ServicePointManager.CertificatePolicy Property
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Caution
CertificatePolicy is obsoleted for this type, please use ServerCertificateValidationCallback instead. http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?linkid=14202
Gets or sets policy for server certificates.
public:
static property System::Net::ICertificatePolicy ^ CertificatePolicy { System::Net::ICertificatePolicy ^ get(); void set(System::Net::ICertificatePolicy ^ value); };
public static System.Net.ICertificatePolicy CertificatePolicy { get; set; }
[System.Obsolete("CertificatePolicy is obsoleted for this type, please use ServerCertificateValidationCallback instead. http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?linkid=14202")]
public static System.Net.ICertificatePolicy CertificatePolicy { get; set; }
static member CertificatePolicy : System.Net.ICertificatePolicy with get, set
[<System.Obsolete("CertificatePolicy is obsoleted for this type, please use ServerCertificateValidationCallback instead. http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?linkid=14202")>]
static member CertificatePolicy : System.Net.ICertificatePolicy with get, set
Public Shared Property CertificatePolicy As ICertificatePolicy
Property Value
An object that implements the ICertificatePolicy interface.
- Attributes
Examples
The following code example shows how to catch a certificate policy exception for a custom certificate policy. It assumes that the certificate policy object has been defined, that the Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) for the Web resource is contained in the variable myUri
, and that there is a method named ProcessResponse
that performs the work of the application.
ServicePointManager::CertificatePolicy = gcnew MyCertificatePolicy;
// Create the request and receive the response
try
{
WebRequest^ myRequest = WebRequest::Create( myUri );
WebResponse^ myResponse = myRequest->GetResponse();
ProcessResponse( myResponse );
myResponse->Close();
}
// Catch any exceptions
catch ( WebException^ e )
{
if ( e->Status == WebExceptionStatus::TrustFailure )
{
// Code for handling security certificate problems goes here.
}
// Other exception handling goes here
}
ServicePointManager.CertificatePolicy = new MyCertificatePolicy();
// Create the request and receive the response
try
{
WebRequest myRequest = WebRequest.Create(myUri);
WebResponse myResponse = myRequest.GetResponse();
ProcessResponse(myResponse);
myResponse.Close();
}
// Catch any exceptions
catch (WebException e)
{
if (e.Status == WebExceptionStatus.TrustFailure)
{
// Code for handling security certificate problems goes here.
}
// Other exception handling goes here
}
ServicePointManager.CertificatePolicy = New MyCertificatePolicy()
' Create the request and receive the response
Try
Dim myRequest As WebRequest = WebRequest.Create(myUri)
Dim myResponse As WebResponse = myRequest.GetResponse()
ProcessResponse(myResponse)
myResponse.Close()
' Catch any exceptions
Catch e As WebException
If e.Status = WebExceptionStatus.TrustFailure Then
' Code for handling security certificate problems goes here.
End If
' Other exception handling goes here
End Try
Remarks
When the CertificatePolicy property is set to an ICertificatePolicy interface object, the ServicePointManager object uses the certificate policy defined in that instance instead of the default certificate policy.
The default certificate policy allows valid certificates and valid certificates that have expired.