52

I'm trying to create a certificate using the BouncyCastle.Crypto dll, which is then used to authenticate a SslStream as the server in a Windows Service process, which runs under the Local System account.

However when I get to the SslStream.AuthenticateAsServer(certificate) call, it throws a Win32 exception with the error message "The credentials supplied to the package were not recognized".

There are several questions on here about this error message, but none of them seem to describe, or solve, my particular problem.

In the hope that someone may be able to offer some help, I include the code I am using to create and install the certificate:

// First create a certificate using the BouncyCastle classes
BigInteger serialNumber = BigInteger.ProbablePrime(120, new Random());
AsymmetricCipherKeyPair keyPair = GenerateKeyPair();

X509V1CertificateGenerator generator = new X509V1CertificateGenerator();
generator.SetSerialNumber(serialNumber);
generator.SetIssuerDN(new X509Name("CN=My Issuer"));
generator.SetNotBefore(DateTime.Today);
generator.SetNotAfter(DateTime.Today.AddYears(100));
generator.SetSubjectDN(new X509Name("CN=My Issuer"));
generator.SetPublicKey(keyPair.Public);
generator.SetSignatureAlgorithm("SHA1WITHRSA");

Org.BouncyCastle.X509.X509Certificate cert = generator.Generate(
    keyPair.Private, SecureRandom.GetInstance("SHA1PRNG"));

// Ok, now we have a BouncyCastle certificate, we need to convert it to the 
// System.Security.Cryptography class, by writing it out to disk and reloading
X509Certificate2 dotNetCert;

string tempStorePassword = "Password01"; // In real life I'd use a random password
FileInfo tempStoreFile = new FileInfo(Path.GetTempFileName());

try
{
    Pkcs12Store newStore = new Pkcs12Store();

    X509CertificateEntry entry = new X509CertificateEntry(cert);

    newStore.SetCertificateEntry(Environment.MachineName, entry);

    newStore.SetKeyEntry(
        Environment.MachineName,
        new AsymmetricKeyEntry(keyPair.Private),
        new [] { entry });

    using (FileStream s = tempStoreFile.Create())
    {
        newStore.Save(s, 
            tempStorePassword.ToCharArray(), 
            new SecureRandom(new CryptoApiRandomGenerator()));
    }

    // Reload the certificate from disk
    dotNetCert = new X509Certificate2(tempStoreFile.FullName, tempStorePassword);
}
finally
{
    tempStoreFile.Delete();
}

// Now install it into the required certificate stores
X509Store targetStore = new X509Store(StoreName.My, StoreLocation.LocalMachine);
targetStore.Open(OpenFlags.ReadWrite);
targetStore.Add(dotNetCert);
targetStore.Close();

Ok, now I have created and installed the certificate. I then configure my Windows Service to use this certificate by supplying it with the generated certificate's thumbprint. I then use the certificate like this:

// First load the certificate
X509Certificate2 certificate = null;

X509Store store = new X509Store(StoreName.My, StoreLocation.LocalMachine);
store.Open(OpenFlags.ReadOnly);

foreach (X509Certificate2 certInStore in store.Certificates)
{
    if (certInStore.Thumbprint == "...value not shown...")
    {
        certificate = certInStore;
        break;
    }
}

SslStream sslStream = new SslStream(new NetworkStream(socket, false), false);

// Now this line throws a Win32Exception 
// "The credentials supplied to the package were not recognized"
sslStream.AuthenticateAsServer(certificate);

Does anyone have any idea what the problem could be here?

I don't get the problem if I install a certificate created with 'makecert', but that isn't suitable for production certificates.

I've also tried creating a separate x509v1 CA certificate and then x509v3 certificate for server authentication, but I get the same error, so I removed this in the example code for simplicity.

11 Answers 11

104

That particular error message rings a bell. I'll guess that either you did not store the private key with the certificate, or, the Windows service does not have access to the private key. To check this, open the Certificates MMC snap-in:

  1. Run mmc (e.g. from the Start menu)
  2. File menu > Add/Remove Snap-in
  3. Select "Certificates" in left pane and then click Add
  4. Select "Computer Account" (for LocalMachine) then click Next, and then Finish

Navigate to the certificate and double-click in the right pane. On the General tab that comes up, you should see a little key icon at the bottom, along with the text, "You have a private key that corresponds to this certificate." If not, that's the problem. The private key was not saved.

If the private key is present, click Ok to dismiss this dialog, and then right-click on the certificate in the right pane and select on the pop-up menu: All Tasks > Manage Private Keys. In that dialog, make sure that the Windows account that the service runs under has read access to the private key. If it doesn't, that's the problem.

