satmonk Posted February 22 Share Posted February 22 I'm sorry I had to say that I mean the batch from page 13 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AstroSkipper Posted February 22 Share Posted February 22 (edited) On 2/22/2023 at 12:45 PM, satmonk said: I'm sorry I had to say that I mean the batch from page 13 I have never used that code to clean up the CryptnetUrlCache in the form of a batch file. I am not a fan of automatical solutions to delete files. I usually do manual cleaning in terms of the CryptnetUrlCache when necessary, i.e., if there are correspondent errors in the event log. Edited March 4 by AstroSkipper 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
egrabrych Posted March 4 Share Posted March 4 (edited) The authroots.sst, updroots.sst and delroots.sst files have changed, the roots.sst file remains unchanged. Edited Sunday at 01:39 AM by egrabrych 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AstroSkipper Posted April 27 Share Posted April 27 On 10/26/2022 at 2:04 AM, AstroSkipper said: Update notification! The Root Certificates have been updated and are now from 25-04-2023. Here is a screenshot: Greetings from Germany, AstroSkipper 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Iron_Wind0ws Posted June 15 Share Posted June 15 Hey howdy, Do you know if by doing these steps correctly, it will open Steam 2019 for me, which is the latest version compatible with XP? Because I'm trying to log in, but the interface doesn't open. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mina7601 Posted June 15 Share Posted June 15 (edited) 1 hour ago, Iron_Wind0ws said: Hey howdy, Do you know if by doing these steps correctly, it will open Steam 2019 for me, which is the latest version compatible with XP? Because I'm trying to log in, but the interface doesn't open. Steam is long dead, my friend. I'm afraid it doesn't work anymore as it used to before in 2019-2020. Let me refer you to this topic. Edited June 15 by mina7601 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
w2k4eva Posted August 18 Share Posted August 18 One thing that still puzzles me is about the *.sst files themselves. What is the function of each file, and does updroots.exe do anything different based on the filename it is called for? I mean, the use of something called "delroots.sst" or "disallowedcert.sst" seems self explanatory, but what about the other 3? I see from the contents that roots.sst has Microsoft-related stuff that could be needed to check the cert lists themselves, so it makes some sense to have it in a separate file for the convenience of those folks who want to manage their own lists. But for authroots.sst vs updroots.sst, the difference is less clear. There must be some reason Microsoft used 2 files instead of combining them all into 1 file, so how are these different? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
egrabrych Posted August 22 Share Posted August 22 (edited) The authroots.sst, updroots.sst and delroots.sst files have changed, the roots.sst file remains unchanged. Edited Sunday at 01:39 AM by egrabrych 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dave-H Posted August 22 Share Posted August 22 Thanks! 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mina7601 Posted August 22 Share Posted August 22 (edited) 14 minutes ago, egrabrych said: The authroots.sst, updroots.sst and delroots.sst files have changed, the roots.sst file remains unchanged. Thanks for updating us! Edited August 22 by mina7601 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
abbodi1406 Posted September 5 Share Posted September 5 On 8/19/2023 at 1:48 AM, w2k4eva said: One thing that still puzzles me is about the *.sst files themselves. What is the function of each file, and does updroots.exe do anything different based on the filename it is called for? I mean, the use of something called "delroots.sst" or "disallowedcert.sst" seems self explanatory, but what about the other 3? I see from the contents that roots.sst has Microsoft-related stuff that could be needed to check the cert lists themselves, so it makes some sense to have it in a separate file for the convenience of those folks who want to manage their own lists. But for authroots.sst vs updroots.sst, the difference is less clear. There must be some reason Microsoft used 2 files instead of combining them all into 1 file, so how are these different? UpdRoots process the files based on the parameters not filename, e.g. if you run updroots.exe delroots.sst it will add the certificates not delete them Usage: UpdRoots [options] <SrcStoreFilename> Options are: -h - This message -d - Delete (default is to add) -l - Local Machine (default is Third Party) -u - Add to disallowed root store based on some checking, updroots.sst contain certificates that can be downloaded separately from WU (manually or using CertUtil –generateSSTFromWU), e.g. http://ctldl.windowsupdate.com/msdownload/update/v3/static/trustedr/en/8F43288AD272F3103B6FB1428485EA3014C0BCFE.crt authroots.sst certificates are not downloadable separately from WU 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Slavich Posted September 22 Share Posted September 22 Hi! Thank you for your work. Please add the certificate of the Digital Ministry of Russia to the assembly: https://transfiles.ru/203oj Thank you. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dave-H Posted September 22 Share Posted September 22 The certificate files are downloaded directly from Microsoft, so they would have to add any additional ones. Individuals can always add extra certificates to their own stores manually of course, including that one. 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
egrabrych Posted Sunday at 01:43 AM Share Posted Sunday at 01:43 AM (edited) The delroots.sst and updroots.sst files have changed, the authroots.sst and roots.sst file remains unchanged. Edited Sunday at 01:44 AM by egrabrych 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dave-H Posted Sunday at 01:14 PM Share Posted Sunday at 01:14 PM Thank you! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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