The response to a successful POST message is a JSON object that includes the reference ID of the created certificate in its key attribute. You can reference this ID in other parts of the configuration. Note that you can use a certificate object for only one purpose, that is, you cannot reference one object twice.
POST https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/x509
Note that the GET method is not permitted on this endpoint, you cannot list the existing certificates. However, if you know the reference ID of a certificate, you can display its properties:
GET https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/x509/<reference-ID-of-the-private-key;>
You cannot directly delete or modify a certificate, the DELETE and PUT methods are not permitted on certificate objects. To update a certificate, create a new one, then update the object that uses the old certificate to reference the new certificate.
Header name | Description | Required | Values |
---|---|---|---|
Content-Type | Specifies the type of the data sent. SPS uses the JSON format | Required | application/json |
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. |
The following command creates a new certificate object. Note the following requirements:
The key must be in PKCS-1 PEM format.
You need the certificate and the private key as well.
Encrypted private keys are not supported.
The attributes of the POST message that contain the certificate and the private key must be a single line, enclosed in double-quotes.
Replace line-breaks in the PEM certificate with \n
The certificate and the certificate chain must be valid, SPS will reject invalid certificates and invalid certificate chains.
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" --cookie cookies https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/x509 --data '{"private_key": "-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----\nMIIEpAIBAAKCAQEAu3QMMhqeg9ZMLNfdvQoNN1deVRE2SR0VKY+ALnzPZF4fUoJy\n.....\nI2SchDibk/Xj/ZvuEQ23LvzayWOVVuVHtH3JZX3SU4Sa0vpaeC+3oddVTwQOWRq0\n ......... Qbn5W3xKz4vXDDQHEbEsvDQ9A7+uCEuHpO4s33IK9KEa0Zdp745AU0DSGXN4HFzc\n-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----\n"}'
The body should be:
{ "certificate": "-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----\nMIIEpAIBAAKCAQEAu3QMMhqeg9ZMLNfdvQoNN1deVRE2SR0VKY+ALnzPZF4fUoJy\n.....\nI2SchDibk/Xj/ZvuEQ23LvzayWOVVuVHtH3JZX3SU4Sa0vpaeC+3oddVTwQOWRq0\n ......... Qbn5W3xKz4vXDDQHEbEsvDQ9A7+uCEuHpO4s33IK9KEa0Zdp745AU0DSGXN4HFzc\n-----END CERTIFICATE-----", "private_key": "-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----\nMIIEpAIBAAKCAQEAu3QMMhqeg9ZMLNfdvQoNN1deVRE2SR0VKY+ALnzPZF4fUoJy\n.....\nI2SchDibk/Xj/ZvuEQ23LvzayWOVVuVHtH3JZX3SU4Sa0vpaeC+3oddVTwQOWRq0\n ......... Qbn5W3xKz4vXDDQHEbEsvDQ9A7+uCEuHpO4s33IK9KEa0Zdp745AU0DSGXN4HFzc\n-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----", "issuer_chain": [] }
Querying a specific key returns the following information about the key:
curl --cookie cookies https://<IP-address-of-SPS>/api/configuration/x509/<reference-ID-of-the-private-key;>
Element | Type | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
fingerprint | string | The fingerprint of the certificate. | |
digest | string | The fingerprint of the certificate, for example ef:d3:8e:d0:81:4f:a2:8f:3b:8b:0c:dd:c7:8f:8c:7e | |
hash_algorithm | string | The hash algorithm used to create the fingerprint, for example, sha256. | |
subject | string | The subject string of the certificate. |
The response to a successful POST message is a JSON object that includes the reference ID of the created certificate in its key attribute.
For details of the meta object, see Message format.
{ "key": "faa96916-c85e-46ff-8697-f4cc5e596e7f", "meta": { "href": "/api/configuration/x509/faa96916-c85e-46ff-8697-f4cc5e596e7f", "parent": "/api/configuration/x509", "transaction": "/api/transaction" } }
The response to querying a specific certificate is a JSON object that includes the parameters of the certificate, for example:
{ "body": { "fingerprint": { "digest": "ef:d3:8e:d0:81:4f:a2:8f:3b:8b:0c:dd:c7:8f:8c:7e", "hash_algorithm": "md5" }, "subject": "C=RO/ST=State/L=Locality/O=Organization/OU=OrganizationalUnit/CN=example.com/emailAddress=root@example.com" }, "key": "6c4d1116-d79d-475b-bb37-9f844f085c14", "meta": { "first": "/api/configuration/x509/e5d13d18-07c5-43fa-89f4-c3d2ece17c71", "href": "/api/configuration/x509/6c4d1116-d79d-475b-bb37-9f844f085c14", "last": "/api/configuration/x509/6c4d1116-d79d-475b-bb37-9f844f085c14", "next": null, "parent": "/api/configuration/x509", "previous": "/api/configuration/x509/e5d13d18-07c5-43fa-89f4-c3d2ece17c71", "transaction": "/api/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. |
400 | SyntacticError | Syntax error: Could not load PEM key: Unsupported private key format, only PKCS-1 is supported. Encrypted private keys are not supported. |
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. |
405 | MethodNotAllowed | The method <method> is not allowed for this node. |
You cannot directly delete or modify a certificate, the DELETE and PUT methods are not permitted on certificate objects. To update a certificate, create a new one, then update the object that uses the old certificate to reference the new certificate. After you commit the transaction, SPS will automatically delete the old certificate.
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