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Marty Matthews

"Microsoft Windows Server 2008: A Beginner's Guide"

In the submenu,
you can stop the issuing of certificates and back up and restore the CA.
5. Back in the context menu with All Tasks, click Properties. In the Properties
dialog box that opens, click the Policy Module tab and again click Properties.
In the Request Handling tab, you can choose manual or automatic issuing of
certificates, as you can see here:
6. Close both Properties dialog boxes. Back in the Certification Authority window,
you??™ll see a Pending Requests folder. If you selected manual certificate issuing,
then all certificate requests will go into this folder. When you are done looking
at the Certification Authority window, close it.
312 Microsoft Windows Server 2008: A Beginner??™s Guide
Start and Configure IPSec
IPSec is controlled by group policies, which can be set at various levels, the primary of
which is the domain. This means that you must have Active Directory (AD) set up and
the server that hosts VPN must be a domain controller. See Chapter 7 for setting up AD
and domain controllers. Assuming you are on an AD domain controller, start and configure
IPSec at the domain level by first setting up group policy management:
1. Click Start | Server Manager and click your server in the tree on the left. Open
Roles and click Network Policy And Access Services.
2. In the right pane, click Add Role Services. Click Network Policy Server,
Routing And Remote Access Services, and Host Credential Authorization.


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