Reputation: 2279
There seems to be a lot of confusing, sometimes conflicting, information with regards to making a .NET HttpListener
HTTPS capable. My understanding is as follows:
One's C# code needs an https
prefix (for example, https://*:8443
) in order for the listener to understand that it needs to service SSL requests at this port.
The actual SSL handshake happens under the covers and is handled by http.sys
(buried somewhere on the Windows machine). The C# code doesn't have to explicitly manage the SSL handshake, because it happens under the covers.
One needs to have a "X.509 trusted certificate" on the httpListener
machine, and somehow that certificate needs to be bound to port 8443 (in this example).
Is my understanding above correct? If not, please educate me.
Regarding X.509 certificates, my understanding is:
makecert
to create an X.509 certificate. This certificate gets stored in the personal store and needs to get moved over to the Trusted Store (this is where the HTTP listener will look). It seems I can use certMgr
to perform the move, or I can use mmc
to effect the move. It seems there is more than one X.509 certificate format (DER
, Base64
, pks
, pswd protected, pks
private, etc.)... Is there a preferred format I should use?Once I get the certificate into the trusted store, I need to bind it to the TCP port. I am on Windows 7: should I be using httpcfg
or netsh
?
Upvotes: 82
Views: 110944
Reputation: 1908
Here are simple steps for getting it working (tested in c#7.0 console application, vs2022, win10)
listener.Prefixes.Add($"https://192.168.1.xxx:4443/");
*or some other ip/port$certs = Get-ChildItem -Path Cert:\LocalMachine\My
foreach ($cert in $certs) {
$thumbprint = $cert.Thumbprint
$appid = [System.Guid]::NewGuid()
Write-Host "Certificate certhash: $thumbprint"
#Write-Host "Application ID (appid): $appid"
}
netsh http add sslcert ipport=0.0.0.0:4443 certhash=xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx appid={xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx}
netsh http delete sslcert ipport=0.0.0.0:4443
"SSL Certificate add failed, Error: 1312 A specified logon session does not exist. It may already have been terminated."
Wrong certhash with netsh command. Try other ones from the returned list.
"The parameter is incorrect."
Don't use ticks or quotes for appid='{...}' in netsh command
"Secure Connection Failed: Error code: Certificate type not approved for application., SEC_ERROR_INADEQUATE_CERT_TYPE"
Used wrong appid taken from powershell list, use another one.
Link to gist https://gist.github.com/unitycoder/ec217d20eecc2dfaf8d316acd8c3c5c5
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 7035
Here are the steps, in detail, that I followed to set up a stand-alone server on Windows, using OpenSSL to create the self-signed certificate for a C# HTTPListener
application. It includes plenty of links, in case you want to do further research.
Create a stand-alone server in .NET via HttpListener
:
var prefixes = {"http://localhost:8080/app/root", "https://localhost:8443/app/root"};
var listener = new HttpListener();
foreach (string s in prefixes)
listener.Prefixes.Add(s);
listener.Start();
Create self-signed certificate:*
openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout key.pem -out cert.pem -days 365
, which will prompt you for the value of each of the certificate's fields on the command line. For the common name, type the domain name (e.g. localhost
)
openssl pkcs12 -inkey bob_key.pem -in bob_cert.cert -export -out bob_pfx.pfx
, so that it can be imported with its key on the target machine.
*For an alternative using makecert
, see Walter's own answer.
Open Certificate Manager for the Local Machine. When you run certmgr.msc
, it opens the Certificate Manager for the current user, which is not what we want here. Instead, run certlm.msc
[Thanks, @Arkane], and if that doesn't work, then:
mmc
Certificates
, and click Add >Computer Account
, and click NextLocal Computer
. Click Finish, then OkayImport the certificate (pfx
) into the Windows Certificate Store on the target machine
In the mmc
window previously opened, drill down to Certificates (Local Computer) > Personal
Right-click on Personal
, then click on All Tasks -> Import...
In the 2nd screen of the dialog that appears, find and import your certificate. You'll have to change the file-type filter to Personal Information Exchange
or All Files
in order to find it
On the next screen, enter the password you chose in step 2.1, and pay close attention to the first check box. This determines how securely your certificate is stored, and also how convenient it is to use
On the last screen, choose Place all certificates in the following store
. Verify that it says Personal
, then click Finish
Repeat the import procedure above for the Trusted Root Certification Authorities
certificates section.
