Sorry for this late reply, I have been otherwise busy for some time.
Yes, I did this via Server 2008 R2.
What I actually did was to add the certificate via Group policy, so
it was automatically propagated to the trusted CA store on all computers
in the domain (including Windows 2000/XP/2003/Vist
Hi,
Have a question. Is this the Windows native store for CA
certificates ? Which MS help doc. are you referring ? We want a secure
storage facility for all our certificates but we don't to buy a
separate product.
Thanks,
Mohan
On Wed, Sep 8, 2010 at 5:10 AM, Dongsheng Song wrote:
> Are
Are you test with 2008/win7 ?
My self-signed certificate can automatically goto 'Trusted Root
Certification Authorities'
on XP/2k3 box, but not 2008 box.
If the answer is 'YES', could you share the configuration ?
Because I compared my self-signed certificate with microsoft 2010 ROOT CA,
no valu
On 07-09-2010 09:59, Dongsheng Song wrote:
Hi,
When I install my self-signed certificate to 'Certificate Store' of
Windows 2008,
if I select 'Automatically select the certificate store based on the
type of certificate',
then the self-signed certificate will be in the 'Intermediate
Certification
Dongsheng,
One solution is to manually specify the location to install the certificate.
This will pop up a dialog box with a list of all the certificate stores
that are available, and from here you can select Trusted Root Certificate.
As far as tweaking your certificate so that it looks like a
Hi,
When I install my self-signed certificate to 'Certificate Store' of Windows
2008,
if I select 'Automatically select the certificate store based on the type of
certificate',
then the self-signed certificate will be in the 'Intermediate Certification
Authorities',
not 'Trusted Root Certification