5 Security Object Commands
Endpoints can make use of the security object commands to operate on the managed objects.
- okv managed-object attribute add Command
Theokv managed-object attribute addcommand adds one or more attributes to a security object. - okv managed-object attribute delete Command
Theokv managed-object attribute deletecommand deletes one or more attributes associated with a security object. - okv managed-object attribute get Command
Theokv managed-object attribute getcommand retrieves an attribute or list of attributes of a security object. - okv managed-object attribute get-all Command
Theokv managed-object attribute get-allcommand retrieves all attributes of a security object. - okv managed-object attribute list Command
Theokv managed-object attribute listcommand retrieves the names of attributes associated with a security object. - okv managed-object attribute modify Command
Theokv managed-object attribute modifycommand modifies attributes associated with a security object. - okv managed-object certificate get Command
Theokv managed-object certificate getcommand retrieves a digital certificate. - okv managed-object certificate register Command
Theokv managed-object certificate registercommand registers a certificate. - okv managed-object certificate-request get Command
Theokv managed-object certificate-request getcommand retrieves a certificate request. - okv managed-object certificate-request register Command
Theokv managed-object certificate-request registercommand registers a certificate request object with Oracle Key Vault. - okv managed-object custom-attribute add Command
Theokv managed-object custom-attribute addcommand adds a custom attribute to a security object. - okv managed-object custom-attribute delete Command
Theokv managed-object custom-attribute deletecommand deletes a custom attribute of a security object. - okv managed-object custom-attribute modify Command
Theokv managed-object custom-attribute modifycommand modifies a custom attribute of a security object. - okv managed-object key create Command
Theokv managed-object key createcommand creates a new symmetric key. - okv managed-object key get Command
Theokv managed-object key getcommand retrieves an encryption key. - okv managed-object key register Command
Theokv managed-object key registercommand registers a key. - okv managed-object object activate Command
Theokv managed-object object activatecommand activates a security object. - okv managed-object object destroy Command
Theokv managed-object object destroycommand requests the server to destroy the key data for a security object. - okv managed-object object locate Command
Theokv managed-object object locatecommand locates a security object. - okv managed-object object query Command
Theokv managed-object object querycommand identifies supported operations and objects. - okv managed-object object revoke Command
Theokv managed-object object revokecommand revokes a security object. - okv managed-object opaque get Command
Theokv managed-object opaque getcommand retrieves an object that contains opaque data. - okv managed-object opaque register Command
Theokv managed-object opaque registercommand registers an opaque security object. - okv managed-object private-key get Command
Theokv managed-object private-key getcommand retrieves a private key. - okv managed-object private-key register Command
Theokv managed-object private-key registercommand registers a private key. - okv managed-object public-key get Command
Theokv managed-object public-key getcommand retrieves a public key. - okv managed-object public-key register Command
Theokv managed-object public-key registercommand registers a public key. - okv managed-object secret get Command
Theokv managed-object secret getcommand retrieves the secret data from a security object of type secret. - okv managed-object secret register Command
Theokv managed-object secret registercommand registers secret data such as passwords or random seeds. - okv managed-object wallet add-member Command
Theokv managed-object wallet add-membercommand adds a security object to a wallet as its member. - okv managed-object wallet delete-member Command
Theokv managed-object wallet delete-membercommand deletes the membership of the managed-object from a wallet. - okv managed-object wallet list Command
Theokv managed-object wallet listcommand lists wallets that have their access granted to the endpoint used to connect to Oracle Key Vault.
5.1 okv managed-object attribute add Command
The okv managed-object attribute add command adds one or more attributes to a security object.
To find the existing attributes for the security object, execute the okv managed-object attribute list command.
If you want to create a custom attribute, then use the okv managed-object custom-attribute add command.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read-modify permission on the object.
Syntax
Uses JSON syntax only: okv managed-object attribute add --generate-json-input
You must use the JSON syntax for this command to specify the attributes. However, you can use the --uuid parameter at the command line with this command. This is useful for cases where you want to apply the same attribute values to multiple objects. You can re-use the same JSON file and specify different UUIDs at the command line.
JSON Input File Template
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "attribute",
"action" : "add",
"options" : {
"uuid" : "#VALUE",
"attributes" : {
"name" : {
"value" : "#VALUE",
"type" : "#text|uri"
},
"contactInfo" : "#VALUE",
"activationDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss",
"deactivationDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss",
"protectStopDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss",
"processStartDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss"
}
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the security object. To find the unique identifier for the object, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
|
|
Required |
Array of attribute names. You must use the JSON syntax to add an attribute. You cannot specify attributes at the command line. To find the existing attributes for the managed object, execute the Attributes that you can enter are as follows:
See Key Management Interoperability Protocol Specification Version 1.1 for details about these attributes. For date values, use the following format:
Example showing how to use the |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object attribute addcommand and save it asadd-attrib.json.okv managed-object attribute add --generate-json-input > add-attrib.json; more add-attrib.json
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "attribute", "action" : "add", "options" : { "uuid" : "#VALUE", "attributes" : { "name" : { "value" : "#VALUE", "type" : "#text|uri" }, "contactInfo" : "#VALUE", "activationDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss", "deactivationDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss", "protectStopDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss", "processStartDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss" } } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
add_attribute.json) and then edit it so that you can add the attributes to the security object. For example:{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "attribute", "action" : "add", "options" : { "uuid" : "2359E04F-DA61-4F7C-BF9F-913D3369A93A", "attributes" : { "contactInfo" : "pfitch@example.com", "deactivationDate" : "2024-12-31 09:00:00", "name" : { "value" : "PROD-HRDB-MKEY", "type" : "text" }, "protectStopDate" : "2024-09-30 09:00:00" } } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object attribute addcommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object attribute add --from-json add_attrib.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result" : "Success", "value" : { "attributes" : { "contactInfo" : "Added", "deactivationDate" : "Added", "name" : "Added", "protectStopDate" : "Added" } } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.2 okv managed-object attribute delete Command
The okv managed-object attribute delete command deletes one or more attributes associated with a security object.
To find the existing attributes for the security object, execute the okv managed-object attribute list command.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read-modify permission on the object.
Syntax
Uses JSON syntax only: okv managed-object attribute delete --generate-json-input
You must use the JSON syntax for this command to specify the attributes. However, you can use the --uuid parameter at the command line with this command. This is useful for cases where you want to apply the same attribute values to multiple objects. You can re-use the same JSON file and specify different UUIDs at the command line.
JSON Input File Template
{
"service": {
"category": "managed-object",
"resource": "attribute",
"action": "delete",
"options": {
"uuid": "#VALUE",
"attributes": {
"name": {
"value": "#VALUE"
},
"contactInfo": "",
"activationDate": "",
"deactivationDate": "",
"protectStopDate": "",
"processStartDate": ""
}
}
}
}Parameters
| Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the security object. To find the unique identifier for the object, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
|
|
Required |
Array of attribute names. You must use the JSON syntax to specify the attribute. You cannot specify attributes at the command line. To find the existing attributes for the managed object, execute the Attributes that you can delete are as follows:
|
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object attribute deletecommand.okv managed-object attribute delete --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "attribute", "action": "delete", "options": { "uuid": "#VALUE", "attributes": { "name": { "value": "#VALUE" }, "contactInfo": "", "activationDate": "", "deactivationDate": "", "protectStopDate": "", "processStartDate": "" } } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
del_attribute.json) and then edit it so that you can delete the attributes associated with a security object.{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "attribute", "action": "delete", "options": { "uuid": "2359E04F-DA61-4F7C-BF9F-913D3369A93A", "attributes": { "name": { "value": "PROD-HRDB-MKEY" } } } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object attribute deletecommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object attribute delete --from-json del_attribute.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success", "value": { "attributes": { "name": "Deleted" } } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.3 okv managed-object attribute get Command
The okv managed-object attribute get command retrieves an attribute or list of attributes of a security object.
To find the existing attributes for the managed object, execute the okv managed-object attribute list command. To retrieve the value of custom attributes, execute the okv managed-object attribute get-all command.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read permission on the object.
Syntax
Uses JSON syntax only: okv managed-object attribute get --generate-json-input
You must use the JSON syntax for this command to specify the attributes. However, you can use the --uuid parameter at the command line with this command. This is useful for cases where you want to apply the same attribute values to multiple objects. You can re-use the same JSON file and specify different UUIDs at the command line.
