We're going to be looking at how to create a server setup file that doesn't trigger any prompts that aren't user friendly. This setup file will contain another signed file that will launch a basic web server. The setup file will create the server file and a firewall rule for the server file. We will be building two files (`setup.go` and `server.go`) separately .
# Then generate the configuration by running the following in a command prompt:
go generate
```
This will create a configuration file named `versioninfo.json` in the current directory. There are three things you will want to edit: 1. The version of the application, 2. The "publisher" or company name and 3. The product name.
![](versioninfo.png)
Near the top of the file, you will see `FileVersion` and `ProductVersion`.
You can set normal major, minor, patch and build versions for those values. The `FileVersion` is the version of the file and `ProductVersion` is the version of the application as a whole. You can most likely use the same version for both unless you're doing something unusual. You will set the same values again under `StringFileInfo`.
Next, you can set the "publisher name" by filling in the `CompanyName` value with the name of your organization.
Lastly, you can give your application a name, like "Go Web Server" under the `ProductName` value.
Be aware that you will likely need to create a Dun & Bradstreet listing to get an "organization" code-signing certificate: https://www.dandb.com/businessdirectory/products/ (this is free)
You can purchase a code-signing certificate here: https://cheapsslsecurity.com/comodo/codesigningcertificate.html The validation process will take 1-3 business days if your information is correct and you give them your D-U-N-S (Dun & Bradstreet) number. After you receive an email containing a link to the certificate, follow these directions in the **exact same** browser as the one you used to request the certificate : https://cheapsslsecurity.com/downloads.aspx?ispdf=true&iscs=true&filenm=Comodo_Code_Signing_Collection_Guide.pdf
Next, you will need to install Visual Studio. You can download Visual Studio here: https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/thank-you-downloading-visual-studio/?sku=Community
In the install process, you will be greeted with this screen:
![](windowsdev.png)
Choose the "Universal Windows Platform Development" workload. After you have finished installing Visual Studio, open a "Developer Command Prompt for VS".
This will create a folder named `static` with a file in it. You will then need to copy that folder to your `$GOPATH/src/` (usually `C:\Users\<Username>\go\src\`).
Credential seems to be what makes it admin or not: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/module/microsoft.powershell.management/set-service?view=powershell-6