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I'm writing a function for an installer DLL to verify the Authenticode signature of EXE files already installed on the system.

The function needs to:

A) verify that the signature is valid.
B) verify that the signer is our organization.

Because this is in an installer, and because this needs to run on older Win2k installations, I don't want to rely on CAPICOM.dll, as it may not be on the target system.

The WinVerifyTrust API works great to solve (A).

I need to find a way to compare a known certificate (or properties therein) to the one that signed the EXE in question.

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+1... if anyone can come up with a library that'll do it even on a non-Windows platform I'll be happy. I'd like to be able to check an .EXE is Microsoft-signed from inside Linux. – bobince Nov 19 '08 at 13:12

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You should use CryptQueryObject.

This KB-article demonstrates the use: How To Get Information from Authenticode Signed Executables.

To the commenter that asked about how to do it without the Windows-APIs, I am not aware of any library that can do it, but the format is documented here: Windows Authenticode Portable Executable Signature Format

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cheers for the doc, guess I'll have to do it the long way round... – bobince Jan 12 at 23:36
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If the signature is valid, its certificate chain will contain your certificate. CertGetCertificateChain will get that chain.

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Do you mean that the WINTRUST_DATA structure contains the certificate? Or perhaps CertGetCertificateChain can be used on a file directly - I just can't figure out how. I must be missing something obvious. Thanks in advance for more details. – Brian Gillespie Nov 20 '08 at 23:38

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