This library wraps the Miva Merchant JSON API introduced in Miva Merchant 9.12. It allows you to quickly integrate your C# applications with a Miva Merchant store to fetch, create, and update store data.
For api documentation visit https://docs.miva.com/json-api.
- Miva Merchant 10+
- Any of the following targets:
- .NET 6.0
- .NET 5.0
- .NET Framework 4.8
- .NET Framework 4.7.2
- NetCoreApp 3.1
- NetStandard 2.1
For Miva Merchant 9.x, use the 1.x release
From your terminal execute the following in your dependent projects directory
dotnet add package MerchantAPI --version 2.*
For additional installation methods visit the NuGET package page at here or consult the documentation here
You can also download the release package from the Releases page or clone the repository directly. To include it in your projects, add the MerchantAPI/MerchantAPI.csproj
to your project and configure the framework reference of your target to link to the MerchantAPI framework.
Examples are provided in the Examples/
directory.
- PKCS#1 PEM Unencrypted
- PKCS#8 PEM Encrypted or Unencrypted
- PKCS#12 (pfx) Encrypted or Unencrypted
If your private key is in OpenSSH format (starts with -----BEGIN OPENSSH PRIVATE KEY-----
) then you will need to convert it.
Create a copy of your key preserving permissions:
cp -p /path/to/private/key/id_rsa /path/to/private/key/id_rsa.pem
Convert in place to the proper format:
ssh-keygen -p -m PEM -f /path/to/private/key/id_rsa.pem
Converting the key with encryption:
openssl pkcs8 -in /path/to/private_key.pem -topk8 -out /path/to/private_key.pkcs8.pem
Converting the key without encryption:
openssl pkcs8 -in /path/to/private_key.pem -topk8 -nocrypt -out /path/to/private_key.pkcs8.pem
If your private key is in OpenSSH format (starts with -----BEGIN OPENSSH PRIVATE KEY-----
) then you will need to convert it.
Create a copy of your key preserving permissions:
cp -p /path/to/private/key/id_rsa /path/to/private/key/id_rsa.pem
Convert in place to the proper format:
ssh-keygen -p -m PEM -f /path/to/private/key/id_rsa.pem
Create a x509 certificate from your private key :
openssl req -new -key /path/to/private/key/id_rsa.pem -out /path/to/private/key/id_rsa.csr
# We need to specify an expiration, but its ignored
openssl req -key /path/to/private/key/id_rsa.pem -new -x509 -days 365 -out /path/to/private/key/id_rsa.crt
openssl pkcs12 -export -out /path/to/private/key/id_rsa.pfx -inkey /path/to/private/key/id_rsa.pem -in /path/to/private/key/id_rsa_converted.crt
Create a x509 certificate from your private key:
openssl req -new -key /path/to/private/key/id_rsa.pem -out /path/to/private/key/id_rsa.csr
# We need to specify an expiration, but its ignored
openssl req -key /path/to/private/key/id_rsa.pem -new -x509 -days 365 -out /path/to/private/key/id_rsa.crt
openssl pkcs12 -export -out /path/to/private/key/id_rsa.pfx -inkey /path/to/private/key/id_rsa.pem -in /path/to/private/key/id_rsa_converted.crt
Your public key must be in the OpenSSH Public Key format. The default public key format is usually the correct type if you generated your key using ssh-keygen
.
See https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4253#section-6.6 for format.
A quick way to get the correct format if you have the key associated with your local SSH agent is to run the command ssh-add -L
and copying the corresponding key.
This library is licensed under the Miva SDK License Agreement
.
See the LICENSE.txt
file for more information.