Signing my solution with a digital certificate - visual-studio

I have an application developed with Visual Studio 2008 and distributed throught ClickOnce. This application is created especially for one client. The network administrator of this company allows me to install this application only with signed executable with a digital certificate. A policy rule will check for the signed certificate on my executable and block otherwise.
My question: do I need to have both setup.exe (ClickOnce) and mysoft.exe (the application installed by this ClickOnce package) signed with a digital certificate?
Thanks.

Yes, you would need to sign both files, but this is not a problem at all - just another line in the building script.
Note, that you would also need to timestamp the signature. Timestamp server address is specified as a parameter in signtool.exe call. The issuer of the code signing certificate (CA) should provide the address of its timestamping server, but not all CAs have timestamping servers. In any case you can use timestamping servers of large CAs such as Verisign, Comodo or GlobalSign.

Good article how to configure VisualStudio to sign app before ClickOnce publishing: http://www.systenics.com/blog/sign-click-once-applications-with-godaddy-code-signing-certificate-and-visual-studio-2012-for-deployment-over-internet/
Firstly, the setup.exe bootstrap file generated by Visual Studio needs to be signed, then the application and deployment manifests need to be signed and finally the application executable needs to be digitally signed.

Related

Packaging code sign certificate - windows UWP app - not distributed through Microsoft store

Need help on how to package code sign certificate with webapp developed in visual studio.
The application setup/installer will be available for download on public website, so we plan to code sign it so it is smoothly installed on client PC.
(1)
how to package code sign certificate
where to get code sign
certificate at reasonable rate
current focus is windows
platform, in future, we need to prepare installer for other
platforms too (Apple, Linux ... )
You can check comodo code signing certificate

Do I need OV or EV code signing certificate when packaging a classic desktop application for the Windows Store?

I want to add a desktop (WPF) application to the Windows Store using the Desktop Bridge (MakePri, MakeAppx). I have tested my build process using a self-sign certificate and all is well.
However, I cannot find any information stating whether I need an Extended Validation (EV) certificate or if an Organization validated (OV) certificate is sufficient. I know an OV certificate can cause SmartScreen warnings for installer .msi packages.
I also found old links (relating to Windows 8 apps) which say that the store does not use SmartScreen. But I cannot find anything relating to Windows 10 desktop apps packaged via the Desktop Bridge.
Will an OV certificate cause SmartScreen warnings when my converted application is downloaded from the store?
You don't need to use a valid certificate to publish your app to the Store. You just need to sign it with a test certificate. When you upload it to dev. center, it will be signed by Microsoft to be distributed through the Store.
I couldn't find a documentation that clarifies this, just saying it by my own experience. There are some notes here:
To test your app in a realistic setting as you prepare for
distribution, it's best to sign your app and then install it.
Visual Studio signs your app by using a test certificate. You'll find
that certificate in the output folder that the Create App Packages
wizard generates. The certificate file has the .cer extension and
you'll have to install that certificate into the Trusted Root
Certification Authorities store on the PC that you want to test your
app on.
Also if you use the new update of Visual Studio, you can create Desktop Bridge apps and publish them to the Store entirely through Visual Studio using the Windows Application Package project. It means you don't need to manually pack and sign it, VS does it for you.
Edit
Your users do not see an Smart Screen anyways. It makes sense since your app cannot run with administrator privileges. If your app needs a functionality that requires admin privileges, you need to consider it before moving forward.

Certificate is not trusted. Application's installer sometimes works correctly and others fails

I have an application in a test environment and when I install it in my computer all work correctly, but when others users installs it some of them works and others fails. When it fails, it displays this error: customized functionality in this application will not work because the certificate used to sign the deployment manifest for appname o its locations is not trusted. Contact your administrators for further assistance.
In addition, I created a test certificate, using visual studio 2015, to sing the application. The application is an add-in using VSTO.
The app is downloaded from a web server into my company, also it uses two web services.
Here is a photo of the error
Get a proper certificate or install the certificate you used onto the computers that you want this app to trust. The whole concept of having to sign the cert is to prevent accidental installations of untrusted applications. In order for that to work the machines you're installing to need to first trust the cert.
You will need a Code Signing certificate and sign the Click-Once package using that cert. You may still need to distribute the trusted cert to the machines somehow (depending on how those are setup).

Difference between package signing and code signing

Using VS2013 and Windows 8.1
I have a .cer and .pfx file bought from Verisign. I am new to store apps. I have couple of questions
What is the difference between signing the package and code signing (done using the VS 2013 packaging tab of Package.appxmanifest) -
my understanding so far
(a) I guess this is similar to using signtool.exe tool right?
(b) both will install the public key(.cer) to certificate store(mmc) and sign the appx with private key(.pfx) so i would need to manually install .cer file in the live machines inorder to install my app?
(c) Code is signing is done in order to ensure the code has not been tampered with but do we need to do this for all main store app and other components used part of dfferent project (.dll)
Do we need both package and code signing inorder to publish store apps on client machine?
I can't use the same .pfx used for package signing for code signing because of some chaining information. Is this how it is supposed to used different .pfx for both is this a normal way?
For the regular Windows Store apps:
You don't need to sign windows store apps manually.
No. Windows Store will sign the package automatically.
Code signing is for Windows Classic apps or drivers and not for Windows Store apps.
For the sideloaded apps:
Windows store enterprise apps can be signed by any certification authority that is trusted on your PCs (where the app will be installed). It's better to sign with visual studio. There is documantation for an exact procedure.
If you will sign with Verisign certificate, you don't need to install anything except the app, because verisign root is already trusted in Windows. Visual studio signs only application package.

Setup Project in Visual Studio 2010 : Unknown Publisher?

I have a VS 2008 Setup Project created. I am trying to install this on a Windows 7 machine as a Standard User. I am getting a warning during install about an unknown publisher. I have used makecert to create a certificate, then converted it to a password pfx file. I have digitally signed the msi and setup.exe with the pfx file. When I go into the file properties, I can see the digital certificate attached. On the Windows 7 machine, I imported the pfx file to "Trusted Publishers". What do I need to do to get rid of the warning? I can't have the admin user and password required to install the app. I can't change the UAC settings. I need to make the change to the certificate / setup files to get this to work.
Makecert creates certificates only for testing purposes. To sign your installer you need a real certificate purchased from an official authority. You can try purchasing one from Verisign or Comodo.
Windows UAC recognizes only real certificates.

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