i have some controlers that provide access only to users that are in Admin role:
[Authorize(Roles = "Administrators")]
controler im talking about displays company details for customers and i want to provide access to that controler by some url for example:
www.mysite.com/Company/123?code=0932840329809u0932840
generating code will not be a problem, problem is what is the best solution to provide access to controler via that secret url AND access without secret url only for administrators?
thnx!
You could create a custom attribute filter by extending the AuthorizeAttribute.
Something like:
public class CustomAuthorizeAttribute : AuthorizeAttribute {
public string Code { get; set; }
protected override bool AuthorizeCore(HttpContextBase httpContext) {
if (base.AuthorizeCore(httpContext)) {
return true;
}
string code = Code ?? GetCode() //parse you code as a parameter or get it from another method
if (httpContext.Request["code"] == code) {
return true;
}
return false;
}
}
//I wouldn't recommend parsing the code like this, I would get it in your action filter
[CustomAuthorizeAttribute(Code="0932840329809u0932840")]
public ActionResult Index() {
return View();
}
Have a look at http://schotime.net/blog/index.php/2009/02/17/custom-authorization-with-aspnet-mvc/
Related
I want to create a Web API MVC.
This API will authorize TOKEN JWT, and I want to create my own Authorize attribute like CanRead, CanModify, CanWrite.
Three attributes just inherit Attribute class (no AuthorizeAttribute), is it ok ?
My application have complicates role and permission so I want to customize all about authorization and authentication.
I want to manage the permission dynamic
So how can I do it ?
Will I access database from attributes (CanRead or CanModify) to check permission
Create a custom AuthorizeAttribute instead. an example below.
public class KeyAuthorizeAttribute : AuthorizeAttribute
{
protected override bool AuthorizeCore(HttpContextBase httpContext)
{
string key = httpContext.Request["X-Key"];
return ApiValidatorService.IsValid(key);
}
}
public static class ApiValidatorService
{
public static bool IsValid(string key)
{
int keyvalue;
if (int.TryParse(key, out keyvalue))
{
return keyvalue % 2137 == 7;
}
return false;
}
}
Taken from Jon Galloway's blog. I don't know specifically how you are authorizing, but if you create a class with:
public bool CanRead { get; set; }
public bool CanWrite { get; set; }
public bool CanModify { get; set; }
And then within the AuthorizeCore method, determine based on the setting if the user has the right permission.
I'm use to custom authorize attribute like
public class AdminAttribute : AuthorizeAttribute
{
protected override bool AuthorizeCore(HttpContextBase httpContext)
{
return (base.AuthorizeCore(httpContext) && User.IsCurrentUserAdmin());
}
}
how to check is action call current user or not
as an example:
[OnlyYouself]
public ActionResult ViewUser(int userId)
{
...
}
means userId = current user
else redirect to previous view
You might want to build a custom attribute that looks like this:
public class AllowCurrentUserAttribute: AuthorizeAttribute
{
public string Field { get; set; }
public override void OnAuthorization(AuthorizationContext filterContext)
{
return (base.AuthorizeCore(httpContext) && filterContext.HttpContext.User.Identity.Name == filterContext.HttpContext.Request.QueryString[Field];
}
And then use it like this:
[AllowCurrentUser(Field = "userId")]
public ActionResult ViewUser(int userId)
{
...
}
There are probably better ways to check the request properties, though. Also, you may want to have a default value of "id" for the field, assuming you use the default MVC routing. If your id field is called something else, you'll want to change it.
actionContext.RequestContext.Principal.Identity
Implementing a basic authorization and authentication layer is quite easy with ASP.NET MVC 4; it's all automatically generated with the 'ASP.NET MVC 4 Web Application'-project template.
However, I'm tasked with implementing some controller actions that require re-authentication and I'm aiming for a maintainable solution. Simply put in a user story, I'm trying to implement the following:
User logs on;
User navigates to a controller (attributed with [Authorize]) action which renders a form view;
User performs a POST by submitting the form;
An authentication form appears in which the user needs to re-authenticate using his/her username and password;
If authentication is succesfull, proceed with handling the POST-request.
Note that 'reauthentication' does not have to alter the state of the current user session.
Obviously, there are many ways to implementing this, but I feel like an implementation which looks similiar to the following (pseudo) sample would suit my needs.
