Can someone please explain Windows Service Principle Names (SPNs . . . A Service Principal Name is a concept from Kerberos It's an identifier for a particular service offered by a particular host within an authentication domain The common form for SPNs is service class fqdn @ REALM (e g IMAP mail example com@EXAMPLE COM) There are also User Principal Names which identify users, in form of user @ REALM (or user1 user2 @ REALM, which identifies a speaks
ssl certificate - What is the role of Subject Name (SN) Subject . . . Specially the template below "subject name" tab What does that change in the normal certificate request other than that there is an additional step to put information in the subject tab while enrolling for a certificate What is the role of Subject Names (SN) Subject Alternative Names (SAN) in Microsoft Public Key Infrastructure (PKI)?
Any difference between DOMAIN\username and - Server Fault The slashed format (DOMAIN\username) is actually the NetBIOS equivalent of the domain's DNS name (domain mycompany local) The NetBIOS name is limited to 15 characters and cannot contain dots, underscores etc This page explains in more detail: Jeff Schertz, 2012-08-20, Understanding Active Directory Naming Formats As mentioned by @harry-johnston above, its really just the old NT4 and Windows
WMI Query for certain computer names but not others I'm trying to write a GPO WMI query that will include computers with certain names and yet exclude some machines that fall within those parameters This is what I have (and doesn't work): SELECT
Subject Alternative Name not added to certificate I'm trying to issue a new certificate using the additional attribues field within the Windows CertSrv Web-Enrollment Client I added the CSR, picked the template and entered this into the attribu