OPC Studio User's Guide and Reference
Examples - OPC UA Interaction - Accept HTTPS certificate
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The example below triggers the component to ask the user whether he/she wants to accept the server's HTTPS certificate.

.NET

// This example shows how in a console application, the user is asked to accept a server HTTPS certificate.
//
// Find all latest examples here: https://opclabs.doc-that.com/files/onlinedocs/OPCLabs-OpcStudio/Latest/examples.html .

using System;
using OpcLabs.EasyOpc.UA;
using OpcLabs.EasyOpc.UA.OperationModel;

namespace UADocExamples.Interaction
{
    partial class AcceptCertificate
    {
        public static void Https()
        {
            // Do not implicitly trust any endpoint URLs. We want the user be asked explicitly.
            EasyUAClient.SharedParameters.EngineParameters.CertificateAcceptancePolicy.TrustedEndpointUrlStrings.Clear();

            // Define which server we will work with.
            UAEndpointDescriptor endpointDescriptor = "https://opcua.demo-this.com:51212/UA/SampleServer/";
            
            // Instantiate the client object.
            var client = new EasyUAClient();

            UAAttributeData attributeData;
            try
            {
                // Obtain attribute data.
                // The component automatically triggers the necessary user interaction during the first operation.
                attributeData = client.Read(endpointDescriptor, "nsu=http://test.org/UA/Data/ ;i=10853");
            }
            catch (UAException uaException)
            {
                Console.WriteLine("*** Failure: {0}", uaException.GetBaseException().Message);
                return;
            }

            // Display results.
            Console.WriteLine("Value: {0}", attributeData.Value);
            Console.WriteLine("ServerTimestamp: {0}", attributeData.ServerTimestamp);
            Console.WriteLine("SourceTimestamp: {0}", attributeData.SourceTimestamp);
            Console.WriteLine("StatusCode: {0}", attributeData.StatusCode);
        }
    }
}

COM

// This example shows how in a console application, the user is asked to accept a server HTTPS certificate.
//
// Find all latest examples here : https://opclabs.doc-that.com/files/onlinedocs/OPCLabs-OpcStudio/Latest/examples.html .

class procedure AcceptCertificate.Https;
var
  AttributeData: _UAAttributeData;
  Client: OpcLabs_EasyOpcUA_TLB._EasyUAClient;
  ClientManagement: TEasyUAClientManagement;
  EndpointDescriptor: string;
begin
  // The configuration object allows access to static behavior.
  ClientManagement := TEasyUAClientManagement.Create(nil);
  ClientManagement.Connect;

  // Do not implicitly trust any endpoint URLs. We want the user be asked explicitly.
  ClientManagement.SharedParameters.EngineParameters.CertificateAcceptancePolicy.TrustedEndpointUrlStrings.Clear();

  // Define which server we will work with.
  EndpointDescriptor := 'https://opcua.demo-this.com:51212/UA/SampleServer/';

  // Instantiate the client object.
  Client := CoEasyUAClient.Create;
  try
    // Obtain attribute data.
    // The component automatically triggers the necessary user interaction during the first operation.
    AttributeData := Client.Read(EndpointDescriptor, 'nsu=http://test.org/UA/Data/ ;i=10853');
  except
    on E: EOleException do
    begin
      WriteLn(Format('*** Failure: %s', [E.GetBaseException.Message]));
      Exit;
    end;
  end;

  // Display results.
  WriteLn('Value: ', AttributeData.Value);
  WriteLn('ServerTimestamp: ', DateTimeToStr(AttributeData.ServerTimestamp));
  WriteLn('SourceTimestamp: ', DateTimeToStr(AttributeData.SourceTimestamp));
  WriteLn('StatusCode: ', AttributeData.StatusCode.ToString);

  FreeAndNil(ClientManagement);
end;

 

The program output may look like this:

Console - Accept HTTPS certificate

Console - Accept HTTPS certificate

 

 

See Also

Examples - OPC Unified Architecture

Conceptual