[Authorize]
[InitializeSimpleMembership]
public class SpecialActionController : Controller
{
public ActionResult SpecialForm() { return View(); }
public ActionResult Succes() { return View(); }
[HttpPost]
[ReAuthenticate] /* <- Prompts user with reauthentication form before proceeding. */
public ActionResult SpecialForm(SpecialFormModel model)
{
if (ModelState.IsValid)
RedirectToAction("Succes");
else
return View(model);
}
}
Any suggestions?
Edit: I forgot to mention that any OAuth-related features are out of scope. External authentication is not an issue here and does not require support. In fact, with the current project I'm working on, all OAuth-related features are either removed or deactivated.
You should be able to do this using a combination of a custom AuthorizeAttribute and the Session. Override the AuthorizeCore method and let all the default authentication take place but introduce your own extra check (for re-authentication) e.g.
public class RecurringAuthorizeAttribute : AuthorizeAttribute
{
protected override bool AuthorizeCore(HttpContextBase httpContext)
{
var reauth = (bool?)httpContext.Session["ReAuthenticated"];
var result = base.AuthorizeCore(httpContext) && (reauth ?? false);
httpContext.Session["ReAuthenticated"] = !result;
return result;
}
}
This should re-direct the user to the login page everytime they hit the action and they haven't re-authenticated. If the user has re-authenticated, we clear the session variable to force a login on the next request.
For this to work correctly, we need a hook to set the ReAuthentication session variable - I think the LogOn method in the AccountController would be the ideal place for this
public class AccountController : Controller
{
...
[HttpPost]
public ActionResult LogOn(LogOnModel model, string returnUrl)
{
if (ModelState.IsValid && WebSecurity.Login(model.UserName, model.Password, persistCookie: model.RememberMe))
{
Session["ReAuthenticated"] = User.Identity.IsAuthenticated;
return RedirectToLocal(returnUrl);
}
...
}
}
Then all that's left to do is decorate our controller actions
[Authorize]
public ActionResult SomePrivateAction()
{
...
}
[RecurringAuthorize]
public ActionResult SomeSuperSecretAction()
{
...
}
You should find authorization will work as normal for any actions using the default AuthorizeAttribute and any actions decorated with the RecurringAuthorizeAttribute will be forced to login everytime they request the page, which includes page refreshes.
I tried to implement the hypothetical [ReAuthenticate]-attribute, but found myself relying on reflection too much. After putting some thought into a more manageable solution, I finally came up with the following:
ReAuth class
public sealed class ReAuth
{
#region Constructor
private ReAuth(Func<System.Web.Mvc.ActionResult> onSuccessAction)
{
this.onSuccessAction = onSuccessAction;
}
#endregion
#region Public static members
public static ReAuth CreateFor(HttpSessionStateBase httpSession, Func<System.Web.Mvc.ActionResult> onSuccessAction)
{
httpSession[sessionKey] = new ReAuth(onSuccessAction);
return GetFor(httpSession);
}
public static ReAuth GetFor(HttpSessionStateBase httpSession)
{
return httpSession[sessionKey] as ReAuth;
}
public static bool ExistsFor(HttpSessionStateBase httpSession)
{
return httpSession[sessionKey] as ReAuth != null;
}
#endregion
#region Public instance members
public bool ReAuthenticated { get; set; }
public System.Web.Mvc.ActionResult Handle()
{
if (ReAuthenticated)
return onSuccessAction();
else
return new System.Web.Mvc.RedirectToRouteResult(
new System.Web.Routing.RouteValueDictionary
{
{ "Controller", "#" }, /* Replace '#' with the name of the controller that implements the re-authentication form... */
{ "Action", "#" } /* Replace '#' with the name of the action on the aforementioned controller. */
});
}
#endregion
#region Private members
private const string sessionKey = "reAuthenticationSessionKey";
private readonly Func<System.Web.Mvc.ActionResult> onSuccessAction;
#endregion
}
Implementation
Suppose we have a hypothetical controller where the solution is applied:
public class AccountInfoController : System.Web.Mvc.Controller
{
/* snip... */
[HttpPost]
public ActionResult EditAccountInfo(AccountInfo model)
{
if (ModelState.IsValid)
return ReAuth.CreateFor(Session, () => { return Success(); }).Handle();
else
return View(model);
}
}
...and, we need a controller (essentially, a 'dumb' copy of the real AccountController that does not tamper with the Forms Authentication User Session state) in which the re-authentication takes place.:
public class ReAuthController : System.Web.Mvc.Controller
{
/* Snip... */
[HttpPost]
public ActionResult LogOn(LogOnModel model)
{
if (ModelState.IsValid)
{
ReAuth.GetFor(Session).ReAuthenticated = Membership.ValidateUser(model.User, model.Password);
return ReAuth.Handle();
}
return View(model);
}
}
As far as I know, this is a manageable solution. It does rely a lot on storing objects into session state. (Especially the object state of the controller which implements the ReAuth-class) If anyone has additional suggestions, please let me know!
