![]() ![]() Log in to Jira as an administrator and navigate to Jira settings (cog icon) > Products, and select "Application Links" in the menu on the left side. Next, we'll generate an application key from Jira. pemįirst, run the commands above in your terminal to create the private key we need for authorization. Openssl x509 -pubkey -noout - in jira_publickey. pcks8 // Extract the public key from the certificate to the jira_publickey.pem file: Openssl pkcs8 -topk8 -nocrypt - in jira_privatekey. cer -days 365 // Extract the private key (PKCS8 format) to the jira_privatekey.pcks8 file: Openssl req -newkey rsa : 1024 -x509 -key jira_privatekey. To do this, we'll create a private key, extract the private key to the PKCS8 format, and extract the public key to a. Since OAuth utilizes the RSA-SHA1 signing for authentication, this means we need a private key to sign requests. Let's configure Jira and generate an RSA public/private keypair. Next, we'll display this data in our client's browser. We'll create a Node.js server, where we'll get data from our Jira application. ![]()
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