JSON Input File Template
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "attribute",
"action" : "get",
"options" : {
"uuid" : "#VALUE",
"attributes" : [ "#ATTRIBUTE_NAME", "#ATTRIBUTE_NAME", "#ATTRIBUTE_NAME"],
"customAttributes" : [ "#ATTRIBUTE_NAME", "#ATTRIBUTE_NAME", "#ATTRIBUTE_NAME" ]
}
}
}Parameters
| Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the security object. To find the unique identifier for the object, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
|
|
Required |
Array of attribute names. You must use the JSON syntax to specify the attributes. You cannot specify attributes at the command line. You can retrieve the value of multiple attributes by including additional optional To find the existing attributes for the managed object, execute the See Key Management Interoperability Protocol Specification Version 1.1 for details about these attributes. |
|
|
Optional |
Array of custom attributes. You must use the JSON syntax to specify the custom attributes. You cannot specify attributes at the command line. To find the existing attributes for the managed object, execute the |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object attribute getcommand.okv managed-object attribute get --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "attribute", "action" : "get", "options" : { "uuid" : "#VALUE", "attributes" : [ "#ATTRIBUTE_NAME", "#ATTRIBUTE_NAME", "#ATTRIBUTE_NAME" ], "customAttributes" : [ "#ATTRIBUTE_NAME", "#ATTRIBUTE_NAME", "#ATTRIBUTE_NAME" ] } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
get_attribute.json) and then edit it so that you can retrieve the attributes associated with the security object.{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "attribute", "action" : "get", "options" : { "uuid": "2359E04F-DA61-4F7C-BF9F-913D3369A93A", "attributes": [ "activationDate", "contactInfo", "cryptoUsageMask", "cryptographicAlgorithm", "cryptographicLength", "name", "objectType", "state" ], "customAttributes" : ["x-ApplicationTag"] } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object attribute getcommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object attribute get --from-json get_attribute.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success", "value": { "attributes": { "activationDate": "2020-11-21 01:00:00", "contactInfo": "pfitch@example.com", "cryptoUsageMask": [ "ENCRYPT", "DECRYPT" ], "cryptographicAlgorithm": "AES", "cryptographicLength": "256", "name": [ { "type": "text", "value": "PROD-HRDB-MKEY" } ], "objectType": "Symmetric Key", "state": "Active" }, "customAttributes": [ { "index": "1", "name": "x-ApplicationTag", "type": "Text String", "value": "HR-Production" } ] } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.4 okv managed-object attribute get-all Command
The okv managed-object attribute get-all command retrieves all attributes of a security object.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read permission on the object.
Syntax
okv managed-object attribute get-all --uuid UUID
JSON Input File Template
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "attribute",
"action" : "get-all",
"options" : {
"uuid" : "#VALUE"
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the security object. To find the unique identifier for the object, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object attribute get-allcommand.okv managed-object attribute get-all --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "attribute", "action" : "get-all", "options" : { "uuid" : "#VALUE" } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
get-all_attribute.json) and then edit it so that you can get all the attributes of the security object.{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "attribute", "action" : "get-all", "options" : { "uuid" : "2359E04F-DA61-4F7C-BF9F-913D3369A93A" } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object attribute get-allcommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object attribute get-all --from-json get-all_attribute.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result" : "Success", "value" : { "attributes" : { "activationDate" : "2020-11-21 01:00:00", "contactInfo" : "pfitch@example.com", "cryptoUsageMask" : [ "ENCRYPT", "DECRYPT" ], "cryptographicAlgorithm" : "AES", "cryptographicLength" : "256", "deactivationDate" : "2024-12-31 01:00:00", "digest" : { "algorithm" : "SHA-256", "digestValue" : "EA31657433D91BF79660525131772D838A1128FCE6B49471726EEF5844EFA3F7", "keyFormatType" : "RAW" }, "fresh" : "Yes", "initialDate" : "2020-11-21 00:57:00", "lastChangeDate" : "2020-11-21 20:17:19", "name" : [ { "type" : "text", "value" : "PROD-HRDB-MKEY" } ], "objectType" : "Symmetric Key", "processStartDate" : "2020-11-21 00:57:00", "protectStopDate" : "2024-09-30 09:00:00", "state" : "Active" }, "customAttributes" : [ { "index" : "1", "name" : "x-ApplicationTag", "type" : "Text String", "value" : "HR-Production" } ] } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.5 okv managed-object attribute list Command
The okv managed-object attribute list command retrieves the names of attributes associated with a security object.
The okv managed-object attribute list command shows the key customAttributes if the object has one or more custom attributes. To find the custom attributes defined for the object, execute the okv managed-object attribute get-all command.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read permission on the object.
Syntax
okv managed-object attribute list --uuid UUID
JSON Input File Template
{
"service": {
"category": "managed-object",
"resource": "attribute",
"action": "list",
"options": {
"uuid": "#VALUE"
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the security object. To find the unique identifier for the object, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object attribute listcommand.okv managed-object attribute list --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "attribute", "action": "list", "options": { "uuid": "#VALUE" } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
list_attribute.json) and then edit it so that you can retrieve the list of attributes for the security object.{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "attribute", "action": "list", "options": { "uuid": "2359E04F-DA61-4F7C-BF9F-913D3369A93A" } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object attribute listcommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object attribute list --from-json list_attribute.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success", "value": { "attributes" : [ "activationDate" , "contactInfo" , "cryptoUsageMask" , "cryptographicAlgorithm" , "cryptographicLength" , "deactivationDate" , "digest" , "fresh" , "initialDate" , "lastChangeDate" , "name" , "objectType" , "processStartDate" , "protectStopDate" , "state" ], "customAttributes" : [ "x-ApplicationTag" ] } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.6 okv managed-object attribute modify Command
The okv managed-object attribute modify command modifies attributes associated with a security object.
To find the existing attributes for the managed object, execute the okv managed-object attribute list command.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read-modify permission on the object.
Syntax
Uses JSON syntax only: okv managed-object attribute modify --generate-json-input
You must use the JSON syntax for this command to specify the attributes. However, you can use the --uuid parameter at the command line with this command. This is useful for cases where you want to apply the same attribute values to multiple objects. You can re-use the same JSON file and specify different UUIDs at the command line.
JSON Input File Template
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "attribute",
"action" : "modify",
"options" : {
"uuid" : "#VALUE",
"attributes" : {
"name" : {
"value" : "#VALUE",
"newValue" : "#VALUE",
"newType" : "#text|uri"
},
"contactInfo" : "#VALUE",
"activationDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss",
"deactivationDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss",
"protectStopDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss",
"processStartDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss"
}
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the security object. To find the unique identifier for the object, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
|
|
Required |
Attribute names and their values. You must use the JSON syntax to specify the attribute. You cannot specify attributes at the command line. To find the existing attributes for the managed object, execute the Attributes that you can enter are as follows:
See Key Management Interoperability Protocol Specification Version 1.1 for details about these attributes. For date values, use the following format:
Example showing how to use the |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object attribute modifycommand.okv managed-object attribute modify --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "attribute", "action" : "modify", "options" : { "uuid" : "#VALUE", "attributes" : { "name" : { "value" : "#VALUE", "newValue" : "#VALUE", "newType" : "#text|uri" }, "contactInfo" : "#VALUE", "activationDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss", "deactivationDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss", "protectStopDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss", "processStartDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss" } } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
modify_attribute.json) and then edit it so that you can modify attributes that you want to change that are associated with a security object.{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "attribute", "action" : "modify", "options" : { "uuid" : "2359E04F-DA61-4F7C-BF9F-913D3369A93A", "attributes" : { "name" : { "value" : "PROD-HRDB-MKEY", "newValue" : "PROD-GLOBAL-HRDB-MKEY", "newType" : "text" }, "contactInfo" : "jscott@example.com", "deactivationDate" : "2024-07-31 09:00:00", "protectStopDate" : "2024-04-30 09:00:00" } } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object attribute modifycommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object attribute modify --from-json modify_attribute.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success", "value": { "attributes": { "contactInfo": "Modified", "deactivationDate": "Modified", "name": "Modified", "protectStopDate": "Modified" } } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.7 okv managed-object certificate get Command
The okv managed-object certificate get command retrieves a digital certificate.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read permission on the certificate object.
