Go
Go
Add a PFX Source to MailMan for Decryption
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Demonstrates the Chilkat MailMan.AddPfxSourceFile method, which adds a PFX/PKCS#12 file to the MailMan object's internal list of sources used for locating certificates and private keys — for example, to decrypt S/MIME email downloaded from the server. The second argument is the PFX password. This example configures a POP3 connection and registers a PFX source.
Background: When
MailMan downloads an encrypted (S/MIME) message, it needs the recipient's private key to decrypt it. On Windows and macOS the OS certificate stores are searched automatically, but when the key lives in a standalone PFX file — common on Linux or in server deployments — AddPfxSourceFile tells MailMan where to find it. A PFX bundles the certificate and its private key in one password-protected file.Chilkat Go Downloads
success := false
// Demonstrates the MailMan.AddPfxSourceFile method, which adds a PFX/PKCS#12 file to the
// MailMan object's internal list of sources used for locating certificates and private
// keys (for example, to decrypt downloaded S/MIME email). The 2nd argument is the PFX
// password.
mailman := chilkat.NewMailMan()
// Configure the POP3 server connection.
mailman.SetMailHost("pop.example.com")
mailman.SetMailPort(995)
mailman.SetPopSsl(true)
mailman.SetPopUsername("user@example.com")
mailman.SetPopPassword("myPassword")
// Provide a PFX so that encrypted emails downloaded from the server can be decrypted.
success = mailman.AddPfxSourceFile("qa_data/certs/decryption.pfx","pfx_password")
if success == false {
fmt.Println(mailman.LastErrorText())
mailman.DisposeMailMan()
return
}
fmt.Println("Added the PFX certificate/private-key source.")
// Note: The path "qa_data/certs/decryption.pfx" is a relative local filesystem path,
// relative to the current working directory of the running application.
mailman.DisposeMailMan()