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ServiceCredentials.ServiceCertificate Property

Definition

Gets the current certificate associated with this service.

public:
 property System::ServiceModel::Security::X509CertificateRecipientServiceCredential ^ ServiceCertificate { System::ServiceModel::Security::X509CertificateRecipientServiceCredential ^ get(); };
public System.ServiceModel.Security.X509CertificateRecipientServiceCredential ServiceCertificate { get; }
member this.ServiceCertificate : System.ServiceModel.Security.X509CertificateRecipientServiceCredential
Public ReadOnly Property ServiceCertificate As X509CertificateRecipientServiceCredential

Property Value

An X509CertificateRecipientServiceCredential instance.

Examples

This code shows how to specify the certificate that a service uses.

A ServiceHost class is created, followed by a single complex code statement that does the following:

Uri a = new Uri("net.tcp://MyMachineName/tcpBase");
Uri[] baseAddresses = new Uri[] { a };
ServiceHost sh = new ServiceHost(typeof(SayHello), baseAddresses);
sh.AddServiceEndpoint(c, b, "Aloha");
sh.Credentials.ServiceCertificate.SetCertificate(
    StoreLocation.LocalMachine,
    StoreName.My,
    X509FindType.FindByThumbprint,
    "af1f50b20cd413ed9cd00c315bbb6dc1c08da5e6");
sh.Open();

Remarks

You can specify the certificate to use by calling members of the X509CertificateRecipientServiceCredential object returned by this property.

You can also set this value using the <certificate> element in a client application configuration file.

Applies to