From: Mike on 21 Jun 2010 21:21 Hi folks, SBS 2008 installed this weekend. I purchased a certificate from godaddy and when through the wizard during setup to request/install it. It seemed to go OK. When I finished the entire install of the box, I brought back up the certificate wizard and I had two certificates for remote.domain.com, the one I bought from godaddy and a self-signed one. I assumed SBS created it itself. Now I'm testing things out. OWA and RWW work, with certificate error, when I view the certificate, it's the self-signed one. Outlook anywhere doesn't connect at all, which is what I'm concerned with most. I contact my ISP and had them set up the external DNS record required for autodiscovery. Smart phones are receiving e-mail. What else do I need to do? Can I remove the self signed cert, or will that cause a problem? What do I need to check? Thanks for any advice. Mike
From: Cliff Galiher - MVP on 21 Jun 2010 21:29 If you completed the wizard then the GoDaddy certificate should have been installed properly and bound to IIS. Did you install the intermediate certificate chain from GoDaddy as their site explains? -- Cliff Galiher Microsoft has opened the Small Business Server forum on Technet! Check it out! http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-us/smallbusinessserver/threads Addicted to newsgroups? Read about the NNTP Bridge for MS Forums.
From: Mike on 22 Jun 2010 07:41 Cliff, Thanks for the reply. Yes, I followed it to the letter including the intermediate file, and it installed successfully. No where did I tell it to create a self-signed one, does it auto-create? Can I manually bind the proper one to IIS? Thanks, Mike "Cliff Galiher - MVP" wrote: > If you completed the wizard then the GoDaddy certificate should have been > installed properly and bound to IIS. > > Did you install the intermediate certificate chain from GoDaddy as their > site explains? > > -- > Cliff Galiher > Microsoft has opened the Small Business Server forum on Technet! Check it > out! > http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-us/smallbusinessserver/threads > Addicted to newsgroups? Read about the NNTP Bridge for MS Forums. >
From: Cliff Galiher - MVP on 22 Jun 2010 19:07 Yes, the self-signed cert is created when you run the IAMW. So it isn't uncommon to see a self-signed cert in the certificates store. The wizard installs the new cert and updates the sites as appropriate. Re-run the "Add a Trusted Certificate" wizard. The first choice there is to use an existing certificate on the server. You should be able to view and select the GoDaddy issued cert and the wizard will do the rest of the IIS configuration for you. -- Cliff Galiher Microsoft has opened the Small Business Server forum on Technet! Check it out! http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-us/smallbusinessserver/threads Addicted to newsgroups? Read about the NNTP Bridge for MS Forums.
From: "Robbin Meng [MSFT]" on 24 Jun 2010 05:12 Hello Mike, Thanks for your post and Cliff's input. If you are using Outlook 2007 to access your e-mail messages, Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 and Outlook 2007 should automatically configure all settings after you enter your e-mail address when you are creating your e-mail profile. (Outlook uses e-mail profiles to remember which e-mail accounts you use and where the data for each account is stored.) For detailed information about installing the self-signed certificate on a computer, open your organization's Internal Web site, and then under Announcements, click Install the server's security certificate on your remote computer. If you are using Outlook 2003 to access your e-mail messages, you should manually configure the Outlook settings. For step-by-step instructions for configuring Outlook Anywhere, in Remote Web Workplace, click "How do I use Outlook Anywhere?" It's important to use the Trusted Certificate wizard for the last step, to ensure that the certificate is bound to the correct IIS website, as well as TSGateway for remote desktop access. For detailed steps, please refer to below two articles: Installing a GoDaddy Standard SSL Certificate on SBS 2008 http://sbs.seandaniel.com/2009/02/installing-godaddy-standard-ssl.html Using "Outlook Anywhere" in Small Business Server 2008 <http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc794265.aspx> More information: Recommendations for Outlook Anywhere http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa997703(EXCHG.80).aspx Using "Outlook Anywhere" in Small Business Server 2008 <http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc794265.aspx> Configuring Outlook Anywhere to Use Multiple SSL Certificates http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb310762(EXCHG.80).aspx Hope it helps. Best regards, Robbin Meng(MSFT) Microsoft Online Newsgroup Support ================================================================== This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights. ==================================================================
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