ASP.NET MVC5/AngularJS/Web API app using Windows Authentication and OWIN - asp.net-mvc

I may be over-complicating things, but we have an internal ASP.NET MVC5 SPA with AngularJS using Windows Authentication. This application has a SQL back-end database that has a table of users, containing their account names, and their respective roles in the application. We will be making calls to another Web API application that also has Windows Authentication enabled.
I have tried to do research on how to handle authorization using OWIN but couldn't find any specific examples regarding OWIN and Windows Authentication. Everything that turns up uses forms authentication with a username and password.
How can I go about using OWIN and Windows Auth for my app? Here's a sample of my OAuthAuthorizationServerProvider class.
public class SimpleAuthorizationServerProvider : OAuthAuthorizationServerProvider
{
public override async Task ValidateClientAuthentication(OAuthValidateClientAuthenticationContext context)
{
context.Validated();
return;
}
public override async Task GrantResourceOwnerCredentials(OAuthGrantResourceOwnerCredentialsContext context)
{
context.OwinContext.Response.Headers.Add("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", new[] { "*" });
var container = UnityHelper.GetContainerInstance("***");
var securityHelper = container.Resolve<ISecurityHelper>();
User currentUser = securityHelper.GetCurrentUser(); // Validates user based on HttpContext.Current.User
if (currentUser == null)
{
context.SetError("invalid_grant", "The user could not be found.");
return;
}
var identity = new ClaimsIdentity(context.Options.AuthenticationType);
identity.AddClaim(new Claim("sub", currentUser.AccountName));
identity.AddClaim(new Claim("role", "user"));
context.Validated(identity);
}
}
UPDATE:
Oops, I forgot to include more information on what we'd like to accomplish. If possible, we'd like to use bearer authentication tickets so we don't have to look up the user and their roles everytime we make a call to a web api method.
UPDATE 2:
As requested by Andrew, below is the TLDR version of my _securityHelper class, specifically the GetCurrentUser() method. You'll notice that I'm attempting to call:
HttpContext.Current.GetOwinContext().Request.User.Identity.Name
This always returns null for User.
public class SecurityHelper : ISecurityHelper
{
private readonly ISecurityGroupController _securityGroupController;
private readonly IUserController _userController;
private readonly IEmployeeController _employeeController;
private readonly IFieldPermissionController _fieldPermissionController;
private readonly IOACController _oacController;
public SecurityHelper(ISecurityGroupController securityGroupController,
IUserController userController,
IEmployeeController employeeController,
IFieldPermissionController fieldPermissionController,
IOACController oacController)
{
_securityGroupController = securityGroupController;
_userController = userController;
_employeeController = employeeController;
_fieldPermissionController = fieldPermissionController;
_oacController = oacController;
}
// ... other methods
public User GetCurrentUser()
{
User user = _userController.GetByAccountName(HttpContext.Current.GetOwinContext().Request.User.Identity.Name);
if (user != null)
{
List<OAC> memberships = _oacController.GetMemberships(user.SourceId).ToList();
if (IsTestModeEnabled() && ((user.OACMemberships != null && user.OACMemberships.Count == 0) || user.OACMemberships == null))
{
user.OACMemberships = memberships;
}
else if (!IsTestModeEnabled())
{
user.OACMemberships = memberships;
}
}
return user;
}
}

