• Welcome to Tux Reports: Where Penguins Fly. We hope you find the topics varied, interesting, and worthy of your time. Please become a member and join in the discussions.

How to sign a file using a certificate allocated in Active Directo

  • Thread starter Pedro M. Piñón
  • Start date
P

Pedro M. Piñón

Flightless Bird
Hi All,

We are trying to manage certificates wich are allocated in the Active
Directory from any computer.

We can access the certificate, but when trying to sign with it, the system
shows the message:

"The signer's certificate is not valid for signing"

When using that same certificate locally, there's not a problem.

Any comment would be appreciated,
 
P

Peter Foldes

Flightless Bird
Pedro

Just to clarify since you posted in the xp.general newsgroup. Are these networked
computers all xp machines or are they server based

--
Peter

Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others
Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged.

"Pedro M. Piñón" <PedroMPin@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:45BE9B91-4098-4252-864B-2C5375AE349B@microsoft.com...
> Hi All,
>
> We are trying to manage certificates wich are allocated in the Active
> Directory from any computer.
>
> We can access the certificate, but when trying to sign with it, the system
> shows the message:
>
> "The signer's certificate is not valid for signing"
>
> When using that same certificate locally, there's not a problem.
>
> Any comment would be appreciated,
>
 
P

Pedro M. Piñón

Flightless Bird
Re: How to sign a file using a certificate allocated in Active Dir

Hi Peter,

The environment are client xp machines in a network. The server is a Windows
Server 2003.

Pedro


"Peter Foldes" wrote:

> Pedro
>
> Just to clarify since you posted in the xp.general newsgroup. Are these networked
> computers all xp machines or are they server based
>
> --
> Peter
>
> Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others
> Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged.
>
> "Pedro M. Piñón" <PedroMPin@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
> news:45BE9B91-4098-4252-864B-2C5375AE349B@microsoft.com...
> > Hi All,
> >
> > We are trying to manage certificates wich are allocated in the Active
> > Directory from any computer.
> >
> > We can access the certificate, but when trying to sign with it, the system
> > shows the message:
> >
> > "The signer's certificate is not valid for signing"
> >
> > When using that same certificate locally, there's not a problem.
> >
> > Any comment would be appreciated,
> >

>
> .
>
 
P

Peter Foldes

Flightless Bird
Re: How to sign a file using a certificate allocated in Active Dir

That is what I thought. Might want to post this to the following newsgroup Pedro.
They are the ones that can answer your issue

On the web:
http://www.microsoft.com/communitie...x?dg=microsoft.public.windows.server.security


--
Peter

Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others
Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged.

"Pedro M. Piñón" <PedroMPin@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:CE01C733-04DE-4D7E-A5FE-0AD7A98187D7@microsoft.com...
> Hi Peter,
>
> The environment are client xp machines in a network. The server is a Windows
> Server 2003.
>
> Pedro
>
>
> "Peter Foldes" wrote:
>
>> Pedro
>>
>> Just to clarify since you posted in the xp.general newsgroup. Are these networked
>> computers all xp machines or are they server based
>>
>> --
>> Peter
>>
>> Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others
>> Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged.
>>
>> "Pedro M. Piñón" <PedroMPin@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
>> news:45BE9B91-4098-4252-864B-2C5375AE349B@microsoft.com...
>> > Hi All,
>> >
>> > We are trying to manage certificates wich are allocated in the Active
>> > Directory from any computer.
>> >
>> > We can access the certificate, but when trying to sign with it, the system
>> > shows the message:
>> >
>> > "The signer's certificate is not valid for signing"
>> >
>> > When using that same certificate locally, there's not a problem.
>> >
>> > Any comment would be appreciated,
>> >

>>
>> .
>>
 
Top