How to decommission a Windows enterprise certification authority and how to remove all related objects from Windows Server 2003 and from Windows Server 2000
When you uninstall a certification authority (CA), the certificates that were issued by the CA are typically still outstanding. If the outstanding certificates are processed by the various Public Key Infrastructure client computers, validation will fail, and those certificates will not be used.
This article describes how to revoke outstanding certificates and how to complete various other tasks that are required to successfully uninstall a CA. Additionally, this article describes several utilities that you can use to help you remove CA objects from your domain.
This step-by-step article describes how to decommission a
Microsoft Windows enterprise CA, and how to remove all related objects from the
Active Directory directory service.
Step 1: Revoke all active certificates that are issued by the enterprise CA
Click Start, point to
Administrative Tools, and then click Certification
Authority.
Expand your CA, and then click the Issued
Certificates folder.
In the right pane, click one of the issued certificates,
and then press CTRL+A to select all issued certificates.
Right-click the selected certificates, click All
Tasks, and then click Revoke Certificate.
In the Certificate Revocation dialog box,
click to select Cease of Operation as the reason for
revocation, and then click OK.
Step 2: Increase the CRL publication interval
In the Certification Authority Microsoft Management Console
(MMC) snap-in, right-click the Revoked Certificates folder,
and then click Properties.
In the CRL Publication Interval box, type
a suitably long value, and then click OK.
Note The lifetime of the Certificate Revocation List (CRL) should be
longer than the lifetime that remains for certificates that have been
revoked.
Step 3: Publish a new CRL
In the Certification Authority MMC snap-in, right-click the
Revoked Certificates folder.
Click All Tasks, and then click
Publish.
In the Publish CRL dialog box, click
New CRL, and then click OK.
Step 4: Deny any pending requests
By default, an enterprise CA does not store certificate requests.
However, an administrator can change this default behavior. To deny any pending
certificate requests, follow these steps:
In the Certification Authority MMC snap-in, click the
Pending Requests folder.
In the right pane, click one of the pending requests, and
then press CTRL+A to select all pending certificates.
Right-click the selected requests, click All
Tasks, and then click Deny Request.
Step 5: Uninstall Certificate Services from the server
To stop Certificate Services, click Start,
click Run, type cmd, and the click
OK.
At the command prompt, type certutil
-shutdown, and then press ENTER.
To list all key stores for the local computer, type
certutil -key at the command prompt. This command will
display the names of all the installed cryptographic service providers (CSP)
and the key stores that are associated with each provider. Among the listed key
stores, you will see the name of your CA listed several times, as shown in the
following example.
(1)Microsoft Base Cryptographic Provider v1.0:
1a3b2f44-2540-408b-8867-51bd6b6ed413
MS IIS DCOM ClientSYSTEMS-1-5-18
MS IIS DCOM Server
Windows2000 Enterprise Root CA
MS IIS DCOM ClientAdministratorS-1-5-21-436374069-839522115-1060284298-500
afd1bc0a-a93c-4a31-8056-c0b9ca632896
Microsoft Internet Information Server
NetMon
MS IIS DCOM ClientAdministratorS-1-5-21-842925246-1715567821-839522115-500
(5)Microsoft Enhanced Cryptographic Provider v1.0:
1a3b2f44-2540-408b-8867-51bd6b6ed413
MS IIS DCOM ClientSYSTEMS-1-5-18
MS IIS DCOM Server
Windows2000 Enterprise Root CA
MS IIS DCOM ClientAdministratorS-1-5-21-436374069-839522115-1060284298-500
afd1bc0a-a93c-4a31-8056-c0b9ca632896
Microsoft Internet Information Server
NetMon
MS IIS DCOM ClientAdministratorS-1-5-21-842925246-1715567821-839522115-500
Delete the private key that is associated with the CA. To
do this, type the following at a command prompt:
certutil -delkey CertificateAuthorityName
Note If your CA name contains spaces, enclose the name in quotation
marks.