This article series would be a good place to start: http://bitoftech.net/2014/06/01/token-based-authentication-asp-net-web-api-2-owin-asp-net-identity/
of note, would be the following code, which essentially stores the bearer token in local storage and attaches it to the headers. There is obviously a lot more to it than this, including the forms and the actual server authentication system, but this should give you a decent start.
server component:
public class Startup
{
public void Configuration(IAppBuilder app)
{
ConfigureOAuth(app);
//Rest of code is here;
}
public void ConfigureOAuth(IAppBuilder app)
{
OAuthAuthorizationServerOptions OAuthServerOptions = new OAuthAuthorizationServerOptions()
{
AllowInsecureHttp = true,
TokenEndpointPath = new PathString("/token"),
AccessTokenExpireTimeSpan = TimeSpan.FromDays(1),
Provider = new SimpleAuthorizationServerProvider()
};
// Token Generation
app.UseOAuthAuthorizationServer(OAuthServerOptions);
app.UseOAuthBearerAuthentication(new OAuthBearerAuthenticationOptions());
}
}
and the following client side code:
'use strict';
app.factory('authService', ['$http', '$q', 'localStorageService', function ($http, $q, localStorageService) {
var serviceBase = 'http://ngauthenticationapi.azurewebsites.net/';
var authServiceFactory = {};
var _authentication = {
isAuth: false,
userName : ""
};
var _saveRegistration = function (registration) {
_logOut();
return $http.post(serviceBase + 'api/account/register', registration).then(function (response) {
return response;
});
};
var _login = function (loginData) {
var data = "grant_type=password&username=" + loginData.userName + "&password=" + loginData.password;
var deferred = $q.defer();
$http.post(serviceBase + 'token', data, { headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded' } }).success(function (response) {
localStorageService.set('authorizationData', { token: response.access_token, userName: loginData.userName });
_authentication.isAuth = true;
_authentication.userName = loginData.userName;
deferred.resolve(response);
}).error(function (err, status) {
_logOut();
deferred.reject(err);
});
return deferred.promise;
};
var _logOut = function () {
localStorageService.remove('authorizationData');
_authentication.isAuth = false;
_authentication.userName = "";
};
var _fillAuthData = function () {
var authData = localStorageService.get('authorizationData');
if (authData)
{
_authentication.isAuth = true;
_authentication.userName = authData.userName;
}
}
authServiceFactory.saveRegistration = _saveRegistration;
authServiceFactory.login = _login;
authServiceFactory.logOut = _logOut;
authServiceFactory.fillAuthData = _fillAuthData;
authServiceFactory.authentication = _authentication;
return authServiceFactory;
}]);
along with
'use strict';
app.factory('authInterceptorService', ['$q', '$location', 'localStorageService', function ($q, $location, localStorageService) {
var authInterceptorServiceFactory = {};
var _request = function (config) {
config.headers = config.headers || {};
var authData = localStorageService.get('authorizationData');
if (authData) {
config.headers.Authorization = 'Bearer ' + authData.token;
}
return config;
}
var _responseError = function (rejection) {
if (rejection.status === 401) {
$location.path('/login');
}
return $q.reject(rejection);
}
authInterceptorServiceFactory.request = _request;
authInterceptorServiceFactory.responseError = _responseError;
return authInterceptorServiceFactory;
}]);

Check out this article for steps on enabling Windows Authentication in OWIN:
http://www.asp.net/aspnet/overview/owin-and-katana/enabling-windows-authentication-in-katana
From the article:
Katana does not currently provide OWIN middleware for Windows Authentication, because this functionality is already available in the servers.
The linked article covers enabling Windows Authentication for development. For deployments, these settings are in IIS under Authentication. Users will be prompted for their username and password by the browser when they first arrive on your application's page.

