TipThis article describes how to create API keys for legacy accounts.
If you're using a new Trend Micro Cloud One account, see Manage API keys instead.
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To use an SDK to create an API key, you first need to obtain the ID of the role to
associate with the API key. You also need to use an existing API key to authenticate
the call. If no API keys have been created, you can use a username and password to
create the first API key.
Obtain a role ID
Obtain a role ID to assign it a role to an API key. When you do not know the ID of
a role, you can search for the role and then obtain the role ID.
For example, a program that generates a report on computer security statuses requires
read access to all computers. The Auditor role that Server & Workload Protection provides by default provides read-only access to computers and policies, and is appropriate
for this task.
If you want to create a role, see Control Access Using Roles.
Use the following general steps to search for a role and obtain the ID. For more information
about searching, see Search for Resources.
Procedure
- Create a
SearchCriteriaobject that defines the search criteria. - Add the
SearchCriteriato aSearchFilter. - Create an
AdministratorRolesApiobject and use it to perform the search. - Obtain the ID from the returned
Roleobject.
Next steps
The following example searches for a role by name.
# Store the role ID - default is None
role_id = None
# Search criteria
name_criteria = api.SearchCriteria()
name_criteria.field_name = "name"
name_criteria.string_value = role_name
name_criteria.string_test = "equal"
# Search filter
role_filter = api.SearchFilter()
role_filter.search_criteria = [name_criteria]
# Perform the search and obtain the ID of the returned role
admin_roles_api = api.AdministratorRolesApi(api.ApiClient(configuration))
roles = admin_roles_api.search_administrator_roles(api_version, search_filter=role_filter)
if len(roles.roles) > 0:
role_id = roles.roles[0].id
return roles.roles[0].id
Also see the Search Administrator Roles operation in the API Reference.
Create an API key using an SDK
To use an SDK create an API key, create an
ApiKey object and set the name and the ID of the role to associate with the API key. You
can also specify the following optional properties:- A description
- The time zone
- The locale
- The expiry date
Use an
APIKeysApi object to create the API key on Server & Workload Protection. The ApiKey object that is returned contains the secret key.To use the API to create an API key, use the Create an API Key operation of the
/api/apikeys endpoint.The following example creates an API key for auditing purposes. The key expires 2
weeks after creation.
# Set key properties
time_to_expiry_in_ms = 14 * 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000
current_time_in_ms = int(round(time.time() * 1000))
key = api.ApiKey()
key.key_name = key_name
key.description = "Read-only access"
key.role_id = "2"
key.locale = "en-US"
key.time_zone = "Asia/Tokyo"
key.expiry_date = current_time_in_ms + time_to_expiry_in_ms # expires in 2 weeks
# Create the key on Server & Workload Protection
api_keys_api = api.APIKeysApi(api.ApiClient(configuration))
return api_keys_api.create_api_key(key, api_version)
For information about authenticating API calls, see Authenticate with Server & Workload Protection.
Create an API key using a username and password
To automate a task when no API key is created yet, you can use the API and a username
and password to create the first API key:
Procedure
- Use the
/api/sessionsresource to obtain a valid session cookie and request ID. - Use the session cookie and request ID in a request to the
/api/apikeysresource to create the API key.
Next steps
Once created, use the API key to make subsequent calls to Server & Workload Protection.
Obtain a session cookie and a request ID
Use an HTTP client such as Postman, Paw, or cURL to send a POST request to the
/api/sessions resource. The response includes a cookie that contains the session ID, and the response
body contains the request ID.
NoteThe
/api/sessions resource is not available in an SDK at this time. |
Use the following information to create the request:
-
Request type:
POST -
URL:
https://<Server & Workload Protection Hostname>:<port>/api/sessions, for examplehttps://localhost:4119/api/sessions -
First header:
- Name:
api-version - Value:
v1
- Name:
-
Second header:
- Name:
Content-type - Value:
application/json
- Name:
-
Body (include the
tenantNameandmfaCodeas well if necessary):{ "userName": "myUserName", "password": "myPassword" }
Here is an example cURL command. The response cookies are saved in the cookie.txt
file.
curl -i -X POST \
https:// localhost:4119/api/sessions \
-H 'Cache-Control: no-cache' \
-H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
-H 'api-version: v1' \
-c cookie.txt \
-d '{
"userName": "myUserName",
"password": "myPassword"
}'
The
Set-Cookie response header includes the session ID in the sID cookie. The response body includes the response ID as the value of RID. The response resembles the following example:X-Frame-Options: SAMEORIGIN
X-XSS-Protection: 1;mode=block
Cache-Control: no-cache,no-store
Pragma: no-cache
Set-Cookie: sID=D5EE2AC155601C895B33B701080D40A6; Path=/; Secure; HttpOnly
Content-Type: application/json
Content-Length: 141
Date: Wed, 24 Oct 2018 15:29:53 GMT
{
"administratorID": 1,
"created": 1540309893123,
"lastActivity": 1540309893123,
"accessType": "webService",
"RID": "77DFF81036170DBF92CB71E4559512B9"
}
Create an API key using the session cookie and the request ID
Use an HTTP client such as Postman, Paw, or cURL to send a POST request to the
/api/apikeys resource. Use the session cookie and the response ID that you obtained from the /api/sessions resource to authenticate the call.
NoteThe SDKs do not support the use of session IDs and resource IDs for authentication
at this time.
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Use the following information to create the request:
-
Request type:
POST -
URL:
https://<Server & Workload Protection Hostname>:<port>/api/apikeys, for examplehttps://localhost:4119/api/sessions -
First header:
- Name:
api-version - Value:
v1
- Name:
-
Second header:
- Name:
Content-type - Value:
application/json
- Name:
-
Third header:
- Name:
rID - Value: The request ID that you obtained from the
sessionsresource, for example77DFF81036170DBF92CB71E4559512B9
- Name:
-
Cookie: Include the
sIDcookie from the response that you received from the/api/sessionsresource. -
Body:
{ "keyName": "First Key", "description": "Created using a request ID", "roleID: 1 }For information about obtaining the role ID, see Obtain a role ID.
Here is an example cURL command. The session cookie is included via the cookie.txt
file.
curl -X POST \
https:// 192.168.60.128:4119/api/apikeys \
-H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
-H 'Postman-Token: 6f81da09-e5e2-421b-a38a-d5679f50608d' \
-H 'api-version: v1' \
-H 'rID: 77DFF81036170DBF92CB71E4559512B9' \
-b cookie.txt \
-d '{
"keyName": "First Key",
"description": "Created using a request ID",
"roleID": 1
}'
The response body includes the secret key as the value of
secretKey, similar to the following example:{
"keyName": "First Key",
"description": "Created using a request ID",
"locale": "en-US",
"roleID": 1,
"timeZone": "America/New_York",
"active": true,
"created": 1540310105209,
"unsuccessfulSignInAttempts": 0,
"secretKey": "8:4rFctPvno+dxntueMcso4F61SUZMFVt3I6SczG7ysOA=",
"serviceAccount": false,
"ID": 8
}
Save the
secretKey so that you can later use it in the api-secret-key header of your API calls.