Syntax
okv managed-object certificate get --uuid UUIDJSON Input File Template Syntax
{
"service": {
"category": "managed-object",
"resource": "certificate",
"action": "get",
"options": {
"uuid": "#VALUE"
}
}
}Parameters
| Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the certificate. To find the unique identifier for the certificate, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object certificate getcommand.okv managed-object certificate get --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "certificate", "action": "get", "options": { "uuid": "#VALUE" } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
get_cert.json) and then edit it so that you can retrieve the certificate.{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "certificate", "action": "get", "options": { "uuid": "EEED2C4F-33D7-4F9A-BF02-52DD2225A43A" } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object certificate getcommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object certificate get --from-json get_cert.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success", "value": { "object": "-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----\nMIIDdzCCAl+gAwIBAgICfVEwDQYJKoZIhvcNAQELBQAwazELMAkGA1UEBhMCdXMx\nEzARB << output truncated >> AYP\n4vwrDwBdNdGtj36GqjuCpz/xCVM9ieSRxJU8\n-----END CERTIFICATE-----" } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.8 okv managed-object certificate register Command
The okv managed-object certificate register command registers a certificate.
Required Authorization
None
Syntax
okv managed-object certificate register --object certificate_file_path --type certificate_type --sub-type certificate_sub_type --algorithm cryptographic_algorithm --length key_length --mask cryptographic_usage_mask --private-key-uuid private_key_uuid --wallet wallet_name
JSON Input File Template
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "certificate",
"action" : "register",
"options" : {
"object" : "#VALUE",
"algorithm" : "#RSA",
"length" : "#1024,2048,4096(RSA)",
"mask" : #[ "ENCRYPT", "DECRYPT", "WRAP_KEY", "UNWRAP_KEY", "EXPORT", "DERIVE_KEY", "GENERATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "VALIDATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "TRANSLATE_ENCRYPT", "TRANSLATE_DECRYPT", "TRANSLATE_WRAP", "TRANSLATE_UNWRAP" ],
"type" : "X_509",
"subType" : "#USER_CERT|TRUSTPOINT",
"privateKeyUUID" : "#VALUE",
"wallet" : "#VALUE",
"attributes" : {
"name" : {
"value" : "#VALUE",
"type" : "#text|uri"
},
"contactInfo" : "#VALUE"
}
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
File path to the certificate object. |
|
|
Required |
Type of certificate. Enter the following value: |
|
|
Optional |
Sub-type of the certificate. Choose from the following values:
|
|
|
Optional |
Cryptographic algorithm of the public key contained in the certificate. If you omit this parameter, then the algorithm is retrieved from the certificate file that is being uploaded. Enter the following value:
|
|
|
Optional |
Length of the public key contained in the certificate. If you omit this parameter, then the key length is retrieved from the certificate file that being uploaded. Choose from the following values:
|
|
|
Required |
Cryptographic usage mask, enclosed in double quotation marks. Choose from the following values:
|
|
|
Optional |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the private key associated with the certificate object. To find the unique identifier for the key, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
|
|
Optional |
Wallet name. To find the names of existing wallets to which you have access, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, select the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Wallets in the left navigation bar. |
|
|
Optional |
Attribute names and their values. Enclose this value in double quotation marks if the value contains spaces, slashes, or colons. To find the existing attributes for the managed object, execute the You cannot specify attributes at the command line. If you want to use attributes, then you must use the JSON syntax. Attributes that you can enter are as follows:
See Key Management Interoperability Protocol Specification Version 1.1 for details about these attributes. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object certificate registercommand.okv managed-object certificate register --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "certificate", "action" : "register", "options" : { "object" : "#VALUE", "algorithm" : "#RSA", "length" : "#1024,2048,4096(RSA)", "mask" : #[ "ENCRYPT", "DECRYPT", "WRAP_KEY", "UNWRAP_KEY", "EXPORT", "DERIVE_KEY", "GENERATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "VALIDATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "TRANSLATE_ENCRYPT", "TRANSLATE_DECRYPT", "TRANSLATE_WRAP", "TRANSLATE_UNWRAP" ], "type" : "X_509", "subType" : "#USER_CERT|TRUSTPOINT", "privateKeyUUID" : "#VALUE", "wallet" : "#VALUE", "attributes" : { "name" : { "value" : "#VALUE", "type" : "#text|uri" }, "contactInfo" : "#VALUE" } } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
reg_cert.json) and then edit it so that you can register the certificate.{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "certificate", "action" : "register", "options" : { "object" : "./cert.pem", "algorithm" : "RSA", "length" : "2048", "mask" : [ "ENCRYPT"], "type" : "X_509", "subType" : "USER_CERT", "privateKeyUUID" : "D497994E-74CD-4F60-BF7C-52F254142705", "wallet" : "hr_wallet", "attributes" : { "name" : { "value" : "FINDB-PROD-CERT", "type" : "text" }, "contactInfo" : "pfitch@example.com" } } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object certificate registercommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object certificate register --from-json reg_cert.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result" : "Success", "value" : { "uuid" : "EEED2C4F-33D7-4F9A-BF02-52DD2225A43A" } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.9 okv managed-object certificate-request get Command
The okv managed-object certificate-request get command retrieves a certificate request.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read permission on the certificate request object.
Syntax
okv managed-object certificate-request get --uuid UUIDJSON Input File Template Syntax
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "certificate-request",
"action" : "get",
"options" : {
"uuid" : "#VALUE"
}
}
}Parameters
| Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the certificate request. To find the unique identifier for the certificate request, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object certificate-request getcommand.okv managed-object certificate-request get --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "certificate-request", "action" : "get", "options" : { "uuid" : "#VALUE" } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
get_cert_req.json) and then edit it to specify the UUI of the certificate request.{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "certificate-request", "action" : "get", "options" : { "uuid" : "BC0E9004-82E0-4FFA-BFF2-29A67DDD5C64" } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object certificate-request getcommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object certificate-request get --from-json get_cert_req.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result" : "Success", "value" : { "object" : "-----BEGIN NEW CERTIFICATE REQUEST-----\nMIIC5TCCAc0CAQAwdDELMAkGA1UEBhMCdXMxEzARBgNVBAgTCkNhbGlmb3JuaWEx << output truncated >> \nDtWoeZfNYHcWPFmHK8aiLCgzeFG62xRdyg==\n-----END NEW CERTIFICATE REQUEST-----" } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.10 okv managed-object certificate-request register Command
The okv managed-object certificate-request register command registers a certificate request object with Oracle Key Vault.
Required Authorization
None
Syntax
okv managed-object certificate-request register --object certificate_requeset_file_path --type certificate_requeset_type --private-key-uuid private_key_uuid --wallet wallet_name
JSON Input File Template
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "certificate-request",
"action" : "register",
"options" : {
"type" : "#CRMF,PKCS10,PEM,PGP",
"object" : "#VALUE",
"privateKeyUUID" : "#VALUE",
"wallet" : "#VALUE",
"attributes" : {
"name" : {
"value" : "#VALUE",
"type" : "#text|uri"
},
"contactInfo" : "#VALUE"
}
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
File path to the certificate request object. |
|
|
Required |
Type of certificate request. Choose from the following values:
|
|
|
Optional |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the private key associated with the certificate request to be registered. To find the unique identifier for the key, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
|
|
Optional |
Wallet name. To find the names of existing wallets to which you have access, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, select the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Wallets in the left navigation bar. |
|
|
Optional |
Attribute names and their values. Enclose this value in double quotation marks if the value contains spaces, slashes, or colons. To find the existing attributes for the managed object, execute the You cannot specify attributes at the command line. If you want to use attributes, then you must use the JSON syntax. Attributes that you can enter are as follows:
|
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object certificate-request registercommand.okv managed-object certificate-request register --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "certificate-request", "action" : "register", "options" : { "type" : "#CRMF,PKCS10,PEM,PGP", "object" : "#VALUE", "privateKeyUUID" : "#VALUE", "wallet" : "#VALUE", "attributes" : { "name" : { "value" : "#VALUE", "type" : "#text|uri" }, "contactInfo" : "#VALUE" } } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
reg_cert_req.json) and then edit it to specify the appropriate certificate request values.{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "certificate-request", "action" : "register", "options" : { "type" : "PEM", "object" : "./cert_req.pem", "privateKeyUUID" : "D497994E-74CD-4F60-BF7C-52F254142705", "wallet" : "hr_wallet", "attributes" : { "name" : { "value" : "FINDB-PROD-CERTREQ", "type" : "text" }, "contactInfo" : "pfitch@example.com" } } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object certificate-request registercommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object certificate-request register --from-json reg_cert_req.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result" : "Success", "value" : { "uuid" : "BC0E9004-82E0-4FFA-BFF2-29A67DDD5C64" } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.11 okv managed-object custom-attribute add Command
The okv managed-object custom-attribute add command adds a custom attribute to a security object.
