On Fri, 22 Mar 2024 18:43:11 GMT, MustavData <d...@openjdk.org> wrote:

>> I also noticed a different problem. No matter if privileged or unprivileged, 
>> `keytool -genkeypair -storetype Windows-My-LOCALMACHINE` works successfully 
>> but the entries are actually created in Windows-MY-CURRENTUSER. This is 
>> unrelated to this code change and I filed 
>> https://bugs.openjdk.org/browse/JDK-8328184.
>
> @wangweij - Regarding your test environment issues:
> 
> Your Windows 2016 systems needs its UAC enabled.   Here is an MS Community 
> remedy for that:
> [cmd.exe always runs as Administrator, how do I make it 
> stop?](https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwiT4bLQrIiFAxW0M1kFHQTrCVMQrAIoAHoECDkQAQ&url=https%3A%2F%2Fanswers.microsoft.com%2Fen-us%2Fwindows%2Fforum%2Fall%2Fcmdexe-always-runs-as-administrator-how-do-i-make%2F63ac20c1-f1a3-4876-8199-cc02c6a5725d&usg=AOvVaw0nipY6czBotcTThwVvaWjv&opi=89978449)
> 
> With UAC enabled, you can switch between your user and administrator roles as 
> a developer would.  In a secured production environment, by contrast, that is 
> not allowed.    Instead, roles are performed by separate users who are 
> assigned the minimum accesses required due to their respective roles.   The 
> primary end user is a build engineer or automated process (_This is like the 
> "java app" described in the Jan 17 reply by @rebarbora-mckvak ._) responsible 
> for writing a code signature to a local file.  And, since that user would 
> never create or install the local code signing certificate, read-only access 
> is assigned.
> 
> -------
> The unexpected signtool error for Step 2 is likely caused by using signtool's 
> "/i" option to locate the certificate in the Windows keystore.   For 
> repeatability across configurations, you should instead use the "/sha1" 
> option which takes the code signing certificate's thumbprint value as an 
> argument.   To retrieve the thumbprint:
> 
> 1. Run the elevated MMC as before and navigate to "Local Computer / Personal 
> / Certificates".
> 2. Double click the certificte, and click the Details tab.
> 3. Scroll to the bottom and click the Thumbprint field.
> 4. Copy the Thumbprint string that appears in the client area (a long hex 
> string).
> 5. Paste it to your command line or script.

@MustavData Thanks a lot for your help. I'll try the steps.

-------------

PR Comment: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/16687#issuecomment-2015826488

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