DID related operations, like registering, updating and deactivating DIDs. For more info on DIDs, go here.
Commands:
Create DID - using create command.
Resolve DID - using resolve command.
List DIDs - using list command.
Import DID to custodian store - using import command.
Delete DID from custodian - using delete command.
All commands have the help option available:
<your-command> -h
<your-command> --help
E.g. did create -h
Creates a DID document using did create [options]
command based on the corresponding SSI ecosystem (DID method). Optionally the associated asymmetric key is also created.
-m, --did-method [key | web | ebsi | iota | jwk | cheqd]
- Specify DID method [key], Supported DID methods are: "key", "web", "ebsi", "iota", "jwk"
-k, --key TEXT
- Specific key (ID or alias)
-d, --domain TEXT
- Domain for did:web
-p, --path TEXT
- Path for did:web
-v, --version INT
- Version of did:ebsi. Allowed values: 1 (default), 2
-n, --network [testnet | mainnet]
- cheqd network, default is testnet
-j, --useJwkJcsPub
- specifies whether to create a did:key using the jwk_jcs-pub multicodec (code: 0xeb51)
The returned value represents the DID document.
E.g. did create -m ebsi -k 8a2c3628acdd45999b4c0b5a69911437
IOTA support
For creating IOTA DIDs and registering them on the IOTA tangle, a wrapper library needs to be installed and available in the local library path.
The wrapper library is included in the SSIKit Docker image, such that for Docker users no additional setup is required.
CLI users can find instructions for build and SSIKit integration at:
Resolves the DID document.
Options:
-d, --did TEXT DID to be resolved
-r, --raw / -t, --typed
-w, --write
List all created DIDs using did list
command
Import DID to custodian store using did import [options]
command
-k, --key-id TEXT
- Specify key ID for imported did, if left empty, only public key will be imported
-f, --file TEXT
- Load the DID document from the given file
-d, --did TEXT
- Try to resolve DID document for the given DID
Use the delete
command to delete a DID:
did delete <your did>
E.g. did delete -d "did:ebsi:zs79GYJvzEnQYxkAAj4UX1j"