cisco.ise.trusted_certificate_import module – Resource module for Trusted Certificate Import
Note
This module is part of the cisco.ise collection (version 2.9.6).
You might already have this collection installed if you are using the ansible package.
It is not included in ansible-core.
To check whether it is installed, run ansible-galaxy collection list.
To install it, use: ansible-galaxy collection install cisco.ise.
You need further requirements to be able to use this module,
see Requirements for details.
To use it in a playbook, specify: cisco.ise.trusted_certificate_import.
New in cisco.ise 1.0.0
Synopsis
- Manage operation create of the resource Trusted Certificate Import. 
- Import an X509 certificate as a trust certificate. 
Note
This module has a corresponding action plugin.
Requirements
The below requirements are needed on the host that executes this module.
- ciscoisesdk >= 2.2.3 
- python >= 3.5 
Parameters
| Parameter | Comments | 
|---|---|
| Allow certificates with Basic Constraints CA Field as False (required). Choices: 
 | |
| Allow out of date certificates (required). Choices: 
 | |
| Allow SHA1 based certificates (required). Choices: 
 | |
| Certificate content (required). | |
| Description of the certificate. | |
| Flag for Identity Services Engine SDK to enable debugging. Choices: 
 | |
| The Identity Services Engine hostname. | |
| The Identity Services Engine password to authenticate. | |
| Timeout (in seconds) for RESTful HTTP requests. Default:  | |
| The Identity Services Engine username to authenticate. | |
| Flag that informs the SDK whether to use the Identity Services Engine’s API Gateway to send requests. If it is true, it uses the ISE’s API Gateway and sends requests to https://{{ise_hostname}}. If it is false, it sends the requests to https://{{ise_hostname}}:{{port}}, where the port value depends on the Service used (ERS, Mnt, UI, PxGrid). Choices: 
 | |
| Flag that informs the SDK whether we send the CSRF token to ISE’s ERS APIs. If it is True, the SDK assumes that your ISE CSRF Check is enabled. If it is True, it assumes you need the SDK to manage the CSRF token automatically for you. Choices: 
 | |
| Flag to enable or disable SSL certificate verification. Choices: 
 | |
| Informs the SDK which version of Identity Services Engine to use. Default:  | |
| Flag for Identity Services Engine SDK to enable automatic rate-limit handling. Choices: 
 | |
| Name of the certificate. | |
| Trust for Certificate based Admin authentication. Choices: 
 | |
| Trust for authentication of Cisco Services. Choices: 
 | |
| Trust for client authentication and Syslog. Choices: 
 | |
| Trust for authentication within Cisco ISE. Choices: 
 | |
| Validate trust certificate extension. Choices: 
 | 
Notes
Note
- SDK Method used are certificates.Certificates.import_trust_certificate, 
- Paths used are post /api/v1/certs/trusted-certificate/import, 
- Does not support - check_mode
- The plugin runs on the control node and does not use any ansible connection plugins, but instead the embedded connection manager from Cisco ISE SDK 
- The parameters starting with ise_ are used by the Cisco ISE Python SDK to establish the connection 
See Also
See also
- Cisco ISE documentation for Certificates
- Complete reference of the Certificates API. 
Examples
- name: Create
  cisco.ise.trusted_certificate_import:
    ise_hostname: "{{ise_hostname}}"
    ise_username: "{{ise_username}}"
    ise_password: "{{ise_password}}"
    ise_verify: "{{ise_verify}}"
    allowBasicConstraintCAFalse: true
    allowOutOfDateCert: true
    allowSHA1Certificates: true
    data: string
    description: string
    name: string
    trustForCertificateBasedAdminAuth: true
    trustForCiscoServicesAuth: true
    trustForClientAuth: true
    trustForIseAuth: true
    validateCertificateExtensions: true
Return Values
Common return values are documented here, the following are the fields unique to this module:
| Key | Description | 
|---|---|
| A dictionary or list with the response returned by the Cisco ISE Python SDK Returned: always Sample:  | 
