OPC Studio User's Guide and Reference
ValidateOwnCertificate Method (EasyUAApplicationCore)



OpcLabs.EasyOpcUA Assembly > OpcLabs.EasyOpc.UA.Application Namespace > EasyUAApplicationCore Class : ValidateOwnCertificate Method
Contains arguments for operations related to OPC UA certificate generation.

The value of this parameter cannot be null (Nothing in Visual Basic).

Validates the own certificate the application is currently configured to use.
Syntax
'Declaration
 
Public Sub ValidateOwnCertificate( _
   ByVal validateCertificateArguments As UAValidateCertificateArguments _
) 
'Usage
 
Dim instance As EasyUAApplicationCore
Dim validateCertificateArguments As UAValidateCertificateArguments
 
instance.ValidateOwnCertificate(validateCertificateArguments)
public void ValidateOwnCertificate( 
   UAValidateCertificateArguments validateCertificateArguments
)
public:
void ValidateOwnCertificate( 
   UAValidateCertificateArguments^ validateCertificateArguments
) 

Parameters

validateCertificateArguments
Contains arguments for operations related to OPC UA certificate generation.

The value of this parameter cannot be null (Nothing in Visual Basic).

Exceptions
ExceptionDescription

A null reference (Nothing in Visual Basic) is passed to a method that does not accept it as a valid argument.

This is a usage error, i.e. it will never occur (the exception will not be thrown) in a correctly written program. Your code should not catch this exception.

The OPC UA operation has failed. This operation exception in uniformly used to allow common handling of various kinds of errors. The System.Exception.InnerException always contains information about the actual error cause.

This is an operation error that depends on factors external to your program, and thus cannot be always avoided. Your code must handle it appropriately.

Remarks

The own certificate must exist in the certificate store prior to the operation, otherwise an error is reported.

Requirements

Target Platforms: .NET Framework: Windows 10 (selected versions), Windows 11 (selected versions), Windows Server 2016, Windows Server 2022; .NET: Linux, macOS, Microsoft Windows

See Also