Edit: Oops, you wrote that the service runs as Local System, so it must be a missing private key, if it is one of these two problems. I'll leave the key access check in my answer anyway, for anybody else that hits this and is not running as Local System.

10
  • 1
    Hmm, I don't think it is one of these problems - I definitely have a private key corresponding to the certificate (I can see the icon and text you describe). I tried going into the "Manage Private Keys" dialog and granting Everyone Full Control for the certificate but I still get the same error.
    – peter reay
    Nov 3, 2011 at 10:19
  • 3
    I just today hit this error (same error message, at least) for a certificate that had a private key showing in the MMC snap-in. I deleted it and re-imported it from the snap-in and then it worked. Try deleting the certificate and importing it from a pfx file format using the MMC snap-in, and see if that avoids the error.
    – Jim Flood
    Nov 11, 2011 at 2:54
  • 11
    +1 for "All Tasks > Manage Private Keys" (and choosing IIS_IUSRS).
    – EthanB
    Aug 10, 2013 at 0:04
  • 2
    Those first 4 steps can be achieved by pressing the Windows key and typing "Manage computer certificates" or enough characters for the option to show up, and then pressing Enter Dec 12, 2019 at 11:23
  • 2
    Almost nine years later, and this answer is still spot on! (read access to private key was missing)
    – Berend
    Aug 12, 2020 at 8:48
44

Sometime the problem happens when the application try to reach the certificate doesn't have enough privilege to access the certificate, the issue may resolve by running the application as administrator.

3
  • 1
    Wish I could upvote this twice, this burnt me a few months back, and burnt me again today, and this answer helped on both occasions.
    – Sully
    Aug 17, 2017 at 20:36
  • 2
    This is exactly correct in my case: Start Visual Studio in Admin mode =) Should be awarded correct answer ;-)
    – Ted
    Sep 25, 2019 at 9:34
  • Or make sure the terminal you run dotnet run from is started as administrator.
    – Lavamantis
    Dec 11, 2019 at 22:49
23

I've the same issue, tried everything from many posts, and google researching. But looks like I found fix. When I changed Identify from ApplicationPoolIdentity to LocalSystem everything start working perfectly.

May be will be helpful for someone.

1
  • 1
    It's applicable if you're using IIS. BTW, seek the Identify property in the Advanced Settings of the pool (official docs)
    – Alex Klaus
    Sep 16, 2019 at 23:30
10

For me works on Windows Server 2012 R2 (.net 4.6.1) - "All Tasks > Manage Private Keys" and set access to Everyone (setting to IS_IUSRS was not enough)

2
  • FYI, your "not enough" tip was enough for me. :) I right-clicked on my certificate > All Tasks > Manage Private Keys, and added the "IS_IUSRS" group you mentioned and it started working for me. Feb 16, 2022 at 1:05
  • Thanks ! That was exactly my issue. I added the user running the windows service which was using the certificate Mar 25, 2022 at 15:32
8

Found this solution online but I can't find the source to give the credit.

Since I ran into the "The credentials supplied to the package were not recognized" problem with AuthenticateAsClient() (for client verification), I'd like to document how I solved it. It's a different method with the same end goal. Since it might be useful for AuthenticateAsServer(), figured why not.

Here I convert a BC Certificate to a .NET certificate. Add an extra step in converting it to a .NET X509Certificate2 to store it's PrivateKey property.

Org.BouncyCastle.X509.X509Certificate bcCert;

X509Certificate dotNetCert = DotNetUtilities.ToX509Certificate(bcCert);
X509Certificate2 dotNetCert2 = new X509Certificate2(dotNetCert);

Problem showed up when adding a BouncyCastle private key to a .NET private key. The X509 certificates converted fine but not the private keys. I converted the BC private key to RSACryptoServiceProvider using the provided DotNetUtilities. Unfortunately it looks like the conversion isn't complete. So I created another RSACryptoServiceProvider which I then initialized. Then I imported the private key into the one I created.

// Apparently, using DotNetUtilities to convert the private key is a little iffy. Have to do some init up front.
RSACryptoServiceProvider tempRcsp = (RSACryptoServiceProvider)DotNetUtilities.ToRSA((RsaPrivateCrtKeyParameters)ackp.Private);
RSACryptoServiceProvider rcsp = new RSACryptoServiceProvider(new CspParameters(1, "Microsoft Strong Cryptographic Provider", 
            new Guid().ToString(), 
            new CryptoKeySecurity(), null));

rcsp.ImportCspBlob(tempRcsp.ExportCspBlob(true));
dotNetCert2.PrivateKey = rcsp;

After that, I was able to save the X509Certificate2 object directly to the key store. I didn't need the actual file so I skipped that step.

