Replace the row-building section with:
df = pd.DataFrame(rows) df.to_csv(output_file, index=False) print(f"✅ Converted len(rows) tokens to output_file") if == " main ": # Example usage jws_to_csv("tokens.txt", "output.csv", fields_of_interest=["sub", "exp", "tenant_id"]) Step 3: Handling nested claims Sometimes your JWS payload contains nested objects: jws to csv converter
pip install PyJWT pandas import base64 import json import csv import sys import pandas as pd from pathlib import Path def decode_jws_payload(jws_token): """Decode the payload (second part) of a compact JWS.""" try: parts = jws_token.split('.') if len(parts) != 3: raise ValueError("Invalid compact JWS: expected 3 parts") # Decode base64url (add padding if needed) payload_b64 = parts[1] # Add padding for base64 decoding padding = '=' * (4 - (len(payload_b64) % 4)) payload_bytes = base64.urlsafe_b64decode(payload_b64 + padding) return json.loads(payload_bytes) except Exception as e: return "error": str(e), "raw_token": jws_token[:50] Replace the row-building section with: df = pd
Opening a raw .log file full of base64url-encoded strings isn’t practical. But dropping that data into a CSV? Now you can sort, filter, and pivot. jws to csv converter
Ten artykuł jest dostępny tylko w zagraniczej odsłonie tego serwisu.