To find the existing attributes for the managed object, execute the okv managed-object attribute list command.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read-modify permission on the object.
Syntax
Uses JSON syntax only: okv managed-object custom-attribute add --generate-json-input
You must use the JSON syntax for this command to specify the attributes. However, you can use the --uuid parameter at the command line with this command. This is useful for cases where you want to apply the same attribute values to multiple objects. You can re-use the same JSON file and specify different UUIDs at the command line.
JSON Input File Template
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "custom-attribute",
"action" : "add",
"options" : {
"uuid" : "#VALUE",
"customAttribute" : {
"name" : "#VALUE",
"value" : "#VALUE",
"type" : "#TEXT|NUMBER"
}
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the security object. To find the unique identifier for the object, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
|
|
Required |
Custom attribute name. Include the prefix You must specify these values for the custom attribute:
See Key Management Interoperability Protocol Specification Version 1.1 for details about JSON attributes. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object custom-attribute addcommand.okv managed-object custom-attribute add --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "custom-attribute", "action" : "add", "options" : { "uuid" : "#VALUE", "customAttribute" : { "name" : "#VALUE", "value" : "#VALUE", "type" : "#TEXT|NUMBER" } } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
add_cust_attr.json) and then edit it so that you can add the custom attribute to the security object.{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "custom-attribute", "action": "add", "options": { "uuid": "3C695846-BB8D-4FD2-BFC4-E646ACB60404", "customAttribute": { "name": "x-ApplicationTag", "value": "HR-Production", "type": "TEXT" } } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object custom-attribute addcommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object custom-attribute add --from-json add_cust_attr.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result" : "Success" }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.12 okv managed-object custom-attribute delete Command
The okv managed-object custom-attribute delete command deletes a custom attribute of a security object.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read-modify permission on the object.
Syntax
Uses JSON syntax only: okv managed-object custom-attribute delete --generate-json-input
You must use the JSON syntax for this command to specify the attributes. However, you can use the --uuid parameter at the command line with this command. This is useful for cases where you want to apply the same attribute values to multiple objects. You can re-use the same JSON file and specify different UUIDs at the command line.
JSON Input File Template
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "custom-attribute",
"action" : "delete",
"options" : {
"uuid" : "#VALUE",
"customAttribute" : {
"name" : "#VALUE",
"index" : "#VALUE"
}
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the security object. To find the unique identifier for the object, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
|
|
Required |
Custom attribute name and its index. You must use the JSON syntax to specify the attribute. You cannot specify attributes at the command line. To find the existing attributes for a managed object, execute the You must specify these values for the attribute:
See Key Management Interoperability Protocol Specification Version 1.1 for details about these attributes. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object custom-attribute deletecommand.okv managed-object custom-attribute delete --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "custom-attribute", "action" : "delete", "options" : { "uuid" : "#VALUE", "customAttribute" : { "name" : "#VALUE", "index" : "#VALUE" } } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
del_cust_attr.json) and then edit it so that you can delete the custom attribute.{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "custom-attribute", "action" : "delete", "options" : { "uuid" : "2359E04F-DA61-4F7C-BF9F-913D3369A93A", "customAttribute" : { "name" : "x-ApplicationTag", "index" : "1" } } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object custom-attribute deletecommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object custom-attribute delete --from-json del_cust_attr.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result" : "Success" }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.13 okv managed-object custom-attribute modify Command
The okv managed-object custom-attribute modify command modifies a custom attribute of a security object.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read-modify permission on the object.
Syntax
Uses JSON syntax only: okv managed-object custom-attribute modify --generate-json-input
You must use the JSON syntax for this command to specify the attributes. However, you can use the --uuid parameter at the command line with this command. This is useful for cases where you want to apply the same attribute values to multiple objects. You can re-use the same JSON file and specify different UUIDs at the command line.
JSON Input File Template
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "custom-attribute",
"action" : "modify",
"options" : {
"uuid" : "#VALUE",
"customAttribute" : {
"name" : "#VALUE",
"newValue" : "#VALUE",
"index" : "#VALUE"
}
}
}
}Parameters
| Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the security object. To find the unique identifier for the object, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
|
|
Required |
Custom attribute name, value, and index. You must use the JSON syntax to specify the attribute. You cannot specify attributes at the command line. To find the existing attributes for the managed object, execute the You cannot specify attributes at the command line. You must use the JSON syntax to modify a custom attribute. You must specify these values for the attribute:
See Key Management Interoperability Protocol Specification Version 1.1 for details about JSON attributes. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object custom-attribute modifycommand.okv managed-object custom-attribute modify --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "custom-attribute", "action" : "modify", "options" : { "uuid" : "#VALUE", "customAttribute" : { "name" : "#VALUE", "newValue" : "#VALUE", "index" : "#VALUE" } } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
modify_cust_attr.json) and then edit it so that you can modify the custom attribute.{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "custom-attribute", "action" : "modify", "options" : { "uuid" : "2359E04F-DA61-4F7C-BF9F-913D3369A93A", "customAttribute" : { "name" : "x-ApplicationTag", "newValue" : "Global-HR-Production", "index" : "1" } } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object custom-attribute modifycommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object custom-attribute modify --from-json modify_cust_attr.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result" : "Success" }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.14 okv managed-object key create Command
The okv managed-object key create command creates a new symmetric key.
Required Authorization
None
Syntax
okv managed-object key create --algorithm cryptographic_algorithm --length key_length --mask crypographic_usage_mask --wallet wallet_name
JSON Input File Template
{
"service": {
"category": "managed-object",
"resource": "key",
"action": "create",
"options": {
"algorithm": "#3DES|AES",
"length": "#112,168(3DES)|128,192,256(AES)",
"mask": #[
"ENCRYPT",
"DECRYPT",
"WRAP_KEY",
"UNWRAP_KEY",
"EXPORT",
"DERIVE_KEY",
"GENERATE_CRYPTOGRAM",
"VALIDATE_CRYPTOGRAM",
"TRANSLATE_ENCRYPT",
"TRANSLATE_DECRYPT",
"TRANSLATE_WRAP",
"TRANSLATE_UNWRAP"
],
"wallet": "#VALUE"
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Cryptographic algorithm. Choose from the following values:
|
|
|
Required |
Key length for the algorithm. Choose from the following values:
|
|
|
Required |
Cryptographic usage mask, enclosed in double quotation marks. Choose from the following values:
|
|
|
Optional |
Wallet name. To find the names of existing wallets to which you have access, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, select the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Wallets in the left navigation bar. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object key createcommand.okv managed-object key create --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "key", "action": "create", "options": { "algorithm": "#3DES|AES", "length": "#112,168(3DES)|128,192,256(AES)", "mask": #[ "ENCRYPT", "DECRYPT", "WRAP_KEY", "UNWRAP_KEY", "EXPORT", "DERIVE_KEY", "GENERATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "VALIDATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "TRANSLATE_ENCRYPT", "TRANSLATE_DECRYPT", "TRANSLATE_WRAP", "TRANSLATE_UNWRAP" ], "wallet": "#VALUE" } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
create_key.json) and then edit it so that you can create the key.{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "key", "action": "create", "options": { "algorithm": "AES", "length": "256", "mask": [ "ENCRYPT", "DECRYPT" ], "wallet": "hr_wallet" } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object key createcommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object key create --from-json create_key.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success", "value": { "uuid": "2359E04F-DA61-4F7C-BF9F-913D3369A93A" } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.15 okv managed-object key get Command
The okv managed-object key get command retrieves an encryption key.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read permission on the key object.
