Working with Credentials working-with-credentials

CAUTION
AEM 6.4 has reached the end of extended support and this documentation is no longer updated. For further details, see our technical support periods. Find the supported versions here.

About the Credential Service

A credential contains your private key information needed for signing or identifying documents. A certificate is public key information that you configure for trust. AEM Forms uses certificates and credentials for several purposes:

You can programmatically interact with the Credential service using the Trust Manager Java API. You can perform the following tasks:

NOTE
You can also import and delete certificates by using administration console. (See administration help.)

Importing Credentials by using the Trust Manager API importing-credentials-by-using-the-trust-manager-api

You can programmatically import a credential into AEM Forms by using the Trust Manager API. For example, you can import a credential used to sign a PDF document. (See Digitally Signing PDF Documents).

When importing a credential, you specify an alias for the credential. The alias is used to perform a Forms operation that requires a credential. Once imported, a credential can be viewed in administration console, as shown in the following illustration. Notice that the alias for the credential is Secure.

ww_ww_truststore

NOTE
You cannot import a credential into AEM Forms using web services.

Summary of steps summary-of-steps

To import a credential into AEM Forms, perform the following steps:

  1. Include project files.
  2. Create a credential service client.
  3. Reference the credential.
  4. Perform the import operation.

Include project files

Include necessary files into your development project. If you are creating a client application using Java, then include the necessary JAR files. If you are using web services, then make sure that you include the proxy files.

The following JAR files must be added to your project’s classpath:

  • adobe-livecycle-client.jar
  • adobe-usermanager-client.jar
  • adobe-truststore-client.jar
  • adobe-utilities.jar (Required if AEM Forms is deployed on JBoss)
  • jbossall-client.jar (Required if AEM Forms is deployed on JBoss)

For information about the location of these JAR files, see Including AEM Forms Java library files.

Create a credential service client

Before you can programmatically import a credential into AEM Forms, create a credential service client. For information, see Setting connection properties.

Reference the credential

Reference a credential that you want to import into AEM Forms. The quick start associated with this section references a P12 file located in the file system.

Perform the import operation

After you reference the credential, import the credential into AEM Forms. If the credential is not successfully imported, an exception is thrown. When importing a credential, you specify an alias for the credential.

See also

Import credentials using the Java API

Including AEM Forms Java library files

Setting connection properties

Credential Service API Quick Starts

Deleting Credentials by using the Trust Manager API

Import credentials using the Java API import-credentials-using-the-java-api

Import a credential into AEM Forms by using the Trust Manager API (Java):

  1. Include project files

    Include client JAR files, such as adobe-truststore-client.jar, in your Java project’s class path.

  2. Create a credential service client

    • Create a ServiceClientFactory object that contains connection properties.
    • Create a CredentialServiceClient object by using its constructor and passing the ServiceClientFactory object.
  3. Reference the credential

    • Create a java.io.FileInputStream object by using its constructor. Pass a string value that specifies the location of the credential.
    • Create a com.adobe.idp.Document object that stores the credential by using the com.adobe.idp.Document constructor. Pass the java.io.FileInputStream object that contains the credential to the constructor.
  4. Perform the import operation

    • Create a string array that holds one element. Assign the value truststore.usage.type.sign to the element.

    • Invoke the CredentialServiceClient object’s importCredential method and pass the following values:

      • A string value that specifies the alias value for the credential.
      • The com.adobe.idp.Document instance that stores the credential.
      • A string value that specifies the password that is associated with the credential.
      • The string array that contains the usage value. For example, you can specify this value truststore.usage.type.sign. To import a Reader Extension credential, specify truststore.usage.type.lcre.

See also

Importing Credentials by using the Trust Manager API

Quick Start (SOAP mode): Importing credentials using the Java API

Including AEM Forms Java library files

Setting connection properties

Deleting Credentials by using the Trust Manager API deleting-credentials-by-using-the-trust-manager-api

You can programmatically delete a credential by using the Trust Manager API. When deleting a credential, you specify an alias that corresponds to the credential. Once deleted, a credential cannot be used to perform an operation.

NOTE
You cannot delete a credential into AEM Forms using web services.

Summary of steps summary_of_steps-1

To delete a credential, perform the following steps:

  1. Include project files.
  2. Create a credential service client.
  3. Perform the delete operation.

Include project files

Include necessary files into your development project. If you are creating a client application using Java, then include the necessary JAR files. The following JAR files must be added to your project’s classpath:

  • adobe-livecycle-client.jar
  • adobe-usermanager-client.jar
  • adobe-truststore-client.jar
  • adobe-utilities.jar (Required if AEM Forms is deployed on JBoss)
  • jbossall-client.jar (Required if AEM Forms is deployed on JBoss)

For information about the location of these JAR files, see Including AEM Forms Java library files.

Create a credential service client

Before you can programmatically delete a credential, create a Data Integration service client. When creating a service client, you define connection settings that are required to invoke a service. For information, see Setting connection properties.

Perform the delete operation

To delete a credential, specify the alias that corresponds to the credential. If you specify an alias that does not exist, an exception is thrown.

See also

Import credentials using the Java API

Including AEM Forms Java library files

Setting connection properties

Import credentials using the Java API

Deleting credentials using the Java API deleting-credentials-using-the-java-api

Delete a credential from AEM Forms by using the Trust Manager API (Java):

  1. Include project files

    Include client JAR files, such as adobe-truststore-client.jar, in your Java project’s class path.

  2. Create a credential service client

    • Create a ServiceClientFactory object that contains connection properties.
    • Create a CredentialServiceClient object by using its constructor and passing the ServiceClientFactory object.
  3. Perform the delete operation

    Invoke the CredentialServiceClient object’s deleteCredential method and pass a string value that specifies the alias value.

See also

Deleting Credentials by using the Trust Manager API

Quick Start (SOAP mode): Deleting credentials using the Java API

Including AEM Forms Java library files

Setting connection properties

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