I am trying to configure SQL Server 2014 so that I can connect to it remotely using SSL. A valid, wildcard cert is installed on the server, and the cert\'s domain name (example.
After communication in comments I can suppose that your main problem is the CN part of the certificate which you use. To have successful TLS communication for IIS Server one have no such strong restrictions like SQL Server has.
Microsoft require (see here) that The name of the certificate must be the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of the computer. It means that the Subject part of the certificate looks like CN = test.widows-server-test.example.com, where test.widows-server-test.example.com is the FQDN of your computer. It's not enough that you use for example CN = *.example.com and Subject Alternative Name, which contains DNS Name=*.example.com
and DNS Name=test.widows-server-test.example.com
, DNS Name=test1.widows-server-test.example.com
, DNS Name=test.widows-server-test2.example.com
and so on. Such certificate will be OK for TLS, but SQL Server will discard it. See the article, which describes close problems.
I recommend you to create self-signed certificate with CN equal to FQDN of the SQL Server and to verify that the certificate will be seen by SQL Server Configuration Manager.
UPDATED: I analysed the problem a little more with respect of Process Monitor and found out that two values in Registry are important for SQL Server Configuration Manager: the values Hostname
and Domain
under the key
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\Tcpip\Parameters
If I change Domain
and Hostname
to the values which corresponds CN of the certificate then the certificate will be already displayed in the SQL Server Configuration Manager. It could be not all problems, but it shows that SQL Server required much more as a web server (IIS for example).
UPDATED 2: I examined the problem once more in details and I think I did found the way how one can configure common SSL certificate which you already have (for example free SSL certificated from Let's Encrypt, StartSSL or some other).
It's important to distinguished what do SQL Server Configuration Manager from the configuration required by SQL Server. The Certificate tab of the properties of the Configuration Manager have more hard restrictions as SQL Server. I describe above only the restrictions of SQL Server Configuration Manager, but one can make configuration directly in the Registry to use more common SSL/TLS Certificate by SQL Server. I describe below how one can do this.
What one need to do one can in the Registry under the key like HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Microsoft SQL Server\MSSQL12.SQL2014\MSSQLServer\SuperSocketNetLib
, where the part MSSQL12.SQL2014
can be a little different in your case. The SQL Server Configuration Manager help us to set two values in the registry: ForceEncryption
and Certificate
:
The Certificate
value is SHA1 hash which can be found by examining the properties of the certificate:
or extended properties of the certificate, which you see by usage certutil.exe -store My
:
One need just copy the "Cert Hash(sha1)" value, remove all spaces and to place as the value of Certificate
value in the Registry. After making the settings and restarting SQL Server windows service one will see in file ERRORLOG
in C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\...\MSSQL\Log
directory the line like
2016-04-25 21:44:25.89 Server The certificate [Cert Hash(sha1) "C261A7C38759A5AD96AC258B62A308A26DB525AA"] was successfully loaded for encryption.