Syntax
okv managed-object key get --uuid UUIDJSON Input File Template
{
"service": {
"category": "managed-object",
"resource": "key",
"action": "get",
"options": {
"uuid": "#VALUE"
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the key. To find the unique identifier for the key, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object key getcommand.okv managed-object key get --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "key", "action": "get", "options": { "uuid": "#VALUE" } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
get_key.json) and then edit it so that you can get the key.{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "key", "action": "get", "options": { "uuid": "2359E04F-DA61-4F7C-BF9F-913D3369A93A" } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object key getcommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object key get --from-json get_key.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success", "value": { "object": "E7A641D77DDAF074C62E7A2C2355F2B8D9CD49486E6AF7F38A22CBDEC91630D0" } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.16 okv managed-object key register Command
The okv managed-object key register command registers a key.
Required Authorization
None
Syntax
okv managed-object key register --algorithm cryptographic_algorithm --length key_length --mask cryptographic_usage_mask --object key_file_path --wallet wallet_name
JSON Input File Template
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "key",
"action" : "register",
"options" : {
"length" : "#112,168(3DES)|128,192,256(AES)",
"object" : "#VALUE",
"algorithm" : "#3DES|AES",
"mask" : #[ "ENCRYPT", "DECRYPT", "WRAP_KEY", "UNWRAP_KEY", "EXPORT", "DERIVE_KEY", "GENERATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "VALIDATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "TRANSLATE_ENCRYPT", "TRANSLATE_DECRYPT", "TRANSLATE_WRAP", "TRANSLATE_UNWRAP" ],
"wallet" : "#VALUE",
"attributes" : {
"name" : {
"value" : "#VALUE",
"type" : "#text|uri"
},
"contactInfo" : "#VALUE"
}
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Cryptographic algorithm. Choose from the following values:
|
|
|
Required |
Key length for the algorithm. Choose from the following values:
|
|
|
Required |
Cryptographic usage mask, enclosed in double quotation marks. Choose from the following values:
|
|
|
Required |
File path to the symmetric key object. |
|
|
Optional |
Wallet name. To find the names of existing wallets to which you have access, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, select the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Wallets in the left navigation bar. |
|
|
Required |
Attribute names and their values. Enclose this value in double quotation marks if the value contains spaces, slashes, or colons. To find the existing attributes for the managed object, execute the You cannot specify attributes at the command line. If you want to use attributes, then you must use the JSON syntax. Attributes that you can enter are as follows:
See Key Management Interoperability Protocol Specification Version 1.1 for details about these attributes. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object key registercommand.okv managed-object key register --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "key", "action" : "register", "options" : { "length" : "#112,168(3DES)|128,192,256(AES)", "object" : "#VALUE", "algorithm" : "#3DES|AES", "mask" : #[ "ENCRYPT", "DECRYPT", "WRAP_KEY", "UNWRAP_KEY", "EXPORT", "DERIVE_KEY", "GENERATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "VALIDATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "TRANSLATE_ENCRYPT", "TRANSLATE_DECRYPT", "TRANSLATE_WRAP", "TRANSLATE_UNWRAP" ], "wallet" : "#VALUE", "attributes" : { "name" : { "value" : "#VALUE", "type" : "#text|uri" }, "contactInfo" : "#VALUE" } } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
reg_key.json) and then edit it so that you can register the key.{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "key", "action": "register", "options": { "length": "256", "object": "./object.txt", "algorithm": "AES", "mask": [ "ENCRYPT", "DECRYPT" ], "wallet": "hr_wallet", "attributes": { "name": { "value": "FINDB-PROD-MKEY", "type": "text" }, "contactInfo": "pfitch@example.com" } } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object key registercommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object key register --from-json reg_key.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success", "value": { "uuid": "39BE0215-5D7B-4F38-BF5F-FC87C82AA004" } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.17 okv managed-object object activate Command
The okv managed-object object activate command activates a security object.
See Oasis Key Management Interoperability Protocol Specification Version 1.1 Oasis Standard for various states that a security object can be in.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read-modify permission on the object.
Syntax
okv managed-object object activate --uuid UUIDJSON Input File Template
{
"service": {
"category": "managed-object",
"resource": "object",
"action": "activate",
"options": {
"uuid": "#VALUE"
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the security object. To find the unique identifier for the object, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object managed-object activatecommand.okv managed-object object activate --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "object", "action": "activate", "options": { "uuid": "#VALUE" } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
activate_object.json) and then edit it so that you can activate the security object.{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "object", "action": "activate", "options": { "uuid": "2359E04F-DA61-4F7C-BF9F-913D3369A93A" } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object managed-object activatecommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object object activate --from-json activate_object.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success" }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.18 okv managed-object object destroy Command
The okv managed-object object destroy command requests the server to destroy the key data for a security object.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read-modify permission on the object.
Syntax
okv managed-object object destroy --uuid UUID JSON Input File Template
{
"service": {
"category": "managed-object",
"resource": "object",
"action": "destroy",
"options": {
"uuid": "#VALUE"
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the security object. To find the unique identifier for the object, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object object destroycommand.okv managed-object object destroy --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "object", "action": "destroy", "options": { "uuid": "#VALUE" } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
destroy_obj.json) and then edit it so that you can destroy the security object data.{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "object", "action": "destroy", "options": { "uuid": "B36F3AD1-0AC7-4FEB-BF32-79E6F727ECB2" } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object object destroycommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object object destroy --from-json del_obj.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success" }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.19 okv managed-object object locate Command
The okv managed-object object locate command locates a security object.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read permission on the objects.
Syntax
okv managed-object object locate --max max_value --object-group-member object_group_member_type --state state_value --name name_value
JSON Input File Template
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "object",
"action" : "locate",
"options" : {
"max" : "#VALUE",
"objectGroupMember" : "#FRESH|DEFAULT",
"attributes" : {
"name" : {
"value" : "#VALUE"
},
"state" :
"#PREACTIVE|ACTIVE|DEACTIVATED|COMPROMISED|DESTROYED|DESTROYED_COMPROMISED",
"objectType" : "#VALUE",
"fresh" : "#YES|NO",
"objectGroup" : "#VALUE",
"contactInfo" : "#VALUE",
"cryptographicAlgorithm" : "#VALUE",
"cryptographicLength" : "#VALUE",
"cryptoUsageMask" : "#VALUE",
"certificateLength" : "#VALUE",
"certificateType" : "#VALUE",
"x509CertificateSubject" : "#VALUE",
"x509CertificateIssuer" : "#VALUE",
"digitalSigningAlgorithm" : "#VALUE",
"digest" : {
"digestValue" : "#VALUE",
"algorithm" : "#VALUE",
"keyFormatType" : "#VALUE"
},
"link" : {
"linkType" : "#VALUE",
"linkValue" : "#VALUE"
},
"activationDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss",
"deactivationDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss",
"processStartDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss",
"protectStopDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss",
"initialDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss",
"lastChangeDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss",
"compromiseDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss",
"compromiseOccurrenceDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss",
"destroyDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss",
"archiveDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss"
},
"customAttributes" : [ {
"name" : "#VALUE",
"value" : "#VALUE",
"type" : "#TEXT|NUMBER"
} ]
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Maximum number of objects that this command should return |
|
|
Optional |
Enter one of the following group values:
|
|
|
Optional |
Enter one of the following states:
|
|
|
Optional |
Name of the object to locate. |
|
|
Required |
Attributes names and their values of the object to locate. Enclose this value in double quotation marks if the value contains spaces, slashes, or colons. You cannot specify attributes at the command line. If you want to use attributes, then you must use the JSON syntax. Attributes that you can enter are as follows:
|
|
|
Optional |
List of custom attributes of the object to locate. Custom attributes that you can enter are as follows:
See Key Management Interoperability Protocol Specification Version 1.1 for details about these attributes. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object object locatecommand.okv managed-object object locate --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "object", "action" : "locate", "options" : { "max" : "#VALUE", "objectGroupMember" : "#FRESH|DEFAULT", "attributes" : { "name" : { "value" : "#VALUE" }, "state" : "#PREACTIVE|ACTIVE|DEACTIVATED|COMPROMISED|DESTROYED|DESTROYED_COMPROMISED", "objectType" : "#VALUE", "fresh" : "#YES|NO", "objectGroup" : "#VALUE", "contactInfo" : "#VALUE", "cryptographicAlgorithm" : "#VALUE", "cryptographicLength" : "#VALUE", "cryptoUsageMask" : "#VALUE", "certificateLength" : "#VALUE", "certificateType" : "#VALUE", "x509CertificateSubject" : "#VALUE", "x509CertificateIssuer" : "#VALUE", "digitalSigningAlgorithm" : "#VALUE", "digest" : { "digestValue" : "#VALUE", "algorithm" : "#VALUE", "keyFormatType" : "#VALUE" }, "link" : { "linkType" : "#VALUE", "linkValue" : "#VALUE" }, "activationDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss", "deactivationDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss", "processStartDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss", "protectStopDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss", "initialDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss", "lastChangeDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss", "compromiseDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss", "compromiseOccurrenceDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss", "destroyDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss", "archiveDate" : "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss" }, "customAttributes" : [ { "name" : "#VALUE", "value" : "#VALUE", "type" : "#TEXT|NUMBER" } ] } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
locate-obj.json) and then edit it so that you can locate the security object.{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "object", "action" : "locate", "options" : { "max" : "10", "objectGroupMember" : "FRESH", "attributes" : { "state": "ACTIVE", "name": { "value": "key8" }, "fresh" : "Yes", "activationDate": "2021-04-10 07:16:00", "link" : { "linkType" : "Replaced Object Link", "linkValue" : "6B13B7B3-BE61-4FF6-BFB0-4108231392F8" } }, "customAttributes" : [{ "name": "x-test_1", "value": "test_1", "type": "TEXT" }, { "name": "x-number", "value": "1", "type": "NUMBER" }] } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object object locatecommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object object locate --from-json locate-obj.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result" : "Success", "value" : { "uuids" : [ "6C51CC04-BFA5-4FBD-BFB4-12DCCECAA355" ] } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.20 okv managed-object object query Command
The okv managed-object object query command identifies supported operations and objects.
