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Update trustFrameworkKeySet

Namespace: microsoft.graph

Important

APIs under the /beta version in Microsoft Graph are subject to change. Use of these APIs in production applications is not supported. To determine whether an API is available in v1.0, use the Version selector.

Update the properties of a trustFrameworkKeyset. This operation will replace the content of an existing keyset. Specifying the ID in the request payload is optional.

Permissions

Choose the permission or permissions marked as least privileged for this API. Use a higher privileged permission or permissions only if your app requires it. For details about delegated and application permissions, see Permission types. To learn more about these permissions, see the permissions reference.

Permission type Least privileged permissions Higher privileged permissions
Delegated (work or school account) TrustFrameworkKeySet.ReadWrite.All Not available.
Delegated (personal Microsoft account) Not supported. Not supported.
Application TrustFrameworkKeySet.ReadWrite.All Not available.

Important

In delegated scenarios with work or school accounts, the admin must be assigned a supported Microsoft Entra role or a custom role with a supported role permission. B2C IEF Keyset Administrator is the least privileged role supported for this operation.

HTTP request

PUT /trustFramework/keySets/{id}

Request headers

Name Description
Authorization Bearer {token}. Required. Learn more about authentication and authorization.
Content-type application/json. Required.

Request body

Property Type Description
keys trustFrameworkKey collection updates a collection of Trustframeworkkeys

Response

If successful, this method returns a 200 OK response code and an updated trustFrameworkKeySet object in the response body.

Examples

Request

The following example shows a request.

PUT https://graph.microsoft.com/beta/trustFramework/keySets/{id}
Content-type: application/json

{
  "keys": [
    {
      "k": "k-value",
      "x5c": [
        "x5c-value"
      ],
      "x5t": "x5t-value",
      "kty": "kty-value",
      "use": "use-value",
      "exp": 99,
      "nbf": 99,
      "kid": "kid-value",
      "e": "e-value",
      "n": "n-value",
      "d": "d-value",
      "p": "p-value",
      "q": "q-value",
      "dp": "dp-value",
      "dq": "dq-value",
      "qi": "qi-value"
    }
  ]
}

Response

The following example shows the response.

Note: The response object shown here might be shortened for readability.

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-type: application/json

{
  "id": "id-value",
  "keys": [
    {
      "k": "k-value",
      "x5c": [
        "x5c-value"
      ],
      "x5t": "x5t-value",
      "kty": "kty-value",
      "use": "use-value",
      "exp": 99,
      "nbf": 99,
      "kid": "kid-value",
      "e": "e-value",
      "n": "n-value",
      "d": "d-value",
      "p": "p-value",
      "q": "q-value",
      "dp": "dp-value",
      "dq": "dq-value",
      "qi": "qi-value"
    }
  ]
}