Where is IIS 10 site certificate binding stored?












0















On IIS 10 it's possible for site bindings to use SNI and indicate which certificate to use. The bindings in applicationHost.config look like this:



<binding protocol="https" bindingInformation="*:443:mydomain.com" sslFlags="1" />


I see the flag that indicates SSL usage, but where is this binding tied to a specific certificate?



The IIS admin panel correctly shows the certificates that I have chosen for each binding, but I can't find this in applicationHost.config. What I'm trying to do is to have two seperate domains for a single https site, but the two domains are supported by two separate certificates. This should work with SNI, and IIS admin panel does not complain about the bindings set up like that, but it doesn't seem to work. One of the bindings (the one I entered last) ends up at the default site as if the client didn't support SNI.



I know a workaround would probably be to define two separate sites, one for each domain.










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    0















    On IIS 10 it's possible for site bindings to use SNI and indicate which certificate to use. The bindings in applicationHost.config look like this:



    <binding protocol="https" bindingInformation="*:443:mydomain.com" sslFlags="1" />


    I see the flag that indicates SSL usage, but where is this binding tied to a specific certificate?



    The IIS admin panel correctly shows the certificates that I have chosen for each binding, but I can't find this in applicationHost.config. What I'm trying to do is to have two seperate domains for a single https site, but the two domains are supported by two separate certificates. This should work with SNI, and IIS admin panel does not complain about the bindings set up like that, but it doesn't seem to work. One of the bindings (the one I entered last) ends up at the default site as if the client didn't support SNI.



    I know a workaround would probably be to define two separate sites, one for each domain.










    share|improve this question



























      0












      0








      0








      On IIS 10 it's possible for site bindings to use SNI and indicate which certificate to use. The bindings in applicationHost.config look like this:



      <binding protocol="https" bindingInformation="*:443:mydomain.com" sslFlags="1" />


      I see the flag that indicates SSL usage, but where is this binding tied to a specific certificate?



      The IIS admin panel correctly shows the certificates that I have chosen for each binding, but I can't find this in applicationHost.config. What I'm trying to do is to have two seperate domains for a single https site, but the two domains are supported by two separate certificates. This should work with SNI, and IIS admin panel does not complain about the bindings set up like that, but it doesn't seem to work. One of the bindings (the one I entered last) ends up at the default site as if the client didn't support SNI.



      I know a workaround would probably be to define two separate sites, one for each domain.










      share|improve this question
















      On IIS 10 it's possible for site bindings to use SNI and indicate which certificate to use. The bindings in applicationHost.config look like this:



      <binding protocol="https" bindingInformation="*:443:mydomain.com" sslFlags="1" />


      I see the flag that indicates SSL usage, but where is this binding tied to a specific certificate?



      The IIS admin panel correctly shows the certificates that I have chosen for each binding, but I can't find this in applicationHost.config. What I'm trying to do is to have two seperate domains for a single https site, but the two domains are supported by two separate certificates. This should work with SNI, and IIS admin panel does not complain about the bindings set up like that, but it doesn't seem to work. One of the bindings (the one I entered last) ends up at the default site as if the client didn't support SNI.



      I know a workaround would probably be to define two separate sites, one for each domain.







      ssl certificate iis bindings






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













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      share|improve this question








      edited Jan 9 at 11:41







      Kjell Rilbe

















      asked Jan 9 at 11:25









      Kjell RilbeKjell Rilbe

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      23929






















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