Required Authorization
None
Syntax
okv managed-object object query
JSON Input File Template
{
"service": {
"category": "managed-object",
"resource": "object",
"action": "query"
}
}Parameters
None
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object object querycommand.okv managed-object object query --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "object", "action": "query" } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
query-obj.json). - Execute the
okv managed-object object querycommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object object query --from-json query-obj.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success", "value": { "objects": [ "Symmetric Key", "Template", "Secret Data", "Opaque Object", "Certificate" ], "operations": [ "Create", "Register", "Re-key", "Locate", "Check", "Get", "Get Attributes", "Get Attribute List", "Add Attribute", "Modify Attribute", "Delete Attribute", "Activate", "Revoke", "Destroy", "Query", "Discover Versions" ] } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.21 okv managed-object object revoke Command
The okv managed-object object revoke command revokes a security object.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read-modify permission on the object.
Syntax
okv managed-object object revoke --code code --reason reason --compromiseDate date --uuid UUID
JSON Input File Template
{
"service": {
"category": "managed-object",
"resource": "object",
"action": "revoke",
"options": {
"code": "#UNSPECIFIED|KEY_COMPROMISE|CA_COMPROMISE|AFFILIATION_CHANGED|SUPERSEDED|CESSATION_OF_OPERATION|PRIVILEGE_WITHDRAWN",
"reason": "#VALUE",
"compromiseOccurrenceDate": "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss",
"uuid": "#VALUE"
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Enter one of the following values:
|
|
|
Required |
Description of the reason for the revocation |
|
|
Optional |
Date the compromise took place |
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the security object. To find the unique identifier for the object, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object object revokecommand.okv managed-object object revoke --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "object", "action": "revoke", "options": { "code": "#UNSPECIFIED|KEY_COMPROMISE|CA_COMPROMISE|AFFILIATION_CHANGED|SUPERSEDED|CESSATION_OF_OPERATION|PRIVILEGE_WITHDRAWN", "reason": "#VALUE", "compromiseOccurrenceDate": "#YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss", "uuid": "#VALUE" } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
revoke-obj.json) and then edit it so that you can revoke the security object privileges.{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "object", "action": "revoke", "options": { "code": "KEY_COMPROMISE", "reason": "security incidence", "compromiseOccurrenceDate": "2020-11-20 10:34:29", "uuid": "E4CA6A16-B3CD-4F98-BF25-4A0EF482B8B8" } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object object revokecommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object object revoke --from-json revoke-obj.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success" }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.22 okv managed-object opaque get Command
The okv managed-object opaque get command retrieves an object that contains opaque data.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read permission on the object.
Syntax
okv managed-object opaque get --uuid UUIDJSON Input File Template
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "opaque",
"action" : "get",
"options" : {
"uuid" : "#VALUE"
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the security object. To find the unique identifier for the object, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object opaque getcommand.okv managed-object opaque get --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "opaque", "action" : "get", "options" : { "uuid" : "#VALUE" } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
get_opaque_object.json) and then edit it so that you can retrieve the data from the opaque object.{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "opaque", "action" : "get", "options" : { "uuid" : "2359E04F-DA61-4F7C-BF9F-913D3369A93A" } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object opaque getcommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object opaque get --from-json get_opaque_object.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result" : "Success", "value" : { "object" : "2D2D2D2D2D424547494E2050524956415445204B45592D2D2D2D2D0A4D494945765149424144414E42676B71686B6947397730424151454641415343424B637767675363 <<<< Output Truncated>>>> 7067533170633634656D3630686C72336B786C593858665734317A594A450A724546334C652F4A4F4B4968674A754C367352734C67553D0A2D2D2D2D2D454E442050524956415445204B45592D2D2D2D2D0A" } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.23 okv managed-object opaque register Command
The okv managed-object opaque register command registers an opaque security object.
Objects containing opaque data are not necessarily interpreted by the server.
Required Authorization
None
Syntax
okv managed-object opaque register --object object_name --wallet wallet_name
JSON Input File Template
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "opaque",
"action" : "register",
"options" : {
"object" : "#VALUE",
"wallet" : "#VALUE",
"attributes" : {
"name" : {
"value" : "#VALUE",
"type" : "#text|uri"
},
"contactInfo" : "#VALUE"
}
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
File path to the object. To find the names of existing objects to which you have access, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, select the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys, Secrets & Objects in the left navigation bar. |
|
|
Optional |
Wallet name. To find the names of existing wallets to which you have access, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, select the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Wallets in the left navigation bar. |
|
|
Optional |
Attribute names and their values. Enclose this value in double quotation marks if the value contains spaces, slashes, or colons. To find the existing attributes for the managed object, execute the You cannot specify attributes at the command line. If you want to use attributes, then you must use the JSON syntax. Attributes that you can enter are as follows:
See Key Management Interoperability Protocol Specification Version 1.1 for details about these attributes. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object opaque registercommand.okv managed-object opaque register --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "opaque", "action" : "register", "options" : { "object" : "#VALUE", "wallet" : "#VALUE", "attributes" : { "name" : { "value" : "#VALUE", "type" : "#text|uri" }, "contactInfo" : "#VALUE" } } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
reg_opaque.json) and then edit it so that you can register the opaque key.{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "opaque", "action": "register", "options": { "object": "./key.pem", "wallet": "hr_wallet", "attributes": { "name": { "value": "Opaque-Key-102", "type": "text" }, "contactInfo": "pfitch@example.com" } } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object opaque registercommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object opaque register --from-json reg_opaque.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success" }
Related Topics
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.24 okv managed-object private-key get Command
The okv managed-object private-key get command retrieves a private key.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read permission on the private key.
Syntax
okv managed-object private-key get --uuid UUIDJSON Input File Template Syntax
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "private-key",
"action" : "get",
"options" : {
"uuid" : "#VALUE"
}
}
}Parameters
| Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the private key. To find the unique identifier for the key, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object private-key getcommand.okv managed-object private-key get --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "private-key", "action" : "get", "options" : { "uuid" : "#VALUE" } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
get_private_key.json) and then edit it to specify the UUID of the private key.{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "private-key", "action" : "get", "options" : { "uuid" : "2F9E2A31-D15A-4F5B-BFA0-761892021DBE" } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object private-key getcommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object private-key get --from-json get_private_key.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result" : "Success", "value" : { "object" : "-----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----\nMIIEvgIBADANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAASCBKgwggSkAg << output truncated >> /onTXJKf8A1kZwPW/Qa6IpPOGCfOJDtyM9F5X9REaJQr+1\nXw1sBm1Tjh4z/m6rsKK6A4YP\n-----END PRIVATE KEY-----" } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.25 okv managed-object private-key register Command
The okv managed-object private-key register command registers a private key.
