C++
C++
Oracle Cloud Secrets - Setup Bootstrap Secret in Memory
See more Secrets Examples
Accessing a cloud-based secrets manager requires authentication credentials, which cannot be stored within the secrets manager itself.This example shows how to set up an in-memory bootstrap secret with authentication credentials which will be used in other examples to access Oracle Cloud Secrets.
Note: This example requires Chilkat v10.1.0 or later.
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#include <CkSecrets.h>
#include <CkJsonObject.h>
#include <CkStringBuilder.h>
void ChilkatSample(void)
{
bool success = false;
// This example requires the Chilkat API to have been previously unlocked.
// See Global Unlock Sample for sample code.
CkSecrets bootstrap;
// This bootstrap secret will reside in memory.
bootstrap.put_Location("memory");
// Specify the name of the bootstrap secret.
// service and username are required.
// appName and domain are optional.
// Note: The values are arbitrary and can be anything you want.
CkJsonObject json;
json.UpdateString("appName","oracle_bs");
json.UpdateString("service","Example");
json.UpdateString("username","Joe");
// The bootstrap secret for Oracle Cloud Secrets is the PEM of your private key.
CkStringBuilder sbPem;
success = sbPem.LoadFile("qa_data/pem/oracle_cloud_privkey.pem","utf-8");
if (success == false) {
std::cout << "Failed to load the private key PEM file." << "\r\n";
return;
}
// The bootstrap secret for the Oracle Cloud Secrets will contain
// the private key PEM.
// The secret is stored encrypted in memory, and is available to be used
// regardless of the lifetime of the "bootstrap" object.
success = bootstrap.UpdateSecretSb(json,sbPem);
if (success == false) {
std::cout << bootstrap.lastErrorText() << "\r\n";
return;
}
std::cout << "The Oracle Cloud bootstrap secret has been stored in memory." << "\r\n";
}