In this example, the
CertificateAuthorityName is Windows2000 Enterprise
Root CA. Therefore, the command line in this example is the following:
certutil -delkey "Windows2000 Enterprise Root CA"
List the key stores again to verify that the private key
for your CA has been deleted.
After you delete the private key for your CA, uninstall
Certificate Services. To do this, follow these steps:
Close the Certification Authority MMC snap-in if it is
still open.
Click Start, point to Control
Panel, and then click Add or Remove
Programs.
Click Add/Remove Windows
Components.
In the Components box, click to clear
the Certificate Services check box, click
Next, and then follow the instructions in the Windows
Components Wizard to complete the removal of Certificate
Services.
Step 6: Remove CA objects from Active Directory
When Microsoft Certificate Services is installed on a server that
is a member of a domain, several objects are created in the configuration
container in Active Directory.
These objects are the following:
certificateAuthority object
Located in CN=AIA,CN=Public Key
Services,CN=Services,CN=Configuration,DC=ForestRootDomain.
Contains the CA certificate for the CA.
Published Authority Information Access (AIA)
location.
crlDistributionPoint object
Located in
CN=ServerName,CN=CDP,CN=Public Key
Service,CN=Services,CN=Configuration,DC=ForestRoot,DC=com.
Contains the CRL periodically published by the
CA.
Published CRL Distribution Point (CDP)
location
certificationAuthority object
Located in CN=Certification Authorities,CN=Public Key
Services,CN=Services,CN=Configuration,DC=ForestRoot,DC=com.
Contains the CA certificate for the CA.
pKIEnrollmentService object
Located in CN=Enrollment Services,CN=Public Key
Services,CN=Services,CN=Configuration,DC=ForestRoot,DC=com.
Created by the enterprise CA.
Contains information about the types of certificates
the CA has been configured to issue. Permissions on this object can control
which security principals can enroll against this CA.
When the CA is uninstalled, only the pKIEnrollmentService object
is removed. This prevents clients from trying to enroll against the
decommissioned CA. The other objects are retained because certificates that are
issued by the CA are probably still outstanding. These certificates must be
revoked by following the procedure in the "Step 1: Revoke all active
certificates that are issued by the enterprise CA" section.
For
Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) client computers to successfully process these
outstanding certificates, the computers must locate the Authority Information
Access (AIA) and CRL distribution point paths in Active Directory. It is a good
idea to revoke all outstanding certificates, extend the lifetime of the CRL,
and publish the CRL in Active Directory. If the outstanding certificates are
processed by the various PKI clients, validation will fail, and those
certificates will not be used.
If it is not a priority to maintain
the CRL distribution point and AIA in Active Directory, you can remove these
objects. Do not remove these objects if you expect to process one or more of
the formerly active digital certificates.
Remove all Certification
Services objects from Active Directory
Note You should not remove certificate templates from Active Directory until after you remove all CA objects in the Active Directory forest.
To remove all Certification
Services objects from Active Directory, follow these steps:
Determine the CACommonName of the CA. To do this, follow these steps:
Click Start, click Run, type cmd in the Open box, and then click OK.
Type certutil, and then press ENTER.
Make a note of the Name value that belongs to your CA. You will need the CACommonName for later steps in this procedure.
Click Start, point to
Administrative Tools, and then click Active Directory
Sites and Services.
On the View menu, click
Show Services Node.
Expand Services, expand Public Key
Services, and then click the AIA folder.
In the right pane, right-click the
CertificationAuthority object for your CA, click
Delete, and then click Yes.
In the left pane of the Active Directory Sites and Services
MMC snap-in, click the CDP folder.
In the right pane, locate the container object for the
server where Certificate Services is installed. Right-click the container,
click Delete, and then click Yes two times.
In the left pane of the Active Directory Sites and Services
MMC snap-in, click the Certification Authorities
node.
In the right pane, right-click the
CertificationAuthority object for your CA, click
Delete, and then click Yes.
In the left pane of the Active Directory Sites and Services
MMC snap-in, click the Enrollment Services node.
