Export Azure SSL certificate as pfx file

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夕颜 2021-01-05 02:02

I purchased a wild card certificate from azure. It sits right now in the Key Vault. I need to upload it to our other server which hosts one of our other applications for the

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  •  时光说笑
    2021-01-05 02:44

    You can create a local PFX copy of Azure App Service Certificate using PowerShell.

    Provide appropriate values from the following variables and save the script as copyasc.ps1.

    Variables:

    $appServiceCertificateName = "ascdemo"
    $resourceGroupName = "ascdemorg"
    $azureLoginEmailId = "user@microsoft.com"
    $subscriptionId = "fb2c25dc-6bab-45c4-8cc9-cece7c42a95a"
    

    copyasc.ps1:

    $appServiceCertificateName = ""
    $resourceGroupName = ""
    $azureLoginEmailId = ""
    $subscriptionId = ""
    
    Login-AzureRmAccount
    Set-AzureRmContext -SubscriptionId $subscriptionId
    
    $ascResource = Get-AzureRmResource -ResourceName $appServiceCertificateName -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName -ResourceType "Microsoft.CertificateRegistration/certificateOrders" -ApiVersion "2015-08-01"
    $keyVaultId = ""
    $keyVaultSecretName = ""
    
    $certificateProperties=Get-Member -InputObject $ascResource.Properties.certificates[0] -MemberType NoteProperty
    $certificateName = $certificateProperties[0].Name
    $keyVaultId = $ascResource.Properties.certificates[0].$certificateName.KeyVaultId
    $keyVaultSecretName = $ascResource.Properties.certificates[0].$certificateName.KeyVaultSecretName
    
    $keyVaultIdParts = $keyVaultId.Split("/")
    $keyVaultName = $keyVaultIdParts[$keyVaultIdParts.Length - 1]
    $keyVaultResourceGroupName = $keyVaultIdParts[$keyVaultIdParts.Length - 5]
    Set-AzureRmKeyVaultAccessPolicy -ResourceGroupName $keyVaultResourceGroupName -VaultName $keyVaultName -UserPrincipalName $azureLoginEmailId -PermissionsToSecrets get
    $secret = Get-AzureKeyVaultSecret -VaultName $keyVaultName -Name $keyVaultSecretName
    $pfxCertObject=New-Object System.Security.Cryptography.X509Certificates.X509Certificate2 -ArgumentList @([Convert]::FromBase64String($secret.SecretValueText),"", [System.Security.Cryptography.X509Certificates.X509KeyStorageFlags]::Exportable)
    $pfxPassword = -join ((65..90) + (97..122) + (48..57) | Get-Random -Count 50 | % {[char]$_})
    $currentDirectory = (Get-Location -PSProvider FileSystem).ProviderPath
    [Environment]::CurrentDirectory = (Get-Location -PSProvider FileSystem).ProviderPath
    [io.file]::WriteAllBytes(".\appservicecertificate.pfx", $pfxCertObject.Export([System.Security.Cryptography.X509Certificates.X509ContentType]::Pkcs12, $pfxPassword))
    Write-Host "Created an App Service Certificate copy at: $currentDirectory\appservicecertificate.pfx"
    Write-Warning "For security reasons, do not store the PFX password. Use it directly from the console as required."
    Write-Host "PFX password: $pfxPassword"
    

    Type the following commands in PowerShell console to execute the script:

    Powershell –ExecutionPolicy Bypass
    .\copyasc.ps1
    

    You can find more details on Azure App Service Team Blog Creating a local PFX copy of App Service Certificate

    If you have an App Service Certificate that you would like to use outside of Azure App Service ecosystem, then give this a try and let us know how it goes. If you run into any issues, please let us know on the Stackoverflow or on the Azure App Service forum.

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