http://www.ISAserver.org ------------------------------------------------------- Then I am not sure why you would have to implicitly trust the certificate. I will have to double check, but I believe your Domain should be automatically added as a trusted authority. > -----Original Message----- > From: isalist-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > [mailto:isalist-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Tom Rogers > Sent: Thursday, May 25, 2006 2:19 PM > To: isalist@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: RE: [isalist] Re: RCP over HTTP Assistance needed > > All Outlook clients are on PCs that are registered with our domain. > > -TRogers > > ________________________________ > > From: isalist-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx on behalf of Chris Patterson > Sent: Thu 5/25/2006 1:53 PM > To: isalist@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: [isalist] Re: RCP over HTTP Assistance needed > > > > http://www.ISAserver.org <http://www.isaserver.org/> > ------------------------------------------------------- > > > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: isalist-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > > [mailto:isalist-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Tom Rogers > > Sent: Thursday, May 25, 2006 11:49 AM > > To: isalist@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > > Subject: [isalist] RCP over HTTP Assistance needed > > > > I did this because OWA and RPC over HTTP are on the > SAME server > > using the same SSL certificate (I installed an internal CA to > > issue the > > certificate > > for the OWA server. User have to click YES to accept > (Trust) the > > certificate, but it works fine.) > > > > I am thinking it is either my ISA 2004 rule or that I may > need to move > > my RPC over HTTP Proxy (IIS) to the ISA 2004 box. No matter > > which one it > > is, could someone explain in detail, the steps to do > either? I do not > > have IIS installed on my ISA 2004 box. Please let me know > if there are > > any "Gotcha's" also. > > Are your clients running Outlook not on the domain that produced the > Certificate for your webserver/isa? If not, then I would suggest you > install the Domain Certificate as a trusted authority on the client > machines. I have had to do that as well. Since in IE, you have the > ability to accept the certificate anyways, but I have never > seen it ask > in Outlook. > > I don't know if simply installing the web server certificate on the > client is sufficient. I have always just installed the domain > certificate as a trusted source. > > You can export it to a PFX file and then install it on the clients by > right clicking on the file from each workstation. > > > -- > > Chris Patterson > > > ------------------------------------------------------ > List Archives: //www.freelists.org/archives/isalist/ > ISA Server Newsletter: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/newsletter.asp > ISA Server Articles and Tutorials: > http://www.isaserver.org/articles_tutorials/ > ISA Server Blogs: http://blogs.isaserver.org/ > ------------------------------------------------------ > Visit TechGenix.com for more information about our other sites: > http://www.techgenix.com <http://www.techgenix.com/> > ------------------------------------------------------ > To unsubscribe visit http://www.isaserver.org/pages/isalist.asp > Report abuse to listadmin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > > > > ------------------------------------------------------ List Archives: //www.freelists.org/archives/isalist/ ISA Server Newsletter: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/newsletter.asp ISA Server Articles and Tutorials: http://www.isaserver.org/articles_tutorials/ ISA Server Blogs: http://blogs.isaserver.org/ ------------------------------------------------------ Visit TechGenix.com for more information about our other sites: http://www.techgenix.com ------------------------------------------------------ To unsubscribe visit http://www.isaserver.org/pages/isalist.asp Report abuse to listadmin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx