reg path to CA certificates
I've got an 2008 r2 server. Dont have no dsstore.exe neither want to spend 300$ for what u had free in 2003, what is the registry location ? hope at least this your specialists can answear.
June 8th, 2012 7:28am
can you explain, what exactly you need?My weblog: http://en-us.sysadmins.lv
PowerShell PKI Module: http://pspki.codeplex.com
Windows PKI reference:
on TechNet wiki
Free Windows Admin Tool Kit Click here and download it now
June 8th, 2012 8:07am
The registry path to certificates ever issued by Certification Authority to remove them manually. Im reinstalling the whole thing.
June 8th, 2012 8:09am
you should consider to use one of the following options:
1) certutil (see certutil -desltore)
2) Certificates MMC snap-in
3) PowerShell (dir cert:\)
alternatively, if you have autoenrollment configured, autoenrollment will automatically archive/hide invalid certificates.My weblog: http://en-us.sysadmins.lv
PowerShell PKI Module: http://pspki.codeplex.com
Windows PKI reference:
on TechNet wiki
Free Windows Admin Tool Kit Click here and download it now
June 8th, 2012 9:50am
So, ure telling me that if im going to manually remove all certificates associated with my previous CA that was located on other DC(through name and dates) in the cert snap-in, thats gonna do the trick and i can invoke a new CA right away ? whats happened
to dsstore.exe ?
June 9th, 2012 1:17am
you can freely set up new CA and then decommission old CA. Look at this article:
http://social.technet.microsoft.com/wiki/contents/articles/3527.how-to-decommission-a-windows-enterprise-certification-authority-and-how-to-remove-all-related-objects.aspx
I don't know what is dsstore.exe.
My weblog: http://en-us.sysadmins.lv
PowerShell PKI Module: http://pspki.codeplex.com
Windows PKI reference:
on TechNet wiki
Free Windows Admin Tool Kit Click here and download it now
June 9th, 2012 4:38am
DSSTORE.exe was a utility used in Windows 2000 (12 years ago)
It was deprecated in starting in Windows 2003 with all functionality moved to certutil.exe
You are reading some really really really really really old articles <G>
Brian
June 9th, 2012 10:06am