In the right pane, verify that the pKIEnrollmentService
object for your CA was removed when Certificate Services was uninstalled. If
the object is not deleted, right-click the object, click
Delete, and then click Yes.
If you did not locate all the objects, some objects may be left in the Active Directory after you perform these steps. To clean up after a CA that may have left objects in Active Directory, follow these steps to determine whether any AD objects remain:
Type the following command at a command line, and then press ENTER:
In this command, CACommonName represents the Name value that you determined in step 1. For example, if the Name value is "CA1 Contoso," type the following:
Open the remainingCAobjects.ldf file in Notepad. Replace the term "changetype: add" with "changetype: delete."
Then, verify whether the Active Directory objects that you will delete are legitimate.
At a command prompt, type the following command, and then press ENTER to delete the remaining CA objects from Active Directory:
ldifde -i -f remainingCAobjects.ldf
Delete the certificate templates if you are sure that all of the certificate authorities have been deleted. Repeat step 12 to determine whether any AD objects remain.
Important You must not delete the certificate templates unless all the certificate authorities have been deleted. If the templates are accidentally deleted, follow these steps:
Make sure that you are
logged on to a server that is running Certificate Services as Enterprise
administrator.
At a command prompt, type the following command, and then press ENTER:
cd
%windir%\system32
Type the following command, and then press ENTER:
regsvr32 /i:i /n /s
certcli.dll
This action re-creates the
certificate templates in Active Directory.
To delete the certificate templates, follow these steps.
In the left pane of the "Active Directory Sites and Services"
MMC snap-in, click the Certificate Templates
folder.
In the right pane, click a certificate template, and then
press CTRL+A to select all templates. Right-click the selected templates, click
Delete, and then click Yes.
Step 7: Delete certificates published to the NtAuthCertificates object
After you delete the CA objects, you have to delete the CA certificates that are published to the NtAuthCertificates object. Use either of the following commands to delete certificates from within the NTAuthCertificates store:
Note You must have Enterprise Administrator permissions to perform this task.
The -viewdelstore action invokes the certificate selection UI on the set of certificates in the specified attibute. You can view the certificate details. You can cancel out of the selection dialog to make no changes. If you select a certificate, that certificate is deleted when the UI closes and the command is fully executed.
Use the following command to see the full LDAP path to the NtAuthCertificates object in your Active Directory:
certutil store -? | findstr "CN=NTAuth"
Step 8: Delete the CA database
When Certification Services is uninstalled, the CA database is
left intact so that the CA can be re-created on another server.
To
remove the CA database, delete the %systemroot%\System32\Certlog
folder.
Step 9: Clean up domain controllers
After the CA is uninstalled, the certificates that were issued to domain controllers must be removed.
To remove certificates that were issued to the Windows Server 2000 domain controllers, use the Dsstore.exe utility from the Microsoft Windows 2000 Resource Kit.
To remove certificates that have been issued to the Windows Server 2000 domain controllers, follow these steps:
Click Start, click Run, type cmd, and then press ENTER.
On a domain controller, type dsstore -dcmon at the command prompt, and then press ENTER.
Type 3, and then press ENTER. This action deletes all certificates on all domain controllers.
Note The Dsstore.exe utility will try to validate domain controller certificates that are issued to each domain controller. Certificates that do not validate are removed from their respective domain controller.
To remove certificates that were issued to the Windows Server 2003 domain controllers, follow these steps.
Important Do not use this procedure if you are using certificates that are based on version 1 domain controller templates.
Click Start, click Run, type cmd, and then press ENTER.
At the command prompt on a domain controller, type certutil -dcinfo deleteBad.
Certutil.exe tries to validate all the DC certificates that are issued to the domain controllers. Certificates that do not validate are removed.
To force application of the security policy,
follow these steps:
Click Start, click Run,
type cmd in the Open box, and then press ENTER.
At a command prompt, type the appropriate command for the corresponding version of the operating system, and then press ENTER:
For Windows Server 2000: secedit /refreshpolicy machine_policy /enforce