If I want only administrator to access the action called "ManagerUser", I know I can do this:
[Authorize( Roles = Constants.ROLES_ADMINISTRATOR )]
public ActionResult ManageUser( string id )
{
}
What if I want to give everyone access except to administrator? I do not want to write all roles up there on function :|.
Any recommendations/way outs?
You can create your own custom Authorize attribute, something like "AuthorizeAllExceptAdmin." Within that class you would simply need to check whether or not the current user was an admin, and if they were reject it, otherwise accept it.
Here's a good tutorial, but you'll probably end up with something like:
public class AuthorizeAllExceptAdmin : AuthorizeAttribute
{
protected override bool AuthorizeCore(HttpContextBase httpContext)
{
return !httpContext.User.IsInRole(Constants.ROLES_ADMINISTRATOR);
}
}
Then your controller method becomes:
[AuthorizeAllExceptAdmin]
public ActionResult SomethingOnlyNonAdminsCanDo()
{
}
Here's an example of the custom attribute that takes in roles to deny.
public class DoNotAuthorize : AuthorizeAttribute
{
private IEnumerable<string> _rolesToReject;
public DoNotAuthorize(IEnumerable<string> rolesToReject)
{
_rolesToReject = rolesToReject;
}
protected override bool AuthorizeCore(HttpContextBase httpContext)
{
foreach (var role in _rolesToReject)
{
if (httpContext.User.IsInRole(role))
return false;
}
return true;
}
}
Then your controller method becomes:
[DoNotAuthorize(new [] {Constants.ROLES_ADMINISTRATOR})]
public ActionResult SomethingOnlyNonAdminsCanDo()
{
}
I would put some thought into it before choosing one of the above options. If you think you'll have several methods (or entire controllers) with similar authorization requirements (i.e, several actions an admin can not perform) then I would stick with the non-parameterized custom attribute. This way, you can evolve them all together (by only changing the custom attribute) later on. For example, maybe later on you want admins to be able to go into a special mode where they can perform these actions.
Alternatively, if the autorization is more varied amongst the actions, then using the parameterized list makes sense, since they'll evolve relatively independently.
Besides creating a custom AuthorizeAttribute, suggested by manu, you could use PrincipalPermission, with a Deny-SecurityAction:
[PrincipalPermission(SecurityAction.Deny, Role="Administrator")]
In my app I don't use roles so I have to query the database to determine whether the user has access or not. The benefits of the code below is that you can redirect the user to a certain action very easily. I explained the code in my blog post at http://blog.athe.la/2009/12/implementing-permission-via-windows-authentication-in-asp-mvc-using-action-filters/
public class DatabaseRepository()
{
private readonly DatabaseDataContext db = new DatabaseDataContext();
public bool UserHasPermission(string userLogon) {
return (from permission this.db.Permissions
where permission.HasPermissionSw == true
select permission).Contains(userLogon);
}
}
public class UserHasPermission: ActionFilterAttribute
{
private readonly DatabaseRepository databaseRepository = new DatabaseRepository();
private readonly string redirectAction;
public UserHasPermission(string redirectTo)
{
this.redirectAction = redirectTo;
}
public override void OnActionExecuting(ActionExecutingContext filterContext)
{
string userLogon = filterContext.HttpContext.User.Identity.Name;
if (!this.databaseRepository.UserHasPermission(userLogon))
{
string routeController = filterContext.Controller.ControllerContext.RouteData.Values["controller"];
filterContext.Result = new RedirectToRouteResult(new RouteValueDictionary(new { controller = routeController, action = this.redirectAction }));
}
}
}
Your controller would then look something like this:
[UserHasPermission("NoAccess")]
public ActionResult SecretArea()
{
// run all the logic
return View();
}
public ActionResult NoAccess()
{
return View();
}
I have a the following methods in an MVC Controller which redirect to the login page when a user is not logged in.