Required Authorization
None
Syntax
okv managed-object private-key register --object private_key_file_path --algorithm cryptographic_algorithm --length key_length --mask cryptographic_usage_mask --wallet wallet_name
JSON Input File Template
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "private-key",
"action" : "register",
"options" : {
"object" : "#VALUE",
"algorithm" : "#RSA",
"length" : "#1024,2048,4096(RSA)",
"mask" : #[ "ENCRYPT", "DECRYPT", "WRAP_KEY", "UNWRAP_KEY", "EXPORT", "DERIVE_KEY", "GENERATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "VALIDATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "TRANSLATE_ENCRYPT", "TRANSLATE_DECRYPT", "TRANSLATE_WRAP", "TRANSLATE_UNWRAP" ],
"wallet" : "#VALUE",
"attributes" : {
"name" : {
"value" : "#VALUE",
"type" : "#text|uri"
},
"contactInfo" : "#VALUE"
}
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
File path to the private key object. |
|
|
Required |
Cryptographic algorithm. The following value is valid: |
|
|
Required |
Key length for the algorithm. Choose from the following values:
|
|
|
Required |
Cryptographic usage mask, enclosed in double quotation marks. Choose from the following values:
|
|
|
Optional |
Wallet name. To find the names of existing wallets to which you have access, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, select the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Wallets in the left navigation bar. |
|
|
Optional |
Attribute names and their values. Enclose this value in double quotation marks if the value contains spaces, slashes, or colons. To find the existing attributes for the managed object, execute the You cannot specify attributes at the command line. If you want to use attributes, then you must use the JSON syntax. Attributes that you can enter are as follows:
See Key Management Interoperability Protocol Specification Version 1.1 for details about these attributes. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object private-key registercommand.okv managed-object private-key register --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "private-key", "action" : "register", "options" : { "object" : "#VALUE", "algorithm" : "#RSA", "length" : "#1024,2048,4096(RSA)", "mask" : #[ "ENCRYPT", "DECRYPT", "WRAP_KEY", "UNWRAP_KEY", "EXPORT", "DERIVE_KEY", "GENERATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "VALIDATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "TRANSLATE_ENCRYPT", "TRANSLATE_DECRYPT", "TRANSLATE_WRAP", "TRANSLATE_UNWRAP" ], "wallet" : "#VALUE", "attributes" : { "name" : { "value" : "#VALUE", "type" : "#text|uri" }, "contactInfo" : "#VALUE" } } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
reg_private_key.json) and then edit it to specify the appropriate private key settings.{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "private-key", "action" : "register", "options" : { "object" : "./priv_key.pem", "algorithm" : "RSA", "length" : "2048", "mask" : [ "ENCRYPT", "DECRYPT" ], "wallet" : "hr_wallet", "attributes" : { "name" : { "value" : "CERT-APPID-103", "type" : "text" }, "contactInfo" : "pfitch@example.com" } } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object private-key registercommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object private-key register --from-json reg_private_key.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result" : "Success", "value" : { "uuid" : "2F9E2A31-D15A-4F5B-BFA0-761892021DBE" } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.26 okv managed-object public-key get Command
The okv managed-object public-key get command retrieves a public key.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read permission on the public key.
Syntax
okv managed-object public-key get --uuid UUIDJSON Input File Template Syntax
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "public-key",
"action" : "get",
"options" : {
"uuid" : "#VALUE"
}
}
}Parameters
| Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the public key. To find the unique identifier for the key, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object public-key getcommand.okv managed-object public-key get --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "public-key", "action" : "get", "options" : { "uuid" : "#VALUE" } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
get_public_key.json) and then edit it to specify the UUID of the public key.{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "public-key", "action" : "get", "options" : { "uuid" : "11652909-D019-4F3B-BFB9-791723095005" } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object public-key getcommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object public-key get --from-json get_public_key.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result" : "Success", "value" : { "object" : "-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----\nMIIBIjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAAOCAQ8AMIIBCgKCAQEAtK4YrT6A/4tVnadRg0ZT\nprsdUwXrIdoqf1+ye/yVkN6RmtR7mthn6WIIrbTVX5MuAkLc6yyuMEc+nLDPZzrU\nFXkCAQeVR7sT/hQo74dQHebIfJxgx+uZrlzOgT4Il1qfmjR6y81RjTvAU8ZPdzPb\nuXKHZErZVQdoXUw5uFrTNzOegLbYJFI2dZnf3erB7Ho64DckFRoFP05cc3A0iLrL\ntzE8CcjAlBlXTGJD4kAtTEet/0TkvuHzBHr23zkfj0kWV3PHGYYC3O+/UzXg/nal\n3iTK5yRDkln45AyI/PkfzAFiZ/kX9C66H0WRMxgfaOn/uRNbikFOFK6IPOGcT+0S\n/QIDAQAB\n-----END PUBLIC KEY-----" } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.27 okv managed-object public-key register Command
The okv managed-object public-key register command registers a public key.
Required Authorization
None
Syntax
okv managed-object public-key register --object public_key_file_path --algorithm cryptographic_algorithm --length key_length --mask cryptographic_usage_mask --private-key-uuid private_key_uuid --wallet wallet_name
JSON Input File Template
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "public-key",
"action" : "register",
"options" : {
"object" : "#VALUE",
"algorithm" : "#RSA",
"length" : "#1024,2048,4096(RSA)",
"mask" : #[ "ENCRYPT", "DECRYPT", "WRAP_KEY", "UNWRAP_KEY", "EXPORT", "DERIVE_KEY", "GENERATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "VALIDATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "TRANSLATE_ENCRYPT", "TRANSLATE_DECRYPT", "TRANSLATE_WRAP", "TRANSLATE_UNWRAP" ],
"privateKeyUUID" : "#VALUE",
"wallet" : "#VALUE",
"attributes" : {
"name" : {
"value" : "#VALUE",
"type" : "#text|uri"
},
"contactInfo" : "#VALUE"
}
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
File path to the public key object. |
|
|
Required |
Cryptographic algorithm. The following value is valid:
|
|
|
Required |
Key length for the algorithm. Choose from the following values:
|
|
|
Required |
Cryptographic usage mask, enclosed in double quotation marks. Choose from the following values:
|
|
|
Optional |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the private key associated with the public key being registered. To find the unique identifier for the key, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
|
|
Optional |
Wallet name. To find the names of existing wallets to which you have access, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, select the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Wallets in the left navigation bar. |
|
|
Optional |
Attribute names and their values. Enclose this value in double quotation marks if the value contains spaces, slashes, or colons. To find the existing attributes for the managed object, execute the You cannot specify attributes at the command line. If you want to use attributes, then you must use the JSON syntax. Attributes that you can enter are as follows:
See Key Management Interoperability Protocol Specification Version 1.1 for details about these attributes. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object public-key registercommand.okv managed-object public-key register --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "public-key", "action" : "register", "options" : { "object" : "#VALUE", "algorithm" : "#RSA", "length" : "#1024,2048,4096(RSA)", "mask" : #[ "ENCRYPT", "DECRYPT", "WRAP_KEY", "UNWRAP_KEY", "EXPORT", "DERIVE_KEY", "GENERATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "VALIDATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "TRANSLATE_ENCRYPT", "TRANSLATE_DECRYPT", "TRANSLATE_WRAP", "TRANSLATE_UNWRAP" ], "privateKeyUUID" : "#VALUE", "wallet" : "#VALUE", "attributes" : { "name" : { "value" : "#VALUE", "type" : "#text|uri" }, "contactInfo" : "#VALUE" } } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
reg_public_key.json) and then edit it to specify the appropriate public key settings.{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "public-key", "action" : "register", "options" : { "object" : "./key.pub", "algorithm" : "RSA", "length" : "2048", "mask" : [ "ENCRYPT", "DECRYPT" ], "privateKeyUUID" : "2F9E2A31-D15A-4F5B-BFA0-761892021DBE ", "wallet" : "hr_wallet", "attributes" : { "name" : { "value" : " FINDB-PROD-PUBKEY ", "type" : "text" }, "contactInfo" : " pfitch@example.com " } } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object public-key registercommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object public-key register --from-json reg_public_key.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result" : "Success", "value" : { "uuid" : "11652909-D019-4F3B-BFB9-791723095005 " } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.28 okv managed-object secret get Command
The okv managed-object secret get command retrieves the secret data from a security object of type secret.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read permission on the secret object.