Related

Getting Error 400: invalid_request while redirecting Authorization page

Following this guide (https://developers.google.com/api-client-library/dotnet/guide/aaa_oauth#web-applications-asp.net-mvc) I made the code work in localhost but it gives an Error 400: invalid_request device_id and device_name are required for private IP: http://xx.xx.xx.xx:xxxxx/AuthCallback/IndexAsync while redirecting to Authorization page. We added subdomain in dns for our windows server ip address and registered the same subdomain in google api console. Why google gets ip address of the server instead of subdomain? Is the problem related to dns?
These are the working codes on local machine:
HomeController.cs
public class HomeController : Controller
{
public async Task<ActionResult> Index(CancellationToken cancellationToken)
{
var result = await new AuthorizationCodeMvcApp(this, new AppFlowMetadata()).
AuthorizeAsync(cancellationToken);
if (result.Credential != null)
{
var service = new GmailService(new BaseClientService.Initializer
{
HttpClientInitializer = result.Credential,
ApplicationName = "BPM Mail"
});
var gmailProfile = service.Users.GetProfile("me").Execute();
var userGmailEmail = gmailProfile.EmailAddress;
Utils.userMail = userGmailEmail;
Utils.cred = result.Credential;
// SAMPLE CODE:
//var list = await service.Files.List().ExecuteAsync();
//ViewBag.Message = "FILE COUNT IS: " + list.Items.Count();
return new RedirectResult("~/Apps/Mail/Default.aspx");
}
else
{
return new RedirectResult(result.RedirectUri);
}
}
}
AppFlowMetadata.cs
public class AppFlowMetadata : FlowMetadata
{
private static readonly IAuthorizationCodeFlow flow =
new GoogleAuthorizationCodeFlow(new GoogleAuthorizationCodeFlow.Initializer
{
ClientSecrets = new ClientSecrets
{
ClientId = "ClientId ",
ClientSecret = "ClientSecret "
},
Scopes = new[] { GmailService.Scope.GmailReadonly, GmailService.Scope.MailGoogleCom, GmailService.Scope.GmailModify },
DataStore = new FileDataStore("D:/bpm_mail/mytokens/token.json", true)
});
public override string GetUserId(Controller controller)
{
// In this sample we use the session to store the user identifiers.
// That's not the best practice, because you should have a logic to identify
// a user. You might want to use "OpenID Connect".
// You can read more about the protocol in the following link:
// https://developers.google.com/accounts/docs/OAuth2Login.
var user = controller.Session["user"];
//Utils.userId = user.ToString();
if (user == null)
{
user = Guid.NewGuid();
controller.Session["user"] = user;
}
return user.ToString();
}
public override IAuthorizationCodeFlow Flow
{
get { return flow; }
}
//public override string AuthCallback
//{
// get { return #"/AuthCallback/IndexAsync"; }
//}
}
AuthCallbackController.cs
public class AuthCallbackController : Google.Apis.Auth.OAuth2.Mvc.Controllers.AuthCallbackController
{
protected override Google.Apis.Auth.OAuth2.Mvc.FlowMetadata FlowData
{
get { return new AppFlowMetadata(); }
}
}
Issue solved by changing private ip to public one and redirect it to domain.

