Docx Tool - Certificate Authority Online

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If you have a few servers you need to do this with, you can just create yourself a CA (Certifying Authority) certificate and load that instead. Then your self-signed certs, signed by your CA cert, will all be accepted without you needing to load each one.
Technically speaking you can create your own SSL certificate (Self Signed) for your domain. Make sure that self-signed certificates will not trusted by browsers and the operating, since there will not be any root certificates.
Expand the Computer Configuration section and open Windows Settings\\Security Settings\\Public Key. Right-click Trusted Root Certification Authorities and select Import. Follow the prompts in the wizard to import the root certificate (for example, root CA. Cer) and click OK.
Create the directories and configuration files for the CA. Create the server's private key and root certificate. Add the root certificate as a trusted certificate on your network. Configure OpenSSL to use the server's private key and certificate to sign certificate requests.
Create Root Key. Create and self sign the Root Certificate. Create the certificate key. Create the signing (CSR) Verify the CSR's content. Generate the certificate using the my domain CSR and key along with the CA Root key. Verify the certificate's content.
Technically Self Sign Certificate means the certificate is signed by the same individual whose identity it certifies. Here, in signing procedure the private key is signed by the owner of the certificate itself (not by trusted Certificate Authority).
Double-click Certificates (Local Computer) Right click on Trusted Root Certification Authorities. Select All Tasks, then Import. Select the new certificate (COMPANYNAME.CER) to place it into Trusted Root Certification Authorities area.
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