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Upload Certificate using API

Hi folks,
 
I've started having a play around with XG. I have a PowerShell script for generating a new Let's Encrypt certificate and updating my various components that use it, and wanted to integrate this with XG Home. It looks like the obvious way of achieving this should be the API, but I'm struggling a little with the certificate upload.

I've taken a look at the documentation and fired off a few API calls successfully, but the upload operation is a little different as it references data in a multipart request.
I'm using the v16.5 documentation because the v17 docs appear to be missing this particular page (it appears in the menu but the link is broken because the AddCertificate&UpdateCertificate.html file is missing).
I am not a developer but I did a bit of Googling and have come up with what I think is a multipart request. A Fiddler trace shows this when I fire off my request (PFX file data redacted and passwords changed).
 
POST sophos:4444/.../APIController
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT; Windows NT 10.0; en-GB) WindowsPowerShell/5.1.16299.251
Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=Certificate_File_Upload
Host: sophos:4444
Content-Length: 2712
Connection: Keep-Alive
 
--Certificate_File_Upload
Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="test.pfx"
Content-Type: application/x-pkcs12
 
<<<<Encoded PFX data here>>>>
--Certificate_File_Upload--

Tidying that up for readability the decoded XML in the URL is:
<Request>
  <Login>
    <Username>admin</Username>
    <Password>MyPassword</Password>
  </Login>
  <Set operation="add">
    <Certificate>
      <Action>UploadCertificate</Action>
      <Name>Test</Name>
      <Password>PfxPassword</Password>
      <CertificateFormat>pkcs12</CertificateFormat>
      <CertificateFile>test.pfx</CertificateFile>
      <PrivateKeyFile></PrivateKeyFile>
    </Certificate>
  </Set>
</Request>
 
The response I get from the API is: <Status code="510">Operation failed. Deleting entity referred by another entity.</Status>
Going by the documentation this means "Certificate could not be uploaded due to invalid private key or passphrase. Choose a proper key".
 
I've also tried a version with the certificate and key in PEM format rather than PFX and get: <Status code="500">Operation could not be performed on Entity.</Status>
Going by the documentation this means "Certificate could not be updated".
 
I tried a multipart/form-data request initially, but the API didn't provide any feedback - I got an HTTP 200 response, but no XML in the body. The multipart/mixed version at least responds with some XML so I'm assuming that's what it wants.
 
I'm assuming there's something wrong with the way I'm uploading the PFX file - perhaps I've misunderstood what the multipart request should look like? I couldn't find an example in the docs. The encoded PFX file data looks correct though, because it appears to be the same in Fiddler when I upload the PFX via the web UI (successfully). I was hoping one of you might have tried this and could point me in the right direction, please?
 
Thanks,
Andrew


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Parents
  • curl -k  -F "reqxml=<uploadTest.txt" -F file=@Certificates.p12 "https://<DNS or IP here>:4444/webconsole/APIController?"

    What mattered was using the @ and not < for the "file=" section.

    From the Curl man page:
    The difference between @ and < is then that @ makes a file get attached in the post as a  file  upload, while  the  <  makes  a text field and just get the contents for that text field from a file.

     

    The rest of this post is for those still learning/trying to figure things out:

    ---Contents of the file called uploadTest.txt---
    <Request>
      <Login>
        <Username>username</Username>
        <Password>password</Password>
      </Login>

      <Set operation="add">
        <Certificate>
          <Action>UploadCertificate</Action>
          <Name>friendly name for us humans goes here</Name>
          <Password>password to decrypt the certificate file</Password>
          <CertificateFormat>pkcs12</CertificateFormat>
          <CertificateFile>Certificates.p12</CertificateFile>
          <PrivateKeyFile></PrivateKeyFile>
        </Certificate>
      </Set>
    </Request>
    ---End content of file uploadTest.txt---

    **In the example above, Certificates.p12 is a placeholder for the filename of your certificate, and if you don't have a separate private key file you can omit the PrivateKeyFile line.

    I created a .p12 file for my certificate and private key simply because it was less to type in the file above and command line when testing. Valid formats are listed in the API documentation

Reply
  • curl -k  -F "reqxml=<uploadTest.txt" -F file=@Certificates.p12 "https://<DNS or IP here>:4444/webconsole/APIController?"

    What mattered was using the @ and not < for the "file=" section.

    From the Curl man page:
    The difference between @ and < is then that @ makes a file get attached in the post as a  file  upload, while  the  <  makes  a text field and just get the contents for that text field from a file.

     

    The rest of this post is for those still learning/trying to figure things out:

    ---Contents of the file called uploadTest.txt---
    <Request>
      <Login>
        <Username>username</Username>
        <Password>password</Password>
      </Login>

      <Set operation="add">
        <Certificate>
          <Action>UploadCertificate</Action>
          <Name>friendly name for us humans goes here</Name>
          <Password>password to decrypt the certificate file</Password>
          <CertificateFormat>pkcs12</CertificateFormat>
          <CertificateFile>Certificates.p12</CertificateFile>
          <PrivateKeyFile></PrivateKeyFile>
        </Certificate>
      </Set>
    </Request>
    ---End content of file uploadTest.txt---

    **In the example above, Certificates.p12 is a placeholder for the filename of your certificate, and if you don't have a separate private key file you can omit the PrivateKeyFile line.

    I created a .p12 file for my certificate and private key simply because it was less to type in the file above and command line when testing. Valid formats are listed in the API documentation

Children
  • Most likely, if you have trouble in uploading the certificate (any file to XG via API), use a Test page and check, what you "actually" upload to the server / xg.

    http://ptsv2.com/s/howitworks.html

    Most likely your file is not proper uploaded / wrong format etc. 

    So you should verify, what you are uploading because XG has no proper storage of the file, if the request was invalid. It will simply flush the upload after parsing the command. 

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