# PEM Decoder and Encoder Often times DER-encoded data is wrapped in PEM encoding. This allows the binary DER data to be identified and reliably sent over various communication channels. The `asn1crypto.pem` module includes three functions: - `detect(byte_string)` - `unarmor(pem_bytes, multiple=False)` - `armor(type_name, der_bytes, headers=None)` ## detect() The `detect()` function accepts a byte string and looks for a `BEGIN` block line. This is useful to determine in a byte string needs to be PEM-decoded before parsing. ```python from asn1crypto import pem, x509 with open('/path/to/cert', 'rb') as f: der_bytes = f.read() if pem.detect(der_bytes): _, _, der_bytes = pem.unarmor(der_bytes) ``` ## unarmor() The `unarmor()` function accepts a byte string and the flag to indicates if more than one PEM block may be contained in the byte string. The result is a three-element tuple. - The first element is a unicode string of the type of PEM block. Examples include: `CERTIFICATE`, `PRIVATE KEY`, `PUBLIC KEY`. - The second element is a `dict` of PEM block headers. Headers are typically only used by encrypted OpenSSL private keys, and are in the format `Name: Value`. - The third element is a byte string of the decoded block contents. ```python from asn1crypto import pem, x509 with open('/path/to/cert', 'rb') as f: der_bytes = f.read() if pem.detect(der_bytes): type_name, headers, der_bytes = pem.unarmor(der_bytes) cert = x509.Certificate.load(der_bytes) ``` If the `multiple` keyword argument is set to `True`, a generator will be returned. ```python from asn1crypto import pem, x509 certs = [] with open('/path/to/ca_certs', 'rb') as f: for type_name, headers, der_bytes in pem.unarmor(f.read(), multiple=True): certs.append(x509.Certificate.load(der_bytes)) ``` ## armor() The `armor()` function accepts three parameters: a unicode string of the block type name, a byte string to encode and an optional keyword argument `headers`, that should be a `dict` of headers to add after the `BEGIN` line. Headers are typically only used by encrypted OpenSSL private keys. ```python from asn1crypto import pem, x509 # cert is an instance of x509.Certificate with open('/path/to/cert', 'wb') as f: der_bytes = cert.dump() pem_bytes = pem.armor('CERTIFICATE', der_bytes) f.write(pem_bytes) ```