Unofficial C++ Otto download demo
An example of the Otto library implementation in C++.
Warning
This demo is not intended for productive usage.
In May 2024, ELSTER introduced a new library called Otto, designed for downloading objects from OTTER (Object Storage in ELSTER). ELSTER took this initiative because the existing solution had reached its limitations. Alongside Otto, a new version of Datenabholung v31 was also released.
The current method of data retrieval using ERiC is planned to be replaced on the client-side with ERiC version 41.2 by November 25th, 2024, at which point only Datenabholung v31 will be available. On the server-side, the transition will occur with the planned annual minimal version increase in mid-April 2025 (exact date to be announced in 2025). After this date, only ERiC version 41.2 or higher with Datenabholung v31 will be supported.
As a result, most software developers currently using ERiC Datenabholung will need to implement Otto in their production systems by April 2025.
This demo intends to simplify the transition and reduce implementation time.
./cotto
-u objectUuid UUID of object to download (mandatory)
-m size Allocate provided Bytes of memory and download object in-memory (optional, max: 10485760 Bytes), cf. Download modes
-e extension Set filename extension of downloaded content [default: "txt"]
-p password Password for certificate [default: "123456"]
-f Force file overwriting [default: false]
Examples:
cotto -u 468a69d4-0151-4681-9e8d-fcd87873d550 # ELOProtokoll / Lohnersatzleistung
cotto -u c48737b3-adfe-4e87-925c-7c362e00a416 -e pdf # DivaBescheidESt
Note
The code and scripts have been tested so far only on Linux and macOS.
Tip
A list of object UUIDs is available with test certificates. You can get a list of them using PostfachAnfrage
with the test certificate. The examples above are for test-softorg-pse.pfx
and might be removed from the test instance after the time specified in the metadata.
You need the official ELSTER Otto library and header files. Download the ERiC package >= v40 for your platform from the ELSTER developer area, unzip it and place it at a desired path. Feel free to place it in ./vendor/
. You need two libraries: otto
and eSigner
(platform dependent naming: (lib)otto.{so|dylib|dll}
and (lib)eSigner.{so|dylib|dll}
), as well as three header files otto.h
, otto_statuscode.h
and otto_types.h
.
Note
The ERiC package, especially the included there libraries are subject to a separate license agreement (presented before download in the ELSTER developer area and included in the ERiC package itself).
Tip
Choose the right library for the platform you compile and run on.
You can compile the code with:
make
Tip
Provide PATH_VENDOR
environment variable to point the path where the ELSTER otto
library is placed on your system or place the needed libraries in ./vendor/
.
Follow the steps to run cotto
locally:
# Clone repository
git clone [email protected]:rechtlogisch/cotto.git
# Change to directory with source code
cd cotto
# Retrieve test certificate to "certificate" subdirectory
./get-test-certificate.sh
# Compile statically linked to Otto library placed in PATH_VENDOR
PATH_VENDOR="/path/to/otto-library/" make
# Run `cotto`, provide objectUuid with -u option and your DEVELOPER_ID inline
DEVELOPER_ID="00000" ./cotto -u 468a69d4-0151-4681-9e8d-fcd87873d550
Note
You should set your five-digit Developer-ID (German: Hersteller-ID) as the environment variable DEVELOPER_ID
. You could source it from for example .env
or pass it inline to cotto
, as shown in the steps above.
Tip
The downloaded result will be saved in the same directory as cotto
, unless you provide a different PATH_DOWNLOAD
.
All supported environment variables are listed in .env.example
. Feel free to copy them to .env
, adjust accordingly and source for usage.
The demo showcases two methods for downloading objects: blockwise (default) and in-memory. OTTER and Otto operate by design by streaming data and forwarding it to the desired storage blockwise. That is the optimal and memory-efficient way for large files. ELSTER engineers wrapped all the necessary calls and the download workflow in one function: OttoDatenAbholen()
, which simplifies the implementation and temporarily stores the complete object in memory.
This demo can operate in both modes. To download in-memory, add the option -m
with a value exceeding 0
and not exceeding 10485760
Bytes (10 MiB). It is recommended to use the in-memory mode with objects where the final size is known and does not exceed the arbitrarily set size of 10485760 Bytes.
Important
-m
sets the minimal allocated memory size. When the object is larger than the set size, Otto allocates as much as needed and as much as available memory. Use at your own risk.
A simple Dockerfile is included. You can use make docker-build
and make docker-cotto
to build and run cotto
in a container.
Tip
Mount volumes, set PATH_DOWNLOAD
and PATH_LOG
environment variables to expose data outside the container.
Please see CHANGELOG for more information on what has changed recently.
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
If you discover any security-related issues, please email [email protected] instead of using the issue tracker.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.
The ERiC package, especially libraries, is not included in this repository and is subject to a separate license agreement. Please see the ELSTER developer area or the lizenz.pdf included in the ERiC package for more information.
This demo was developed by RL Recht logisch GmbH & Co. KG and should be used only for test purposes.
ELSTER is a registered trademark of the Freistaat Bayern, represented by the Bayerische Staatsministerium der Finanzen.