How can constructing an X509Certificate2 from a PKCS#12 byte array throw CryptographicException("The system cannot find the file specified.")?

Jeffrey Hantin picture Jeffrey Hantin · Sep 30, 2010 · Viewed 38.4k times · Source

I'm trying to construct an X509Certificate2 from a PKCS#12 blob in a byte array and getting a rather puzzling error. This code is running in a desktop application with administrator rights on Windows XP.

The stack trace is as follows, but I got lost trying to troubleshoot because _LoadCertFromBlob is marked [MethodImpl(MethodImplOptions.InternalCall)].

System.Security.Cryptography.CryptographicException: The system cannot find the file specified.
  at System.Security.Cryptography.CryptographicException.ThrowCryptogaphicException(Int32 hr)
  at System.Security.Cryptography.X509Certificates.X509Utils._LoadCertFromBlob(Byte[] rawData, IntPtr password, UInt32 dwFlags, Boolean persistKeySet, SafeCertContextHandle& pCertCtx)
  at System.Security.Cryptography.X509Certificates.X509Certificate.LoadCertificateFromBlob(Byte[] rawData, Object password, X509KeyStorageFlags keyStorageFlags)
  at System.Security.Cryptography.X509Certificates.X509Certificate2..ctor(Byte[] rawData, String password, X509KeyStorageFlags keyStorageFlags)

EDIT: The blob is a true PKCS#12 generated by BouncyCastle for C# containing a RSA private key and certificate (either self-signed or recently enrolled with a CA) -- what I'm trying to do is convert the private key and certificate from the BouncyCastle library to the System.Security.Cryptography library by exporting from one and importing to the other. This code works on the vast majority of systems it's been tried on; I've just never seen that particular error thrown from that constructor. It may be some sort of environmental weirdness on that one box.

EDIT 2: The error is occurring in a different environment in a different city, and I'm unable to reproduce it locally, so I may end up having to chalk it up to a broken XP installation.

Since you asked, though, here is the fragment in question. The code takes a private key and certificate in BouncyCastle representation, deletes any previous certificates for the same Distinguished Name from the personal key store, and imports the new private key and certificate into the personal key store via an intermediate PKCS#12 blob.

// open the personal keystore
var msMyStore = new X509Store(StoreName.My);
msMyStore.Open(OpenFlags.MaxAllowed);

// remove any certs previously issued for the same DN
var oldCerts =
    msMyStore.Certificates.Cast<X509Certificate2>()
        .Where(c => X509Name
                        .GetInstance(Asn1Object.FromByteArray(c.SubjectName.RawData))
                        .Equivalent(CurrentCertificate.SubjectDN))
        .ToArray();
if (oldCerts.Length > 0) msMyStore.RemoveRange(new X509Certificate2Collection(oldCerts));

// build a PKCS#12 blob from the private key and certificate
var pkcs12store = new Pkcs12StoreBuilder().Build();
pkcs12store.SetKeyEntry(_Pkcs12KeyName,
                        new AsymmetricKeyEntry(KeyPair.Private),
                        new[] {new X509CertificateEntry(CurrentCertificate)});
var pkcs12data = new MemoryStream();
pkcs12store.Save(pkcs12data, _Pkcs12Password.ToCharArray(), Random);

// and import it.  this constructor call blows up
_MyCertificate2 = new X509Certificate2(pkcs12data.ToArray(),
                                       _Pkcs12Password,
                                       X509KeyStorageFlags.Exportable);
msMyStore.Add(_MyCertificate2);
msMyStore.Close();

Answer

Oleg picture Oleg · Sep 30, 2010

Do you have PKCS#12 or just PFX-file? In the Microsoft world it is the same, but other think another (see this archived page).

You can try just following

X509Certificate2 cert = X509Certificate2(byte[] rawData, "password");
X509Certificate2 cert2 = X509Certificate2(byte[] rawData, "password",
              X509KeyStorageFlags.MachineKeySet |
              X509KeyStorageFlags.PersistKeySet |
              X509KeyStorageFlags.Exportable);

(X509Certificate2(Byte[])) or

X509Certificate2 cert = X509Certificate2("C:\Path\my.pfx", "password");

(see X509Certificate2(String, String) and Import(String, String, X509KeyStorageFlags) on Microsoft Docs if you need use some flags)

UPDATED: It would be helpful if you insert a code fragment and not only the exception stack trace.

Which X509KeyStorageFlags do you use? You can use Process Monitor to find out which file could not find the X509Certificate2 constructor. It can be for example that there are no default key container for the current user on the Windows XP having the problem. You can create it and retry the import.