From: Cliff Galiher - MVP on
Well, it looks like you are getting a certificate chain error. Those can
cause serious problems depending on the OS level.

I'm gonna *guess* that you purchased a GoDaddy cert. This is fine, but you
must install the intermediate certificate chain as well to use this.

Documented here:
http://blogs.technet.com/b/sbs/archive/2009/02/11/sean-daniel-how-to-install-a-godaddy-certificate-on-sbs-2008.aspx

Do that then try to use outlook anywhere. If it still fails, re-run the
testexchangeconnectivity test and see if you can fix the errors it is
reporting (usually they are straightforward, but not always). Finally, if
you can't, repost the new error report as necessary.

--
Cliff Galiher
Microsoft has opened the Small Business Server forum on Technet! Check it
out!
http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-us/smallbusinessserver/threads
Addicted to newsgroups? Read about the NNTP Bridge for MS Forums.

From: Mikey on
On Jun 21, 11:08 am, "Cliff Galiher - MVP" <cgali...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> Well, it looks like you are getting a certificate chain error. Those can
> cause serious problems depending on the OS level.
>
> I'm gonna *guess* that you purchased a GoDaddy cert. This is fine, but you
> must install the intermediate certificate chain as well to use this.
>
> Documented here:http://blogs.technet.com/b/sbs/archive/2009/02/11/sean-daniel-how-to-...
>
> Do that then try to use outlook anywhere. If it still fails, re-run the
> testexchangeconnectivity test and see if you can fix the errors it is
> reporting (usually they are straightforward, but not always). Finally, if
> you can't, repost the new error report as necessary.
>
> --
> Cliff Galiher
> Microsoft has opened the Small Business Server forum on Technet!  Check it
> out!http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-us/smallbusinessserver/....
> Addicted to newsgroups?  Read about the NNTP Bridge for MS Forums.

I just purchased a UCC certificate from them & will be installing
shortly.
I'll re-run tests & post back with results.
From: Mikey on
On Jun 21, 11:43 am, Mikey <texan...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
> On Jun 21, 11:08 am, "Cliff Galiher - MVP" <cgali...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > Well, it looks like you are getting a certificate chain error. Those can
> > cause serious problems depending on the OS level.
>
> > I'm gonna *guess* that you purchased a GoDaddy cert. This is fine, but you
> > must install the intermediate certificate chain as well to use this.
>
> > Documented here:http://blogs.technet.com/b/sbs/archive/2009/02/11/sean-daniel-how-to-...
>
> > Do that then try to use outlook anywhere. If it still fails, re-run the
> > testexchangeconnectivity test and see if you can fix the errors it is
> > reporting (usually they are straightforward, but not always). Finally, if
> > you can't, repost the new error report as necessary.
>
> > --
> > Cliff Galiher
> > Microsoft has opened the Small Business Server forum on Technet!  Check it
> > out!http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-us/smallbusinessserver/...
> > Addicted to newsgroups?  Read about the NNTP Bridge for MS Forums.
>
> I just purchased a UCC certificate from them & will be installing
> shortly.
> I'll re-run tests & post back with results.

Installed certificate & still having problems...
I am once again getting warnings when using OWA, too.
When I ran the wizard, it put in the name remote.mydomain.com by
default, I guess, even though the machine is named
exchange.mydomain.com.
According to someone's blog out there, I was also to include the
following names on the certificate;
autodiscover.mydomain.com
exchange.mydomain.local
exchange
sites
Is this right?
I also have an SRV record in my public DNS records, but exchange test
website is still reporting errors, as well.
Needless to say, remote outlook clients aren't connecting, either.
I am really starting to regret moving from my good ol' reliable 2003
SBS....
From: Mikey on
On Jun 21, 4:14 pm, Mikey <texan...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
> On Jun 21, 11:43 am, Mikey <texan...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > On Jun 21, 11:08 am, "Cliff Galiher - MVP" <cgali...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > Well, it looks like you are getting a certificate chain error. Those can
> > > cause serious problems depending on the OS level.
>
> > > I'm gonna *guess* that you purchased a GoDaddy cert. This is fine, but you
> > > must install the intermediate certificate chain as well to use this.
>
> > > Documented here:http://blogs.technet.com/b/sbs/archive/2009/02/11/sean-daniel-how-to-...
>
> > > Do that then try to use outlook anywhere. If it still fails, re-run the
> > > testexchangeconnectivity test and see if you can fix the errors it is
> > > reporting (usually they are straightforward, but not always). Finally, if
> > > you can't, repost the new error report as necessary.
>
> > > --
> > > Cliff Galiher
> > > Microsoft has opened the Small Business Server forum on Technet!  Check it
> > > out!http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-us/smallbusinessserver/...
> > > Addicted to newsgroups?  Read about the NNTP Bridge for MS Forums.
>
> > I just purchased a UCC certificate from them & will be installing
> > shortly.
> > I'll re-run tests & post back with results.
>
> Installed certificate & still having problems...
> I am once again getting warnings when using OWA, too.
> When I ran the wizard, it put in the name remote.mydomain.com by
> default, I guess, even though the machine is named
> exchange.mydomain.com.
> According to someone's blog out there, I was also to include the
> following names on the certificate;
> autodiscover.mydomain.com
> exchange.mydomain.local
> exchange
> sites
> Is this right?
> I also have an SRV record in my public DNS records, but exchange test
> website is still reporting errors, as well.
> Needless to say, remote outlook clients aren't connecting, either.
> I am really starting to regret moving from my good ol' reliable 2003
> SBS....

Sorry, but one more stupid question.
When downloading the new certificate, it asked what type of server it
was going on.
With no SBS option, I chose IIS rather then Exchange 2007.
Was this right?
It seems that when I did this for 2003 many moons ago, I needed to
chose IIS, so OWA would work.
From: Cliff Galiher - MVP on
IIS was correct. You actually don't need a UCC certificate for Outlook
Anywhere to work, so most of those names will do no good, but they'll also
do no harm.

I will ask, however, as I did before, that you post the contents of your
connectivity test in full so we can spot and then fix the problem. I don't
play guessing games.

--
Cliff Galiher
Microsoft has opened the Small Business Server forum on Technet! Check it
out!
http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-us/smallbusinessserver/threads
Addicted to newsgroups? Read about the NNTP Bridge for MS Forums.