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Trusted Application Deployment overview

Applies to: yesVisual Studio noVisual Studio for Mac

Note

This article applies to Visual Studio 2017. If you're looking for the latest Visual Studio documentation, see Visual Studio documentation. We recommend upgrading to the latest version of Visual Studio. Download it here

This topic provides an overview of how to deploy ClickOnce applications that have elevated permissions by using the Trusted Application Deployment technology.

Trusted Application Deployment, part of the ClickOnce deployment technology, makes it easier for organizations of any size to grant additional permissions to a managed application in a safer, more secure manner without user prompting. With Trusted Application Deployment, an organization can just configure a client computer to have a list of trusted publishers, who are identified using Authenticode certificates. Thereafter, any ClickOnce application signed by one of these trusted publishers receives a higher level of trust.

Note

Trusted Application Deployment requires one-time configuration of a user's computer. In managed desktop environments, this configuration can be performed by using global policy. If this is not what you want for your application, use permission elevation instead. For more information, see Securing ClickOnce Applications.

Trusted Application Deployment basics

The following table shows the objects and roles that are involved in Trusted Application Deployment.

Object or role Description
administrator The organizational entity responsible for updating and maintaining client computers
trust manager The subsystem within the common language runtime (CLR) responsible for enforcing client application security.
publisher The entity that writes and maintains the application.
deployer The entity that packages and distributes the application to users.
certificate A cryptographic signature that consists of a public and private key; generally issued by a certification authority (CA) that can vouch for its authenticity.
Authenticode certificate A certificate with embedded metadata describing, among other things, the uses for which the certificate can be employed.
certification authority An organization that verifies the identity of publishers and issues them certificates embedded with the publisher's metadata.
root authority A certification authority that authorizes other Certificate Authorities to issue certificates.
key container A logical storage space in Microsoft Windows for storing certificates.
trusted publisher A publisher whose Authenticode certificate has been added to a certificate trust list (CTL) on a client computer.

In larger organizations, the publisher and deployer are frequently two separate entities:

  • The publisher is the group that creates the ClickOnce application.

  • The deployer is the group, typically the information technology (IT) department, that distributes ClickOnce application to corporate enterprise desktop computers.

You must follow these steps to take advantage of Trusted Application Deployment:

  1. Obtain a certificate for the publisher.

  2. Add the publisher to the trusted publishers store on all clients.

  3. Create your ClickOnce application.

  4. Sign the deployment manifest with the publisher's certificate.

  5. Publish the application deployment to client computers.

Obtain a certificate for the publisher

Digital certificates are a core component of the Microsoft Authenticode authentication and security system. Authenticode is a standard part of the Windows operating system. All ClickOnce applications must be signed with a digital certificate, regardless of whether they participate in Trusted Application Deployment. For a full explanation of how Authenticode works with ClickOnce, see ClickOnce and Authenticode.

Add the publisher to the trusted publishers store

For your ClickOnce application to receive a higher level of trust, you must add your certificate as a trusted publisher to each client computer on which the application will run. Performing this task is a one-time configuration. After it is completed, you can deploy as many ClickOnce applications signed with your publisher's certificate as you want, and they will all run with high trust.

If you are deploying your application in a managed desktop environment; for example, a corporate intranet running the Windows operating system; you can add trusted publishers to a client's store by creating a new certificate trust list (CTL) with Group Policy. For more information, see Create a certificate trust list for a Group Policy object.

If you are not deploying your application in a managed desktop environment, you have the following options for adding a certificate to the trusted publisher store:

Create a ClickOnce Application

A ClickOnce application is a .NET Framework client application combined with manifest files that describe the application and supply installation parameters. You can turn your program into a ClickOnce application by using the Publish command in Visual Studio. Alternatively, you can generate all the files required for ClickOnce deployment by using tools that are included with the Windows Software Development Kit (SDK). For detailed steps about ClickOnce deployment, see Walkthrough: Manually Deploying a ClickOnce Application.

Trusted Application Deployment is specific to ClickOnce, and can only be used with ClickOnce applications.

Sign the deployment

After obtaining your certificate, you must use it to sign your deployment. If you are deploying your application by using the Visual Studio Publish wizard, the wizard will automatically generate a test certificate for you if you have not specified a certificate yourself. You can also use the Visual Studio Project Designer window, however, to supply a certificate provided by a CA. Also see How to: Publish a ClickOnce Application using the Publish Wizard.

Caution

We do not recommend that the application be deployed with a test certificate.

You can also sign the application by using the Mage.exe or MageUI.exe SDK tools. For more information, see Walkthrough: Manually deploy a ClickOnce application. For a full list of command-line options related to deployment signing, see Mage.exe (Manifest Generation and Editing Tool).

Publish the application

As soon as you have signed your ClickOnce manifests, the application is ready to publish to your install location. The installation location can be a Web server, a file share, or the local disk. When a client accesses the deployment manifest for the first time, the trust manager must choose whether the ClickOnce application has been granted authority or not to run at a higher level of trust by an installed trusted publisher. The trust manager makes this choice by comparing the certificate used to sign the deployment with the certificates stored in the client's trusted publisher store. If the trust manager finds a match, the application runs with high trust.

Trusted Application Deployment and Permission Elevation

If the current publisher is not a trusted publisher, trust manager will use Permission Elevation to query the user about whether he or she wants to grant your application elevated permissions. If permission elevation is disabled by the administrator, however, the application cannot obtain permission to run. The application will not run and no notification will be displayed to the user. For more information about Permission Elevation, see Securing ClickOnce Applications.

Limitations of Trusted Application Deployment

You can use Trusted Application Deployment to grant elevated trust to ClickOnce applications deployed over the Web or through an enterprise file share. You do not have to use Trusted Application Deployment for ClickOnce applications distributed on a CD, because, by default, these applications are granted full trust.

See also