I see that this post and the answers are from a couple years ago. Now that it is possible to add an SSL certificate to Azure for a custom domain, I thought it would be useful to post a full solution here.
The MSDN blog post that I have followed to install a GoDaddy certificate on Windows Azure site is Avkash Chauhan's Complete Solution: Adding SSL Certificate with Windows Azure Application . He doesn't detail the Certificate Authority part, but I added steps below referring to how it is done on GoDaddy. His blog and another he links to have great detail about the whole rest of the process. My summary of all the steps is:
- Purchase your SSL credit at GoDaddy
- Use the credit to create or renew your SSL Certificate on GoDaddy. As part of the creation process, GoDaddy will ask you for your Certificate Signing Request (CSR). The CSR should be created on your LOCAL IIS server, as follows
- In your local IIS 7 Manager, go to Server Certificates and choose Create Certificate Request... on the right. This is where you specify your domain name and details, including the encryption strength. Choose 2048-bit or higher. And RSA as the Cryptographic Provider
- Once the CSR file is created, paste the contents into the GoDaddy creation form. It will take 5 to 10 minutes for the certificate creation to complete.
- Download the certificate as a .zip file and save to your computer
- Go to IIS 7 Manager again and choose Complete Certificate Request... It will ask you to browse to a *.cer file. Actually, you should use the . filter and browse to the *.crt file that was in your .zip file. Give it a friendly name like MyDomainSSL2015
- Now that the certificate is created, highlight it and choose Export to export it to a .pfx file. At this point you will also give the exported file a password.
- (The next few steps come from another MSDN post by William Bellamy, linked to in the other post I referenced) Log in to Windows Azure, go to Manage the service where you want to install the certificate, and choose Certificates tab
- Click "Upload" at the bottom. It will ask you to browse to your .pfx file and enter the password that you created
- Now that your certificate is uploaded to Azure, you still must specify that you want your Role to use it. This can be done in Visual Studio. So open your Visual Studio project
- Right click on your role and choose Properties. Go to the Certificates tab
- Click Add Certificate. A new line will be created in the grid. Make sure that LocalMachine is selected for the Store Location and CA for Store Name (though My seems to work too).
- Click the ellipses in the Thumbprint column. This will show you a list of all your local certificates. Choose the one with the Friendly Name that you created earlier
- Go to the Endpoints tab. For your HTTPS Endpoint, choose the SSL Certificate Name that you just added.
- Publish your role
That's it. Again, the two blogs I referenced have some more detail and some screen shots, though some of the screen shots are outdated.