Create the port associations for your application. On Windows Vista and later, use netsh
, as I did. (For Windows XP and earlier, use httpcfg
)
From the administrative command line, type the following to set up the SSL binding* to your app, and the appropriate port. NB: This command is easy to get wrong, because (in PowerShell) the braces need to be escaped. The following PowerShell command will work:
netsh http add sslcert ipport=0.0.0.0:8443 `
certhash=110000000000003ed9cd0c315bbb6dc1c08da5e6 `
appid=`{00112233-4455-6677-8899-AABBCCDDEEFF`}
For cmd.exe
, the following should be used instead:
netsh http add sslcert ipport=0.0.0.0:8443 certhash=110000000000003ed9cd0c315bbb6dc1c08da5e6 appid={00112233-4455-6677-8899-AABBCCDDEEFF}
ipport
parameter will cause the SSL certificate to bind to the port 8443
on every network interface; to bind to a specific interface (only), choose the IP address associated with that network interface.certhash
is simply the certificate thumbprint, with spaces removedappid
is the GUID stored in the Assembly Info of your application. (Sidenote: The netsh
mechanism is evidently a COM interface, judging from this question and its answers)* Microsoft has redirected the SSL Binding link from here to there.
Upvotes: 47
Reputation: 91
The following command generates self-signed certificate for localhost for 10 years, imports it to the local computer storage and displays Thumbprint (certhash) in the output:
powershell -Command "New-SelfSignedCertificate -DnsName localhost -CertStoreLocation cert:\LocalMachine\My -NotAfter (Get-Date).AddYears(10)"
Then you can copy Thumbprint from output and attach the certificate to localhost:443 using netsh.exe, for example:
netsh http add sslcert ipport=localhost:443 certhash=110000000000003ed9cd0c315bbb6dc1c08da5e6 appid={00112233-4455-6677-8899-AABBCCDDEEFF}
Works on Windows 8 or higher. Requires administrator rights.
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 2279
I did a bunch of homework and got this working. The steps to add SSL support for an .NET HttpListener are:
Update C# application code to include the https
prefix. Example:
String[] prefixes = { "http://*:8089/","https://*:8443/" };
That's it from the code aspect.
For the certificate side of things, using the Windows SDK command console or Visual Studio Professional command console
Use makecert.exe
to create a certificate authority. Example:
makecert -n "CN=vMargeCA" -r -sv vMargeCA.pvk vMargeCA.cer
Use makecert.exe
to create an SSL certificate
makecert -sk vMargeSignedByCA -iv vMargeCA.pvk -n "CN=vMargeSignedByCA" -ic vMargeCA.cer vMargeSignedByCA.cer -sr localmachine -ss My
Use MMC GUI to install CA in Trusted Authority store
Bind certificate to IP address:port
and application. Example:
netsh http add sslcert ipport=0.0.0.0:8443 certhash=585947f104b5bce53239f02d1c6fed06832f47dc appid={df8c8073-5a4b-4810-b469-5975a9c95230}
The certhash is the thumbprint from your SSL certificate. You can find this using mmc. The appid is found in Visual Studio...usually in assembly.cs, look for the GUID value.
There may be other ways to accomplish the above, but this worked for me.
Upvotes: 98
Reputation: 303
As making your own self-signed certificates in the answers did not work for me and as the question specifically calls for making a .NET HTTPListener HTTPS capable and asks for any tips/advice, I want to share my approach.
You need a hostname, something like www.made-up.com which needs to point to your WAN IP address (e.g. ask your host provider for instructions) and forward its port, e.g. 443, to your local machine. Don't forget to open that inbound 443 port in your firewall of your local machine.
I used https://letsencrypt.org/. On Windows this not as easy as on Linux, because there isn't any official certbot ACME client for windows. However, you can use https://github.com/Lone-Coder/letsencrypt-win-simple, of which there are also binaries around. However "Currently only IIS is supported". But you can easily trick it to create a certificate on your computer such that you can approach your HTTP listener the SSL way:
I believe you have to take note of the refresh task generated, since I am not sure it will succeed after a few months (you probably have to start IIS again for the certificate to be renewed).