JWT Authentication ASP.NET Core MVC application

I've seen numerous examples of how to use JWT authentication with Angular, React, Vue etc... clients but can't find any examples of using JWT authentication with ASP.NET Core (specifically 2.2) Web App Mvc.
Does anyone have any examples or advice on how to do this?
Thanks,
You can use this class based on nuget package JWT 3.0.3
using JWT;
using JWT.Algorithms;
using JWT.Serializers;
using Newtonsoft.Json;
using System;
namespace Common.Utils
{
public class JwtToken
{
private IJwtEncoder encoder;
private IJwtDecoder decoder;
/// <remarks>
/// This requires a key value randomly generated and stored in your configuration settings.
/// Consider that it is a good practice use keys as at least long as the output digest bytes
/// length produced by the hashing algorithm used. Since we use an HMAC-SHA-512 algorithm,
/// then we can provide it a key at least 64 bytes long.
/// <see cref="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4868#page-7"/>
/// </remarks>
public string SecretKey { get; set; }
public JwtToken()
{
IJwtAlgorithm algorithm = new HMACSHA512Algorithm();
IJsonSerializer serializer = new JsonNetSerializer();
IDateTimeProvider datetimeProvider = new UtcDateTimeProvider();
IJwtValidator validator = new JwtValidator(serializer, datetimeProvider);
IBase64UrlEncoder urlEncoder = new JwtBase64UrlEncoder();
encoder = new JwtEncoder(algorithm, serializer, urlEncoder);
decoder = new JwtDecoder(serializer, validator, urlEncoder);
SecretKey = "";
}
public JwtToken(string secretKey) : this()
{
SecretKey = secretKey;
}
public bool IsTokenValid(string token)
{
return !string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(DecodeToken(token));
}
public string GetToken(object payload)
{
try
{
return encoder.Encode(payload, SecretKey);
}
catch (Exception)
{
return encoder.Encode(new DataModel(payload), SecretKey);
}
}
public string DecodeToken(string token)
{
try
{
if (string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(token) || token == "null")
{
return null;
}
return decoder.Decode(token, SecretKey, true);
}
catch (TokenExpiredException)
{
return null;
}
catch (SignatureVerificationException)
{
return null;
}
}
public T DecodeToken<T>(string token) where T : class
{
try
{
if (string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(token))
{
return null;
}
return decoder.DecodeToObject<T>(token, SecretKey, true);
}
catch (TokenExpiredException)
{
return null;
}
catch (SignatureVerificationException)
{
return null;
}
catch (Exception)
{
var data = decoder.DecodeToObject<DataModel>(token, SecretKey, true).Data;
return JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<T>(JsonConvert.SerializeObject(data));
}
}
}
public class DataModel
{
public DataModel(object data)
{
Data = data;
}
public object Data { get; set; }
}
}
Then in your Startup class Configure method set the jwt middleware
for check authentication status of each request:
app.Use((context, next) =>
{
// verify app access token if not another service call
var appAccessToken = context.Request.Headers["Authorization"];
if (appAccessToken.Count == 0)
{
context.Items["User"] = null;
}
else
{
var token = appAccessToken.ToString().Replace("Bearer ", "");
var jwtToken = new JwtToken(config.JwtTokenSecret); //you need a secret (with requirements specified above) in your configuration (db, appsettings.json)
if (string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(token) || !jwtToken.IsTokenValid(token))
{
context.Response.StatusCode = 401;
return Task.FromResult(0);
}
dynamic user = jwtToken.DecodeToken<dynamic>(token);
var cachedToken = cache.Get(user.Id); //you need some cache for store your token after login success and so can check against
if (cachedToken == null || cachedToken.ToString() != token)
{
context.Response.StatusCode = 401;
return Task.FromResult(0);
}
context.Items["User"] = new Dictionary<string, string>() {
{ "FullName",user.Name?.ToString()},
{ "FirstName",user.FirstName?.ToString()},
{ "LastName",user.LastName?.ToString()},
{ "Role",user.Role?.ToString()},
{ "Email",user.Email?.ToString()}
};
}
return next();
});
And finally you need generate the token and return it after
authentication:
[AllowAnonymous]
public IActionResult Login(string username, string password)
{
User user = null; //you need some User class with the structure of the previous dictionary
if (checkAuthenticationOK(username, password, out user)) //chackAuthenticationOk sets the user against db data after a succesfull authentication
{
var token = new JwtToken(_config.JwtTokenSecret).GetToken(user); //_config is an object to your configuration
_cache.Set(user.id, token); //store in the cache the token for checking in each request
return Ok(token);
}
return StatusCode(401, "User is not authorized");
}
Add following code to startup
public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
services.AddAuthentication(JwtBearerDefaults.AuthenticationScheme)
.AddJwtBearer(options =>
{
options.TokenValidationParameters = new TokenValidationParameters
