Ruby
Ruby
HTTP TLS Mutual Authentication (Client-Side Certificate)
See more HTTP Examples
This example demonstrates what to do when a TLS connection requires a client-side certificate, also known as "two-way authentication" or "mutual authentication". The Chilkat API provides a few standard methods for setting the client-side certificate:- SetSslClientCert
- SetSslClientPem
- SetSslClientPfx
These methods are present in any Chilkat class that has SSL/TLS functionality. When the SSL client cert is set via one of these methods, it tells the API to use it for two-way (i.e. mutual) authentication. In all possible tasks, whether it is a POST, GET, PUT, an Amazon S3 method, etc., the only thing required for implementing the two-way authentication is to make a successful call to one of the above SetSsl* methods.
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require 'chilkat'
success = false
# This example assumes the Chilkat API to have been previously unlocked.
# See Global Unlock Sample for sample code.
http = Chilkat::CkHttp.new()
# Set the certificate to be used for mutual TLS authentication
# (i.e. sets the client-side certificate for two-way TLS authentication)
success = http.SetSslClientCertPfx("/home/bob/pfxFiles/myClientSideCertWithPrivateKey.pfx","pfxPassword")
if (success != true)
print http.lastErrorText() + "\n";
exit
end
# Note: The certificate used for the client-side of TLS mutual authentication
# must have the associated private key available. (PFX files typically store both
# the certificate and associated private key.)
# At this point, the HTTP object is setup with the client-side cert, and any SSL/TLS
# connection will automatically use it if the server demands a client-side cert