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.NET Core C#

AWS Secrets Manager - List Matching Secrets

See more Secrets Examples

List secrets in the AWS Secrets Manager matching one or more wildcarded names for app, service, domain, and username.

Note: This example requires Chilkat v10.1.0 or later.

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.NET Core C#
bool success = false;

// This example requires the Chilkat API to have been previously unlocked.
// See Global Unlock Sample for sample code.

// The bootstrap secret will contain the following information:

// AWS Region
// AWS Access Key
// AWS Secret Key

// See following examples for setting up a bootstrap secret in memory, 
// or in the local manager (Windows Credentials Manager or Apple Keychain)
// Setup Bootstrap Secret in Local Manager
// Setup Bootstrap Secret in Memory
Chilkat.Secrets bootstrap = new Chilkat.Secrets();

// Set the location of the bootstrap secret.
// Can be "local_manager" or "memory", depending on how you setup the bootstrap secret.
// ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// If your operating system is NOT Windows or MacOS/iOS, then change "local_manager" to "memory"
// You can also, if desired, use "memory" on Windows and MacOS/iOS if your bootstrap secret was previously setup in memory.
// ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
bootstrap.Location = "local_manager";

// Specify the bootstrap secret to be used.
Chilkat.JsonObject bsId = new Chilkat.JsonObject();
bsId.UpdateString("appName","AWS");
bsId.UpdateString("service","Example");
bsId.UpdateString("username","Joe");

// ----------------------------------------------------
Chilkat.Secrets secrets = new Chilkat.Secrets();

// Setup for the AWS Secrets Manager
secrets.Location = "aws_secrets_manager";
success = secrets.SetBootstrapSecret(bsId,bootstrap);
if (success == false) {
    Debug.WriteLine(secrets.LastErrorText);
    return;
}

// Set wildcarded or exact values for appName, service, domain, and username.
// Omit any members where anything is allowed to match, or alternatively specify "*" to match anything.
Chilkat.JsonObject jsonMatch = new Chilkat.JsonObject();
jsonMatch.UpdateString("appName","Test*");
// The following lines can be omitted. Not specifying anything for service, domain, or username is the same as "*".
jsonMatch.UpdateString("service","*");
jsonMatch.UpdateString("domain","*");
jsonMatch.UpdateString("username","*");

Chilkat.JsonObject results = new Chilkat.JsonObject();
results.EmitCompact = false;

success = secrets.ListSecrets(jsonMatch,results);
if (success == false) {
    Debug.WriteLine(secrets.LastErrorText);
    return;
}

Debug.WriteLine(results.Emit());

// Sample output:

// {
//   "secrets": [
//     {
//       "appName": "Test",
//       "service": "Something",
//       "domain": "Xyz",
//       "username": "Abc",
//       "awsName": "Test/Something/Xyz/Abc"
//     },
//     {
//       "appName": "Test2",
//       "service": "Custom",
//       "domain": "Ocean",
//       "username": "Starfish",
//       "awsName": "Test2/Custom/Ocean/Starfish"
//     }
//   ]
// }

// ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Here's sample code for parsing the JSON list of secrets.

string appName;
string service;
string domain;
string username;
string awsName;

int i = 0;
int numSecrets = results.SizeOfArray("secrets");
while (i < numSecrets) {
    results.I = i;
    // Note: appName and domain are optional and may not exist in any given secret.
    appName = results.StringOf("secrets[i].appName");
    service = results.StringOf("secrets[i].service");
    domain = results.StringOf("secrets[i].domain");
    username = results.StringOf("secrets[i].username");
    // Information field for the raw AWS secret name.
    awsName = results.StringOf("secrets[i].awsName");
    i = i + 1;
}