2
  • This answer was hugely helpful to me. Not sure why the DotNetUtilities conversion isn't working quite right, but this solved my problem with the same error! Thanks! Oct 18, 2012 at 18:23
  • I think you mean Guid.NewGuid().ToString(), otherwise all of the containers will have the same name (Guid.Empty), leading to the problem of keys being overwritten. At least it does if you also specify Flags = CspProviderFlags.UseMachineKeyStore on the CspParameters object. Ask me how I know! Jul 17, 2021 at 0:12
7

If you running from IIS, ensure that the Application Pool has 'Load User Profile' set to true. This was the only solution for me.

1
2

Previously, every time I have run into this issue, I have had to delete the cert out of my local machine cert store and re-import it. Then it all seems happy. I can't see how it could be a global permissions issue or invalid cert if simply re-importing it fixes the issue.

How I finally fixed it was using the winhttpcertcfg tool from the Windows Resource Kit to grant permission to the specific user that was using the cert.

The syntax would be:

"C:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Resource Kits\Tools\winhttpcertcfg" -i cert.p12 -c LOCAL_MACHINE\My -a UserWhoUsesTheCert -p passwordforp12
2

I had the similar issue when calling a WCF REST service from .NET application where I need to attach the client certificate; All I had to do was provide access to the certificate in cert store[mmc console] to the "NETWORKSERVICE] off course my IIS Pool was default pool which indicates its using NETWORKService user account.

the mistake that I did was, I copied the cert from another store to Local Machine -> Personnel store where the certificate was protected with password. should import the certificate explicitly in required store.

0

I don't recall this error but the certificate you're creating is not a valid to be used for SSL/TLS, including:

  • v1 (not v3) certificate;
  • missing extensions;
  • invalid CN;
  • ...

There are several RFC that talks about this, including RFC5246 on TLS (1.2).

Finally making your own certificates is not more suitable than using the ones made by makecert (but the last one can generate the minimum set to be usable for an SSL/TLS server certificate).

I strongly suggest you to buy, from a good known Certificate Authority (CA), a SSL/TLS certificate for production. That will get you a working certificate recognized by the most browsers and tools.

5
  • I tried changing my v1 certificate generator to a v3 version, but to no avail. Buying a certificate isn't possible for us - we are going to generate a certificate at install-time for our service. Obviously it won't have a trusted certification path, but still allows us to encrypt our data as it is transferred.
    – peter reay
    Nov 3, 2011 at 10:23
  • i don't suppose you could supply any more detail on what you mean by 'missing extensions' and 'invalid CN'?
    – peter reay
    Nov 3, 2011 at 10:54
  • That falls in the "can write a book about" (see FAQ) category ;-) You can have a minimal guess by looking at the internals of what makecert (or any SSL certificates from web sites) are made. Lots of crap around (sadly) but browsers accept them just as well.
    – poupou
    Nov 3, 2011 at 12:09
  • The TLS RFC isn't concerned with how to verify a certificate. The PKI RFC is. There also a good note about which extensions are useful here: mozilla.org/projects/security/pki/nss/tech-notes/tn3.html
    – Bruno
    Nov 3, 2011 at 13:26
  • For what should be in the subjectAltName or CN, check this: tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6125
    – Bruno
    Nov 3, 2011 at 13:32
0

Another reason for this error is that you ran the application / server under an account which password has changed, breaking its capability of accessing the certificate it wants to use in the certificate store.

This especially may not be as obvious if you use a NuGet package like LettuceEncrypt which automatically stores the LetsEncrypt in your store.

Delete the certificate from your store and reimport it.

0

I also experienced this error because of a bad automation of the certificate import.

In my case, I was missing the X509KeyStorageFlags.MachineKeySet flag which indicates that the private key should be stored in the local computer store rather than in the current user store. When this flag is omitted, current user store is used for the private key even if target certificate store is local computer store.

void ImportP12ToWindowsStore(string p12FilePath, string pwd)
{
    using var store = new X509Store(StoreName.My, StoreLocation.LocalMachine);
    store.Open(OpenFlags.ReadWrite);

    var certs = new X509Certificate2Collection();
    certs.Import(p12FilePath, pwd, X509KeyStorageFlags.PersistKeySet | X509KeyStorageFlags.MachineKeySet);

    foreach (var cert in certs)
    {
        store.Add(cert);
    }
}

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