Key/Certificate parameters
Quite a few of the openssl functions require a key or a certificate parameter. Following methods may be used to get them:
Certificates
- An OpenSSLCertificate instance (or prior to PHP 8.0.0, a resource of type
OpenSSL X.509) returned from openssl_x509_read() - A string having the format file://path/to/cert.pem; the named file must contain a PEM encoded certificate
- A string containing the content of a certificate, PEM encoded, may start with
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
- An OpenSSLCertificate instance (or prior to PHP 8.0.0, a resource of type
Certificate Signing Requests (CSRs)
- An OpenSSLCertificateSigningRequest instance (or prior to PHP 8.0.0, a resource of type
OpenSSL X.509 CSR) returned from openssl_csr_new() - A string having the format file://path/to/csr.pem; the named file must contain a PEM encoded CSR
- A string containing the content of a CSR, PEM encoded, may start with
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE REQUEST-----
- An OpenSSLCertificateSigningRequest instance (or prior to PHP 8.0.0, a resource of type
Public/Private Keys
- An OpenSSLAsymmetricKey instance (or prior to PHP 8.0.0, a resource of type
OpenSSL key) returned from openssl_get_publickey() or openssl_get_privatekey() - For public keys only: an OpenSSLCertificate instance (or prior to PHP 8.0.0, a resource of type
OpenSSL X.509) - A string having the format file://path/to/file.pem - the named file must contain a PEM encoded certificate/private key (it may contain both)
- A string containing the content of a certificate/key, PEM encoded, may start with
-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY----- - For private keys, you may also use the syntax
array($key, $passphrase)where $key represents a key specified using the file:// or textual content notation above, and $passphrase represents a string containing the passphrase for that private key
- An OpenSSLAsymmetricKey instance (or prior to PHP 8.0.0, a resource of type
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