Syntax
okv managed-object secret get --uuid UUIDJSON Input File Template
{
"service": {
"category": "managed-object",
"resource": "secret",
"action": "get",
"options": {
"uuid": "#VALUE"
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the security object. To find the unique identifier for the object, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object secret getcommand.okv managed-object secret get --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "secret", "action": "get", "options": { "uuid": "#VALUE" } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
secret_get.json) and then edit it so that you can locate the secret object.{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "secret", "action": "get", "options": { "uuid": "D69D2F32-2DBB-4FF3-BF52-95487526E6EC" } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object secret getcommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object secret get --from-json secret_get.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success", "value": { "object": "ki3j&8slo73y2ls" } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.29 okv managed-object secret register Command
The okv managed-object secret register command registers secret data such as passwords or random seeds.
Required Authorization
None
Syntax
okv managed-object secret register --object object_name type PASSWORD|SEED wallet wallet_name --mask cryptogrpahic_usage_mask
JSON Input File Template
{
"service" : {
"category" : "managed-object",
"resource" : "secret",
"action" : "register",
"options" : {
"object" : "#VALUE",
"type" : "#PASSWORD|SEED",
"mask" : #[ "ENCRYPT", "DECRYPT", "WRAP_KEY", "UNWRAP_KEY", "EXPORT", "DERIVE_KEY", "GENERATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "VALIDATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "TRANSLATE_ENCRYPT", "TRANSLATE_DECRYPT", "TRANSLATE_WRAP", "TRANSLATE_UNWRAP" ],
"wallet" : "#VALUE",
"attributes" : {
"name" : {
"value" : "#VALUE",
"type" : "#text|uri"
},
"contactInfo" : "#VALUE"
}
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Path of the object file containing secret data. |
|
|
Required |
Enter one of the following values:
|
|
|
Optional |
Wallet name. To find the names of existing wallets to which you have access, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, select the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Wallets in the left navigation bar. |
|
|
Required |
Cryptographic usage mask, enclosed in double quotation marks. Choose from the following values:
|
|
|
Required |
Attribute names and their values. Enclose this value in double quotation marks if the value contains spaces, slashes, or colons. To find the existing attributes for the managed object, execute the You cannot specify attributes at the command line. If you want to use attributes, then you must use the JSON syntax. Attributes that you can enter are as follows:
See Key Management Interoperability Protocol Specification Version 1.1 for details about these attributes. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object secret registercommand.okv managed-object secret register --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "secret", "action" : "register", "options" : { "object" : "#VALUE", "type" : "#PASSWORD|SEED", "mask" : #[ "ENCRYPT", "DECRYPT", "WRAP_KEY", "UNWRAP_KEY", "EXPORT", "DERIVE_KEY", "GENERATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "VALIDATE_CRYPTOGRAM", "TRANSLATE_ENCRYPT", "TRANSLATE_DECRYPT", "TRANSLATE_WRAP", "TRANSLATE_UNWRAP" ], "wallet" : "#VALUE", "attributes" : { "name" : { "value" : "#VALUE", "type" : "#text|uri" }, "contactInfo" : "#VALUE" } } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
reg-secret.json) and then edit it so that you can register the secret object.{ "service" : { "category" : "managed-object", "resource" : "secret", "action" : "register", "options" : { "object" : "./hr_db_connect_password.txt", "type" : "PASSWORD", "mask" : [ "DERIVE_KEY" ], "wallet" : "hr_wallet", "attributes" : { "name" : { "value" : "HR-DB-CONNECT-PASSWORD", "type" : "text" }, "contactInfo" : "pfitch@example.com" } } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object secret registercommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object secret register --from-json reg-secret.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success", "value": { "uuid": "0F54D31A-ABA0-4F15-BF67-1B7513DD8634" } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.30 okv managed-object wallet add-member Command
The okv managed-object wallet add-member command adds a security object to a wallet as its member.
This command authenticates with the endpoint's client certificate.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read-modify permission on the object and manage-wallet access (MW) on the wallet.
Syntax
okv managed-object wallet add-member --uuid UUID --wallet wallet_name
JSON Input File Template
{
"service": {
"category": "managed-object",
"resource": "wallet",
"action": "add-member",
"options": {
"uuid": "#VALUE",
"wallet": "#VALUE"
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the managed object that is being added to the wallet. To find the unique identifier for the managed object, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
|
|
Required |
Wallet name. To find the names of existing wallets to which you have access, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, select the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Wallets in the left navigation bar. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object wallet add-membercommand.okv managed-object wallet add-member --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "wallet", "action": "add-member", "options": { "uuid": "#VALUE", "wallet": "#VALUE" } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
add_wallet_member.json) and then edit it so that you can add a security object to a wallet.{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "wallet", "action": "add-member", "options": { "uuid": "D69D2F32-2DBB-4FF3-BF52-95487526E6EC", "wallet": "hr_wallet" } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object wallet add-membercommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object wallet add-member --from-json add_wallet_member.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success" }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.31 okv managed-object wallet delete-member Command
The okv managed-object wallet delete-member command deletes the membership of the managed-object from a wallet.
This command authenticates with the endpoint's client certificate.
Required Authorization
The endpoint must have read-modify permission on the object and manage-wallet access (MW) on the wallet.
Syntax
okv managed-object wallet delete-member --uuid UUID --wallet wallet_name
JSON Input File Template
{
"service": {
"category": "managed-object",
"resource": "wallet",
"action": "delete-member",
"options": {
"uuid": "#VALUE",
"wallet": "#VALUE"
}
}
}Parameters
| Parameter/Template Parameter | Required? | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Required |
Universally unique ID (UUID) of the managed object in the wallet. To find the unique identifier for the managed object, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, click the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Keys & Secrets in the left navigation window. In the Keys & Secrets table, check the Unique Identifier column. |
|
|
Required |
Wallet name. To find the names of existing wallets to which you have access, in the Oracle Key Vault management console, select the Keys & Wallets tab, and then click Wallets in the left navigation panel. |
JSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object wallet delete-membercommand.okv managed-object wallet delete-member --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "wallet", "action": "delete-member", "options": { "uuid": "#VALUE", "wallet": "#VALUE" } } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
delete_wallet_member.json) and then edit it so that you can delete a security object from a wallet.{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "wallet", "action": "delete-member", "options": { "uuid": "D69D2F32-2DBB-4FF3-BF52-95487526E6EC", "wallet": "hr_wallet" } } } - Execute the
okv managed-object wallet delete-membercommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object wallet delete-member --from-json delete_wallet_member.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success" }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands
5.32 okv managed-object wallet list Command
The okv managed-object wallet list command lists wallets that have their access granted to the endpoint used to connect to Oracle Key Vault.
This command authenticates with the endpoint's client certificate.
Required Authorization
None, but this command returns only those wallets to which the current endpoint is granted access.
Syntax
JSON Input File Template
{
"service": {
"category": "managed-object",
"resource": "wallet",
"action": "list"
}
}okv managed-object wallet list
Parameters
NoneJSON Example
- Generate JSON input for the
okv managed-object wallet listcommand.okv managed-object wallet list --generate-json-input
The generated input appears as follows:
{ "service": { "category": "managed-object", "resource": "wallet", "action": "list" } } - Save the generated input to a file (for example,
wallet_list.json). - Execute the
okv managed-object wallet listcommand using the generated JSON file.okv managed-object wallet list --from-json wallet_list.json
Output similar to the following appears:
{ "result": "Success", "value": { "wallets": [ "hr_wallet", "sales_wallet" ] } }
Parent topic: Security Object Commands