I need to programatically create the equivalant keys in a .NET application...

makecert -r -pe -a sha1 -n "CN=MyName" -ss my -sr CurrentUser -sky exchange

makecert -r -pe -a sha1 -n "CN=MyName" -ss my -sr CurrentUser -sky signature

The output will ultimately be used like this:

RSACryptoServiceProvider privateKey = new RSACryptoServiceProvider();         
privateKey.FromXmlString("<RSAKeyValue>
<Modulus>wL8s+C8SnnlaaqR+VsyijmxOJOARNa4o7ZNsqfy3+9J9Ol2JNSjjMfQWoUnFtClzJBlZhU5KtuazQe8ZKXTX9YvKoJdRhlsonZkC04qiTMdO/FZIH00GrCRxeQ7XDnQnvPB9Bdsvs//7zrY3f7eLIkpIyK9cQHU+5jjJd5IT0eE=</Modulus>
<Exponent>AQAB</Exponent>
<P>83xxN7jvpg5z16pxz2tIQIdqd/EfmikR9Q2TjG2tosWkUSvtyx0xHZ9EqdTUbSGZZ+jgrabzkafYc7Mplylwew==</P>
<Q>yqcnYSZEXHwJvRWi2V09PNEENTozQZywcFptUUGar9TciaQvoNv3lpnfzUKNBRdhzq4lImxkamajZlTWE5buUw==</Q>
<DP>37HqilkbwyHwB6mOGhPkM3S1ujAK6qTk3JB2iEOTjMGrru9+7maJYz+Z47Wm3ARMXgyzrpZ9m8nqsJFfmoL11Q==</DP>
<DQ>v285tv8kMs2FkZYfuP/oOkwkkneBNejjj68Md2bmzlThZDCyQV2pvB1tmgPVHUsiPNCrCaKlFRISJzfa5rR8Ow==</DQ>
<InverseQ>fgJE2TRe/SS+YqW0/I+FtHrdfbbao0/R3pHD4r4oceZQUemlBgZ7DxOAetebHKthlOdjGkmfWYB8EU4XoWggqw==</InverseQ>
<D>FMLCwjy3wbAKiCANp6XFAJgz1o7365NFv0k41BpvasViTa4TgFFWH2ROJ7M9g0lPqJy+YrhrHcY9mqV5TVjTheQp0JeckrgO2B39XngPMAMMdne3rWGpf0Pfbj3FLfchMk6XYDXSZzCS2CmSeRA4aBMb+4R3YurixyJLrnGRMH0=</D>
</RSAKeyValue>");         
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74% accept rate
makecert creates a keypair and an X509 certificate. It looks like you are only using the keypair. Do you need the certificate? – GregS Apr 14 '11 at 23:10
@GregS I thought an X509 was the public cert, and the pks file is the pair (protected by a password). The word keypair is throwing me off... – makerofthings7 Apr 14 '11 at 23:53
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