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 499
We can import the certificates using PowerShell and C# (no manual steps required).
For details, see: https://blog.davidchristiansen.com/2016/09/howto-create-self-signed-certificates-with-powershell/
I'm using this code:
/// <summary>
/// Create and install a self-signed certificate for HTTPS use
/// </summary>
private static void CreateInstallCert(int expDate, string password, string issuedBy)
{
// Create/install certificate
using (var powerShell = System.Management.Automation.PowerShell.Create())
{
var notAfter = DateTime.Now.AddYears(expDate).ToLongDateString();
var assemPath = Assembly.GetCallingAssembly().Location;
var fileInfo = new FileInfo(assemPath);
var saveDir = Path.Combine(fileInfo.Directory.FullName, "CertDir");
if (!Directory.Exists(saveDir))
{
Directory.CreateDirectory(saveDir);
}
// This adds certificate to Personal and Intermediate Certification Authority
var rootAuthorityName = "My-RootAuthority";
var rootFriendlyName = "My Root Authority";
var rootAuthorityScript =
$"$rootAuthority = New-SelfSignedCertificate" +
$" -DnsName '{rootAuthorityName}'" +
$" -NotAfter '{notAfter}'" +
$" -CertStoreLocation cert:\\LocalMachine\\My" +
$" -FriendlyName '{rootFriendlyName}'" +
$" -KeyUsage DigitalSignature,CertSign";
powerShell.AddScript(rootAuthorityScript);
// Export CRT file
var rootAuthorityCrtPath = Path.Combine(saveDir, "MyRootAuthority.crt");
var exportAuthorityCrtScript =
$"$rootAuthorityPath = 'cert:\\localMachine\\my\\' + $rootAuthority.thumbprint;" +
$"Export-Certificate" +
$" -Cert $rootAuthorityPath" +
$" -FilePath {rootAuthorityCrtPath}";
powerShell.AddScript(exportAuthorityCrtScript);
// Export PFX file
var rootAuthorityPfxPath = Path.Combine(saveDir, "MyRootAuthority.pfx");
var exportAuthorityPfxScript =
$"$pwd = ConvertTo-SecureString -String '{password}' -Force -AsPlainText;" +
$"Export-PfxCertificate" +
$" -Cert $rootAuthorityPath" +
$" -FilePath '{rootAuthorityPfxPath}'" +
$" -Password $pwd";
powerShell.AddScript(exportAuthorityPfxScript);
// Create the self-signed certificate, signed using the above certificate
var gatewayAuthorityName = "My-Service";
var gatewayFriendlyName = "My Service";
var gatewayAuthorityScript =
$"$rootcert = ( Get-ChildItem -Path $rootAuthorityPath );" +
$"$gatewayCert = New-SelfSignedCertificate" +
$" -DnsName '{gatewayAuthorityName}'" +
$" -NotAfter '{notAfter}'" +
$" -certstorelocation cert:\\localmachine\\my" +
$" -Signer $rootcert" +
$" -FriendlyName '{gatewayFriendlyName}'" +
$" -KeyUsage KeyEncipherment,DigitalSignature";
powerShell.AddScript(gatewayAuthorityScript);
// Export new certificate public key as a CRT file
var myGatewayCrtPath = Path.Combine(saveDir, "MyGatewayAuthority.crt");
var exportCrtScript =
$"$gatewayCertPath = 'cert:\\localMachine\\my\\' + $gatewayCert.thumbprint;" +
$"Export-Certificate" +
$" -Cert $gatewayCertPath" +
$" -FilePath {myGatewayCrtPath}";
powerShell.AddScript(exportCrtScript);
// Export the new certificate as a PFX file
var myGatewayPfxPath = Path.Combine(saveDir, "MyGatewayAuthority.pfx");
var exportPfxScript =
$"Export-PfxCertificate" +
$" -Cert $gatewayCertPath" +
$" -FilePath {myGatewayPfxPath}" +
$" -Password $pwd"; // Use the previous password
powerShell.AddScript(exportPfxScript);
powerShell.Invoke();
}
}
Requires PowerShell 4 or higher.
Upvotes: 7