SSLClientAuthentication Event
Fired when the client presents its credentials to the server.
Syntax
public event OnSSLClientAuthenticationHandler OnSSLClientAuthentication; public delegate void OnSSLClientAuthenticationHandler(object sender, MllpserverSSLClientAuthenticationEventArgs e); public class MllpserverSSLClientAuthenticationEventArgs : EventArgs { public string ConnectionId { get; } public string CertEncoded { get; }
public byte[] CertEncodedB { get; } public string CertSubject { get; } public string CertIssuer { get; } public string Status { get; } public bool Accept { get; set; } }
Public Event OnSSLClientAuthentication As OnSSLClientAuthenticationHandler Public Delegate Sub OnSSLClientAuthenticationHandler(sender As Object, e As MllpserverSSLClientAuthenticationEventArgs) Public Class MllpserverSSLClientAuthenticationEventArgs Inherits EventArgs Public ReadOnly Property ConnectionId As String Public ReadOnly Property CertEncoded As String
Public ReadOnly Property CertEncodedB As Byte() Public ReadOnly Property CertSubject As String Public ReadOnly Property CertIssuer As String Public ReadOnly Property Status As String Public Property Accept As Boolean End Class
Remarks
This is where the server can decide whether to continue or not. The Accept parameter is a recommendation on whether to continue or close the connection. This is just a suggestion: application software must use its own logic to determine whether to continue or not.
When Accept is False, Status shows why the verification failed (otherwise, Status contains the string "OK").