Here you come with the example of how to use this function.
if( $csr = openssl_csr_new( array(
"countryName"=>"PL",
"stateOrProvinceName" => "blah",
"organizationName" => "company ltd",
"commonName"=>"foo.bar.com",
"Email"=>"blah@foo.bar.com"), $privkey )
)
{
openssl_csr_export_to_file( $csr, "out.csr");
}
else
{
printf("failed\n");
}
Keep in mind that keys are case sensitive (i.e. give "email" instead of "Email" and you get warning). Also remember it's important to keep the order of the arguments in array. Move the "Email" above commonName and check what you get (in case you don't know how: "openssl req -noout -text -in out.csr").
It also happened to me me I got segfault when order was rubbish (afair Email after countryName, or plenty Email's here and there), so be awared.
openssl_csr_export
(PHP 4 >= 4.2.0, PHP 5)
openssl_csr_export — Exports a CSR as a string
Opis
bool openssl_csr_export
( resource $csr
, string &$out
[, bool $notext
] )
openssl_csr_export() takes the Certificate Signing Request represented by csr and stores it as ascii-armoured text into out , which is passed by reference.
Parametry
- csr
-
- out
-
- notext
-
Opcjonalny parametr notext wpływa na szczegółowość komunikatów wyjścia. Jeśli wynosi FALSE, wówczas do wyjścia dołączane są dodatkowe informacje zrozumiałe dla ludzi. Wartość domyślna parametru notext wynosi: TRUE.
Zwracane wartości
Zwraca TRUE w przypadku powodzenia, FALSE w przypadku błędu.
openssl_csr_export
carlos AT wfmh DOT org DOT pl
27-Jun-2002 04:44
27-Jun-2002 04:44