{
ValidateIssuer = true,
ValidateAudience = true,
ValidateLifetime = true,
ValidateIssuerSigningKey = true,
ValidIssuer = Configuration["Issuer"],
ValidAudience = Configuration["Audience"],
IssuerSigningKey = new SymmetricSecurityKey(Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(Configuration["SigningKey"]))
};
});
}
public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app, IHostingEnvironment env,, ILoggerFactory loggerFactory)
{
app.UseAuthentication();
}
Code for login action in AccountController
[Route("api/[controller]")]
public class AccountController : Controller
{
[AllowAnonymous]
[HttpPost]
[Route("login")]
public IActionResult Login([FromBody]LoginViewModel loginViewModel)
{
if (ModelState.IsValid)
{
var user = _userService.Authenticate(loginViewModel);
var claims = new[]
{
new Claim(JwtRegisteredClaimNames.Sub, loginViewModel.Username),
new Claim(JwtRegisteredClaimNames.Jti, Guid.NewGuid().ToString())
};
var token = new JwtSecurityToken
(
issuer: _configuration["Issuer"],
audience: _configuration["Audience"],
claims: claims,
expires: DateTime.UtcNow.AddDays(10),
notBefore: DateTime.UtcNow,
signingCredentials: new SigningCredentials(new SymmetricSecurityKey(Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(_configuration["SigningKey"])),
SecurityAlgorithms.HmacSha256)
);
return Ok(new
{
access_token = new JwtSecurityTokenHandler().WriteToken(token),
expires_in = (int)token.ValidTo.Subtract(DateTime.UtcNow).TotalSeconds,// TimeSpan.FromTicks( token.ValidTo.Ticks).TotalSeconds,
sub = loginViewModel.Username,
name = loginViewModel.Username,
fullName = user.FullName,
jobtitle = string.Empty,
phone = string.Empty,
email = user.EmailName,
});
}
}
}
I assume you have implemented JWT on the server side. To handle this on client side, first you have to add token to web browser local storage. Add to your main layout javascript (let's named it AuthService.js)
below code adds token to local storage after login button clicked. gettokenfromlocalstorage() retrieve token from local storage.
<script>
var token = "";
function Loginclick() {
var form = document.querySelector('form');
var data = new FormData(form);
var authsevice = new AuthService();
authsevice.LogIn(data.get("username").toString(), data.get("password").toString());
}
function gettokenfromlocalstorage() {
var authserv = new AuthService();
var mytoken = authserv.getAuth();
authserv.LogOut();
}
var AuthService = /** #class */ (function () {
function AuthService() {
this.authKey = "auth";
}
AuthService.prototype.LogIn = function (username, password) {
this.username = username;
this.password = password;
this.grant_type = "password";
this.client_id = "MyClientId";
var loginurl = "/api/Token/Auth";
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open("POST", loginurl, true);
xhr.setRequestHeader('Content-Type', 'application/json');
xhr.send(JSON.stringify(this));
xhr.onreadystatechange = function () {
console.log("onreadystatechange");
};
xhr.onerror = function () {
var aaa = this.responseText;
};
xhr.onload = function () {
var data = JSON.parse(this.responseText);
var auth = new AuthService();
auth.setAuth(data);
};
};
AuthService.prototype.LogOut = function () {
this.setAuth(null);
return true;
};
AuthService.prototype.setAuth = function (auth) {
if (auth) {
localStorage.setItem(this.authKey, JSON.stringify(auth));
}
else {
localStorage.removeItem(this.authKey);
}
return true;
};
AuthService.prototype.getAuth = function () {
var i = localStorage.getItem(this.authKey);
return i === null ? null : JSON.parse(i);
};
AuthService.prototype.isLoggedIn = function () {
return localStorage.getItem(this.authKey) !== null ? true : false;
};
return AuthService;
}());
var aa = new AuthService();
var gettoken = aa.getAuth();
if (gettoken !== null) {
token = gettoken.token;
}
</script>
To add token to the header of each anchor tag put below script also to
your main layout.
<script>
var links = $('a');
for (var i = 0; i < links.length; i++) {
links[i].onclick = function check() {
addheader(this.href);
return false;
}
}
function addheader(object) {
let xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open("GET", object, true);
xhr.setRequestHeader('Authorization', 'Bearer ' + token);
xhr.send(null);
xhr.onload = function () {
window.history.pushState("/", "", xhr.responseURL);
//mycontainer is a div for parialview content
$("#mycontainer").html(xhr.responseText);
window.onpopstate = function (e) {
if (e.state) {
$("html").html = e.state;
document.title = e.state.pageTitle;
}
};
};
}
</script>
Remember that using of this approach, each view has to be loaded as a partial view.
If you insert url address in a web browser bar directly this solution doesn't work. I haven't figured it out yet. That's why to manage token authentication is better using single page application, not multipage application.
You can use this boilerplate to understand how to implement JWT tokenization with .Net Core. In the project you can find JWT, Swagger and EF features.

