MCITP MCSE Boot Camp Training

 
  • Do you want to become MCSE /CCNA ?
     
  • Do you want to finish in 2/3 weeks?

 



 
 
 
 


 
 

 

CCNA Training, MCSE Training, A+ Certification, MCSA, CCNP, Network+, Security+, CISSP, MCSD, CCSP,

MCSE Bootcamp Training - Cheapest, Fast, Guaranteed MCSE certification

 

MCSE Boot Camp, CCNA Bootcamps, CCNP Boot camp Certification Training
 
Free MCSE
Free MCSE Training
MCSE
MCSE 2003
MCSE Books
MCSE Boot Camp
MCSE Brain dumps
MCSE Certification
MCSE Exam
MCSE Free
MCSE Jobs
MCSE Logo
MCSE Online
MCSE Online Training
MCSE Practice
MCSE Practice Exams
MCSE Practice Tests
MCSE Requirements
MCSE Resume
MCSE Salary
MCSE Self Paced Training Kit
MCSE Study
MCSE Study Guide
MCSE Study Guides
MCSE Test
MCSE Testing
MCSE Training
MCSE Training Kit
MCSE Training Video
MCSE Windows 2003
Microsoft MCSE Training
Training MCSE
Windows 2003 MCSE

 

 

Configure SSL

To configure SSL for your website on IIS 6.0 (running on Windows Server 2003) complete the following steps:

Note: Although the screenshots are made with IIS 6.0 on Windows Server 2003, the same procedure applies for IIS 5.0 and IIS 5.1.

  1. Click Start, point to All Programs, point to Administrative Tools, and then click Internet Information Services (IIS) Manager.
  2. In Internet Services Manager, in the console tree, expand SERVERNAME (your local computer), and then expand Web Sites.
  3. In the console tree, right-click Default Web Site, and then click Properties.

Note: It's possible that the site you've created was stored under a different virtual server. If your website is not stored within the Default Web Site, right-click your own web site and click Properties.

 

  1. In the Default Web Site Properties dialog box, click Directory Security.

 

  1. On the Directory Security tab, click Server Certificate.
  2. In the Welcome to the Web Server Certificate Wizard, on the Welcome page, click Next.
  3. On the Server Certificate page, verify that Create a new certificate is selected, and then click Next.

 

  1. On the Delayed or Immediate Request page, click Send the request immediately to an online certification authority, and then click Next.

 

Note: If you don't have a Certificate Authority (CA) installed on your server or on a different server on the network you can prepare the request but you'll need to manually send it to the CA.

  1. On the Name and Security Settings page, in the Name box, type yourservername.domainname.com (or .net, .org, .mil etc. Use your own registered domain name, the one you want people to use when browsing to your site) and then click Next.

 

Note: You will need a different certificate for each website you'll run on this server, so make sure you provide the exact server URL.

Important note - Internet use: You must make sure that either the Name or the Common Name fields (one of them or both of them) exactly match the external FQDN of the website. For example, if your server's NetBIOS name is SERVER1, and it is located in the MYINTERNALDOM.LOCAL domain, but it will host a website that will require users to enter WWW.KUKU.CO.IL to reach it, you must then use WWW.KUKU.CO.IL as the Name or Common Name in the certificate request wizard, and DO NOT use SERVER1.MYINTERNALDOM.LOCAL.

Important note - Intranet use: For Intranet-only purposes you CAN use the internal FQDN of the server, or even just it's NetBIOS name. For example, if your server's NetBIOS name is SERVER1, and it is located in the MYINTERNALDOM.LOCAL domain, you can use SERVER1.MYINTERNALDOM.LOCAL or just SERVER1 for the Name or the Common Name fields.

You can also change the Bit Length for the encryption key if you want.

  1. On the Organization Information page, in the Organization box, type your own company name. In the Organizational Unit box, type a descriptive name and then click Next.

 

  1. On the Your Sites Common Name page, in the Common name box, type yourservername.domainname.com (see important note in step #9) and then click Next.

 

  1. On the Geographical Information page, in the State/province box, type the required info and then click Next.

 

  1. On the SSL Port page, in the SSL port this web site should use box, verify that 443 is specified, and then click Next.

 

Note: SSL can only listen once on port 443, requiring you to either select a different SSL port for each SSL protected website you're about to host on the server, or, even better, use a different static IP for each site, and share port 443 amongst them.

  1. On the Choose a Certification Authority page, in the Certification Authorities box, verify that your online CA is selected, and then click Next.

 

  1. On the Certificate Request Submission page, click Next to submit the request, and then click Finish to complete the wizard.

 


© Vibrant Worldwide Inc.
RHCE Redhat Certification training | MCITP Boot Camp