VBScript
VBScript
Add a PFX Source from BinData
See more Email Object Examples
Demonstrates the Chilkat Email.AddPfxSourceBd method, which adds PFX data held in a BinData object to the list of certificate and private-key sources used during decryption or signing. The second argument is the PFX password. Call it before obtaining the encrypted email so Chilkat can decrypt it automatically. This example loads a PFX into a BinData, adds it, and then loads an encrypted email.
Background: This is the in-memory (
BinData) counterpart to AddPfxSourceFile. It is the right choice when the PFX bytes come from somewhere other than a file — a database, a secrets manager, or an HTTP download — letting you supply the certificate and private key without first writing them to disk (which is preferable for sensitive key material).Chilkat VBScript Downloads
Dim fso, outFile
Set fso = CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")
'Create a Unicode (utf-16) output text file.
Set outFile = fso.CreateTextFile("output.txt", True, True)
success = 0
' Demonstrates the AddPfxSourceBd method, which adds PFX data (held in a BinData) to the
' list of certificate and private-key sources used during decryption or signing. The
' second argument is the PFX password. Call it before obtaining the encrypted email.
set email = CreateObject("Chilkat.Email")
' Load PFX data into a BinData object.
set bdPfx = CreateObject("Chilkat.BinData")
success = bdPfx.LoadFile("qa_data/certs/decryption.pfx")
If (success = 0) Then
outFile.WriteLine(bdPfx.LastErrorText)
WScript.Quit
End If
' Add the PFX as a source of the certificate + private key.
success = email.AddPfxSourceBd(bdPfx,"pfx_password")
If (success = 0) Then
outFile.WriteLine(email.LastErrorText)
WScript.Quit
End If
' Load an encrypted email; Chilkat decrypts it using the PFX source.
success = email.LoadEml("qa_data/eml/encrypted.eml")
If (success = 0) Then
outFile.WriteLine(email.LastErrorText)
WScript.Quit
End If
outFile.WriteLine("Decrypted = " & email.Decrypted)
' Note: Paths such as "qa_data/..." are relative local filesystem paths,
' relative to the current working directory of the running application.
outFile.Close