How to prevent an ASP NET MVC application requesting authorization from Google every hour?

We are using packages Google.Apis.Calendar.v3 and Google.Apis.Auth.Mvc in an ASP .NET MVC application with users.
We want each user to have access to their Google Calendar, so it is necessary that each one of them give permission to our application. We have read a lot and it is said that there is a way to prevent the application from asking the user for these credentials every hour
We have looked at solutions like this and do not work for us
solutions like this one we do not know how to use them in our MVC application
users may or may not register on our site using google
This is the last code that we tried and everything works correctly, except that every hour the users who had already given permission to our application had to do it again and to re-authenticate with google and give permissions:
FlowMetadata implementation
public class AppFlowMetadata : FlowMetadata
{
private static readonly IAuthorizationCodeFlow flow =
new ForceOfflineGoogleAuthorizationCodeFlow(new GoogleAuthorizationCodeFlow.Initializer
{
ClientSecrets = new ClientSecrets
{
ClientId = "MY_VALID_CLIENT_ID",
ClientSecret = "MY_VALID_CLIENT_SECRET"
},
Scopes = new[] { CalendarService.Scope.Calendar },
DataStore = new FileDataStore("Google.Api.Auth.Store")
});
public override string GetUserId(Controller controller)
{
var userId = controller.User.Identity.GetUserId();
return userId;
}
public override IAuthorizationCodeFlow Flow
{
get { return flow; }
}
}
GoogleAuthorizationCodeFlow implementation forcing offline
internal class ForceOfflineGoogleAuthorizationCodeFlow : GoogleAuthorizationCodeFlow
{
public ForceOfflineGoogleAuthorizationCodeFlow(GoogleAuthorizationCodeFlow.Initializer initializer) : base(initializer) { }
public override AuthorizationCodeRequestUrl CreateAuthorizationCodeRequest(string redirectUri)
{
return new GoogleAuthorizationCodeRequestUrl(new Uri(AuthorizationServerUrl))
{
ClientId = ClientSecrets.ClientId,
Scope = string.Join(" ", Scopes),
RedirectUri = redirectUri,
AccessType = "offline",
ApprovalPrompt = "force"
};
}
}
AuthCallbackController
public class AuthCallbackController : Google.Apis.Auth.OAuth2.Mvc.Controllers.AuthCallbackController
{
protected override Google.Apis.Auth.OAuth2.Mvc.FlowMetadata FlowData
{
get { return new AppFlowMetadata(); }
}
}
Test controller action
public async Task IndexAsync(CancellationToken cancellationToken)
{
var result = await new AuthorizationCodeMvcApp(this, new AppFlowMetadata()).
AuthorizeAsync(cancellationToken);
if (result.Credential != null)
{
var service = new CalendarService(new BaseClientService.Initializer()
{
HttpClientInitializer = result.Credential,
ApplicationName = "TEST",
});
IList list = service.CalendarList.List().Execute().Items;
var selected = list.First();
EventsResource.ListRequest request = service.Events.List(selected.Id);
request.TimeMin = new DateTime?(new DateTime(2017, 1, 1));
request.ShowDeleted = false;
request.SingleEvents = true;
request.MaxResults = 10;
request.OrderBy = EventsResource.ListRequest.OrderByEnum.StartTime;
Events events = request.Execute();
return View(events);
}
else
{
return new RedirectResult(result.RedirectUri);
}
}

