Classic ASP
Classic ASP
Socket TLS Mutual Authentication (Client-Side Certificate)
See more Socket/SSL/TLS Examples
This example demonstrates how to provide a client-side certificate, also known as "two-way authentication" or "mutual authentication" for servers that require a client certificate.Chilkat Classic ASP Downloads
<html>
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<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
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<body>
<%
success = 0
' This example assumes the Chilkat API to have been previously unlocked.
' See Global Unlock Sample for sample code.
set sock = Server.CreateObject("Chilkat.Socket")
' Set the certificate to be used for mutual TLS authentication
' (i.e. sets the client-side certificate for two-way TLS authentication)
success = sock.SetSslClientCertPfx("/home/bob/pfxFiles/myClientSideCertWithPrivateKey.pfx","pfxPassword")
If (success <> 1) Then
Response.Write "<pre>" & Server.HTMLEncode( sock.LastErrorText) & "</pre>"
Response.End
End If
' Note: The certificate used for the client-side of TLS mutual authentication
' must have the associated private key available. (.pfx/.p12 files typically store both
' the certificate and associated private key.)
' Establish the connection using the socket object (with client certificate authentication).
bTls = 1
port = 443
maxWaitMs = 5000
success = sock.Connect("www.example.com",port,bTls,maxWaitMs)
If (success <> 1) Then
Response.Write "<pre>" & Server.HTMLEncode( "Connect Failure Error Code: " & sock.ConnectFailReason) & "</pre>"
Response.Write "<pre>" & Server.HTMLEncode( sock.LastErrorText) & "</pre>"
Response.End
End If
' At this point, the Socket object is connected and authenticated using the client-side cert
' ...
' ..
%>
</body>
</html>