[Authorize]
public ActionResult Search() {
return View();
}
[Authorize]
public ActionResult Edit() {
return View();
}
Is there a quick/easy/standard way to redirect the second action to a different login page other than the page defined in the web.config file?
Or do I have to do something like
public ActionResult Edit() {
if (IsUserLoggedIn)
return View();
else
return ReturnRedirect("/Login2");
}
I think it is possible by creating a custom authorization filter:
public class CustomAuthorization : AuthorizeAttribute
{
public string LoginPage { get; set; }
public override void OnAuthorization(AuthorizationContext filterContext)
{
if (!filterContext.HttpContext.User.Identity.IsAuthenticated)
{
filterContext.HttpContext.Response.Redirect(LoginPage);
}
base.OnAuthorization(filterContext);
}
}
In your action:
[CustomAuthorization(LoginPage="~/Home/Login1")]
public ActionResult Search()
{
return View();
}
[CustomAuthorization(LoginPage="~/Home/Login2")]
public ActionResult Edit()
{
return View();
}
Web.config based forms authentication does not have such a functionality built-in (this applies to both WinForms and MVC). You have to handle it yourself (either through an HttpModule or ActionFilter, the method you mentioned or any other method)
I implemented the accepted answer by user434917 and even though I was being redirected correctly, I was also receiving the error "Server cannot set status after HTTP headers have been sent." in the server log. After searching, I found this post (answer by Mattias Jakobsson) that solved the problem. I combined the answers to get this solution.
Create a custom authorization filter:
using System.Web.Mvc;
using System.Web.Routing;
namespace SomeNamespace.CustomFilters
{
public class CustomAuthorization : AuthorizeAttribute
{
public string ActionValue { get; set; }
public string AreaValue { get; set; }
public string ControllerValue { get; set; }
public override void OnAuthorization(AuthorizationContext context)
{
base.OnAuthorization(context);
if (context.HttpContext.User.Identity.IsAuthenticated == false)
{
var routeValues = new RouteValueDictionary();
routeValues["area"] = AreaValue;
routeValues["controller"] = ControllerValue;
routeValues["action"] = ActionValue;
context.Result = new System.Web.Mvc.RedirectToRouteResult(routeValues);
}
}
}
}
Then on your controller, use the customer attribute.
[CustomAuthorization(ActionValue = "actionName", AreaValue = "areaName", ControllerValue = "controllerName")]
public class SomeControllerController : Controller
{
//DO WHATEVER
}
Yeah pretty easy! Lets say you have 2 different type of users. First typenormal users, the other one is administrators. You would like to make them login from different pages. You also want them to be able to access different ActionResults.
First you have add two different schemes. In these schemes you will define your different login pages and other options you want.
in startup.cs
services.AddAuthentication("UserSceheme").AddCookie("UserScheme", config =>
{
config.LoginPath = "/UsersLogin/Login/";
config.Cookie.Name = "UsersCookie";
});
services.AddAuthentication("AdminScheme").AddCookie("AdminScheme", config =>
{
config.LoginPath = "/AdminLogin/Login/";
config.Cookie.Name = "AdminsCookie";
});
Then you will define two policies. Here I called them UserAccess and AdminAccess Each policy will use the sceheme that I point.
In startup.cs just after schemes add those below.
services.AddAuthorization(options =>
{
options.AddPolicy("UserAccess", policy =>
{
policy.AuthenticationSchemes.Add("UserScheme");
policy.RequireAuthenticatedUser();
});
options.AddPolicy("AdminAccess", policy =>
{
policy.AuthenticationSchemes.Add("AdminScheme");
policy.RequireAuthenticatedUser();
});
});
The last thing we have to do is again telling the scheme we want to use when login.
var userPrincipal = new ClaimsPrincipal(new[] {
new ClaimsIdentity(loginClaims, "ServiceCenter")
});
HttpContext.SignInAsync("AdminScheme",userPrincipal);
Thats it! Now we can use these just like this; This will redirect you to the users login page.
[Authorize(Policy = "UserAccess")]
public IActionResult Index()
{
return View();
}
If you have some places that you want both user types to be able to access all you have to do;
[Authorize(Policy = "AdminAccess")]
[Authorize(Policy = "UserAccess")]
public IActionResult Index()
{
return View();
}
And finally for log-out you also have to point the scheme
public async Task<IActionResult> Logout()
{
await HttpContext.SignOutAsync("AdminScheme");
return View();
}
Thats it!