Web Api with Owin with JWT always fails to authorize request

I have followed the tutorials up till this point in the series. I am using one project in the solution that acts as both the token issuing authority as well as the resource server.
The JWT is generated using the endpoint mentioned in the startup class and I validated it on jwt.io as well. However when I pass this JWT using Postman on Chrome to the resource API end point secured with an Authorize attribute, I always find it returning
{
"message": "Authorization has been denied for this request." }
The other api method as in the api controller class below works when called thru Postman on Chrome.
I have used the latest versions of all dlls required from the nuget console
Code in the startup class
public void Configuration(IAppBuilder app)
{
HttpConfiguration config = new HttpConfiguration();
ConfigureOAuthTokenGeneration(app);
ConfigureOAuthTokenConsumption(app);
WebApiConfig.Register(config);
app.UseCors(Microsoft.Owin.Cors.CorsOptions.AllowAll);
app.UseWebApi(config);
}
private void ConfigureOAuthTokenGeneration(IAppBuilder app)
{
OAuthAuthorizationServerOptions OAuthServerOptions = new OAuthAuthorizationServerOptions()
{
//For Dev enviroment only (on production should be AllowInsecureHttp = false)
AllowInsecureHttp = true,
TokenEndpointPath = new PathString("/oauth/token"),
AccessTokenExpireTimeSpan = TimeSpan.FromDays(1),
Provider = new CustomOAuthProvider(),
AccessTokenFormat = new CustomJwtFormat(ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["Issuer"]),
};
// OAuth 2.0 Bearer Access Token Generation
app.UseOAuthAuthorizationServer(OAuthServerOptions);
}
private void ConfigureOAuthTokenConsumption(IAppBuilder app)
{
string issuer = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["Issuer"];
string audienceId = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["AudienceId"];
byte[] audienceSecret = TextEncodings.Base64Url.Decode(ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["AudienceSecret"]);
// Api controllers with an [Authorize] attribute will be validated with JWT
app.UseJwtBearerAuthentication(
new JwtBearerAuthenticationOptions
{
AuthenticationMode = AuthenticationMode.Active,
AllowedAudiences = new[] { audienceId },
IssuerSecurityTokenProviders = new IIssuerSecurityTokenProvider[]
{
new SymmetricKeyIssuerSecurityTokenProvider(issuer, audienceSecret)
}
});
}
Code in the Custom OAuthProvider
public class CustomOAuthProvider : OAuthAuthorizationServerProvider
{
public override Task ValidateClientAuthentication(OAuthValidateClientAuthenticationContext context)
{
context.Validated();
return Task.FromResult<object>(null);
}
public override Task MatchEndpoint(OAuthMatchEndpointContext context)
{
//avoid pre-flight calls
if (context.OwinContext.Request.Method == "OPTIONS" && context.IsTokenEndpoint)
{
context.OwinContext.Response.Headers.Add("Access-Control-Allow-Methods", new[] { "POST" });
context.OwinContext.Response.Headers.Add("Access-Control-Allow-Headers", new[] { "accept", "authorization", "content-type" });
context.OwinContext.Response.StatusCode = 200;
context.RequestCompleted();
return Task.FromResult<object>(null);
}
return base.MatchEndpoint(context);
}
public override async Task GrantResourceOwnerCredentials(OAuthGrantResourceOwnerCredentialsContext context)
{
context.OwinContext.Response.Headers.Add("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", new[] { "*" });
//setting up claims in the constructor of class UserDetails
UserDetails user = new UserDetails();
user.UserName = context.UserName;
user.FirstName = "Dummy First";
user.LastName = "Dummy Last";
ClaimsIdentity identity = new ClaimsIdentity("JWT-BearerAuth-Test");
identity.AddClaim(new Claim(ClaimTypes.Name, context.UserName));
foreach (string claim in user.Claims)
{
identity.AddClaim(new Claim(ClaimTypes.Role, claim));
}
var ticket = new AuthenticationTicket(identity, null);
context.Validated(ticket);
}
}
The custom JWT class
public class CustomJwtFormat : ISecureDataFormat<AuthenticationTicket>
{
private readonly string _issuer = string.Empty;
public CustomJwtFormat(string issuer)
{
_issuer = issuer;
}
public string Protect(AuthenticationTicket data)
{
if (data == null)
{
throw new ArgumentNullException("data");
}
string audienceId = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["AudienceId"];
string symmetricKeyAsBase64 = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["AudienceSecret"];
var keyByteArray = TextEncodings.Base64Url.Decode(symmetricKeyAsBase64);
var signingKey = new HmacSigningCredentials(keyByteArray);
var issued = data.Properties.IssuedUtc;
var expires = data.Properties.ExpiresUtc;
var token = new JwtSecurityToken(_issuer, audienceId, data.Identity.Claims, issued.Value.UtcDateTime, expires.Value.UtcDateTime, signingKey);
var handler = new JwtSecurityTokenHandler();
var jwt = handler.WriteToken(token);
return jwt;
}
}
The Resource server's Api controller
public class AdminController : ApiController
{
//This call works
public IHttpActionResult ReadData(string id)
{
return Ok("ID sent in:" + id);
}
//[Authorize(Roles="EditRecord")] //doesnt work
[Authorize] //doesnt work either
public IHttpActionResult EditData(string id)
{
return Ok("Edited ID:" + id);
}
}
My environment is VS2013 with Framework 4.5 using OAuth2 with Web Api 2. Please excuse the long post.
You need to make sure that values for issuer, audienceId, and audienceSecret used in method "ConfigureOAuthTokenConsumption" are the same values used when you generated the JWT token, take care of trailing slashes "/".
This is the only thing comes to my mind right now.

Authenticate - provide login email address to lookup user identity

I am using Thinktecture AuthenticationConfiguration to provide an end point for signing tokens on my API:
var authConfig = new AuthenticationConfiguration
{
EnableSessionToken = true,
SendWwwAuthenticateResponseHeaders = true,
RequireSsl = false,
ClaimsAuthenticationManager = new ClaimsTransformation(),
SessionToken = new SessionTokenConfiguration
{
EndpointAddress = "/api/token",
SigningKey = signingKey,
DefaultTokenLifetime = new TimeSpan(1, 0, 0)
}
};
var userCredentialsService = new CredentialsService(credentialStore);
authConfig.AddBasicAuthentication(userCredentialsService.Validate);
And authenticating users with CredentialsService:
public class CredentialsService
{
public bool Validate(string username, string password)
{
return username == password;
}
}
The above works, and no its certainly not used in production, but on returning true i will get a token in which contains a claim with the username.
In my scenario I have a user id (an integer) which can never change and I would like this to be in my claim. So the user would pass an email address to the service endpoint in the header as basic authentication, and then if valid go ahead and sign with the id as the claim (but not the email address as the claim):
public class CredentialsService
{
public bool Validate(string emailAddress, string password)
{
// map from the provided name, to the user id
var details = MySqlDb.ReadBy(emailAddress);
var id = details.Id; // this is the actual identity of the user
var email = details.EmailAddress;
var hash = details.Hash;
return PasswordHash.ValidatePassword(password,hash);
}
}
I appreciate this will need a second lookup to a sql server database to transform the emailAddress in to a userId, is there a way for me to insert this in to the pipeline flow before CredentialsService is called?
Or am i going about it the wrong way, and just stick with the username that was signed in as, then use a claims transformation based on the username to enrich with the integer identity - but then what if they changed the username?
Ok, I managed to solve this by taking a look at the awesome thinktecture source and overriding BasicAuthenticationSecurityTokenHandler to give a derived class which has a second delegate returning a Claim[] ready to be signed:
public class BasicAuthSecurityTokenHandlerWithClaimsOutput : BasicAuthenticationSecurityTokenHandler
{
public BasicAuthSecurityTokenHandlerWithClaimsOutput(ValidateUserNameCredentialDelegate validateUserNameCredential, GetClaimsForAuthenticatedUser getClaimsForAuthenticatedUser)
: base()
{
if (validateUserNameCredential == null)
{
throw new ArgumentNullException("ValidateUserNameCredential");
}
if (getClaimsForAuthenticatedUser== null)
{
throw new ArgumentNullException("GetClaimsForAuthenticatedUser");
}
base.ValidateUserNameCredential = validateUserNameCredential;
_getClaimsForAuthenticatedUser = getClaimsForAuthenticatedUser;
}
public delegate Claim[] GetClaimsForAuthenticatedUser(string username);
private readonly GetClaimsForAuthenticatedUser _getClaimsForAuthenticatedUser;
public override ReadOnlyCollection<ClaimsIdentity> ValidateToken(SecurityToken token)
{
if (token == null)
{
throw new ArgumentNullException("token");
}
if (base.Configuration == null)
{
throw new InvalidOperationException("No Configuration set");
}
UserNameSecurityToken unToken = token as UserNameSecurityToken;
if (unToken == null)
{
throw new ArgumentException("SecurityToken is not a UserNameSecurityToken");
}
if (!ValidateUserNameCredentialCore(unToken.UserName, unToken.Password))
{
throw new SecurityTokenValidationException(unToken.UserName);
}
var claims = new List<Claim>
{
new Claim(ClaimTypes.Name, unToken.UserName),
new Claim(ClaimTypes.AuthenticationMethod, AuthenticationMethods.Password),
AuthenticationInstantClaim.Now
};
var lookedUpClaims = _getClaimsForAuthenticatedUser(unToken.UserName);
claims.AddRange(lookedUpClaims);
if (RetainPassword)
{
claims.Add(new Claim("password", unToken.Password));
}
var identity = new ClaimsIdentity(claims, "Basic");
if (Configuration.SaveBootstrapContext)
{
if (this.RetainPassword)
{
identity.BootstrapContext = new BootstrapContext(unToken, this);
}
else
{
var bootstrapToken = new UserNameSecurityToken(unToken.UserName, null);
identity.BootstrapContext = new BootstrapContext(bootstrapToken, this);
}
}
return new List<ClaimsIdentity> {identity}.AsReadOnly();
}
}
I then added a second helper method to make it easier to wire up:
public static class BasicAuthHandlerExtensionWithClaimsOutput
{
public static void AddBasicAuthenticationWithClaimsOutput(
this AuthenticationConfiguration configuration,
BasicAuthenticationSecurityTokenHandler.ValidateUserNameCredentialDelegate validationDelegate,
BasicAuthSecurityTokenHandlerWithClaimsOutput.GetClaimsForAuthenticatedUser getClaimsForAuthenticatedUserDelegate,
string realm = "localhost", bool retainPassword = false)
{
var handler = new BasicAuthSecurityTokenHandlerWithClaimsOutput(validationDelegate, getClaimsForAuthenticatedUserDelegate);
handler.RetainPassword = retainPassword;
configuration.AddMapping(new AuthenticationOptionMapping
{
TokenHandler = new SecurityTokenHandlerCollection { handler },
Options = AuthenticationOptions.ForAuthorizationHeader(scheme: "Basic"),
Scheme = AuthenticationScheme.SchemeAndRealm("Basic", realm)
});
}
}
Hope this helps others, please let me know if i have done something horrific!

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