System.Web.Security Namespace
Ensures that an Authentication object is present in the context. This class cannot be inherited.
The DefaultAuthenticationModule ensures that the User property of the current HttpContext is set to an IPrincipal object for each request. The DefaultAuthenticationModule examines the User property after the AuthenticateRequest event and before the AuthorizeRequest event. If the User property is a null reference ( Nothing in Visual Basic ), the DefaultAuthenticationModule sets the User property to a GenericPrincipal object that contains no user information.
If the authentication module sets the StatusCode property to 401, the DefaultAuthenticationModule will write out a special access-denied error page. If the value of the StatusCode property is set to a value greater than 200, the DefaultAuthenticationModule object will end the request, and only HTTP modules that subscribe to the EndRequest event will be called prior to the completion of the current request.
The DefaultAuthenticationModule exposes an Authenticate event that enables you to provide a custom IPrincipal object for the User property of the current HttpContext. The Authenticate event is accessed by specifying an event named DefaultAuthentication_OnAuthenticate in the Global.asax file for your ASP.NET application.
The following code example uses the DefaultAuthentication_OnAuthenticate event to test whether the User property of the current HttpContext is a null reference ( Nothing in Visual Basic ) . If the User property is a null reference ( Nothing in Visual Basic ), then the sample sets the User property of the current HttpContext to a GenericPrincipal object where the Identity of the GenericPrincipal object is a GenericIdentity with a Name value of "default.".
NOTE: The DefaultAuthentication_OnAuthenticate event is raised before the AuthorizeRequest event. As a result, if you set the User property of the current HttpContext to a custom identity, it can affect the behavior of your application. For example, if you are using the FormsAuthentication class and you specify <deny users = "?" />
in the authorization configuration section to ensure that only authenticated users have access to your site, this sample will cause the deny element to be ignored, as the user will have a name, which is "default." Instead, you would specify <deny users = "default" />
to ensure that only authenticated users can access your site.
public void DefaultAuthentication_OnAuthenticate ( object src, DefaultAuthenticationEventArgs args ) {
if ( args.Context.User == null ) {
args.Context.User = new System.Security.Principal.GenericPrincipal (
new System.Security.Principal.GenericIdentity ( "default" ), new String [ 0 ] );
}
}
Public Sub DefaultAuthentication_OnAuthenticate ( src As Object, args As DefaultAuthenticationEventArgs )
If args.Context.User Is Nothing Then
args.Context.User = new System.Security.Principal.GenericPrincipal ( _
new System.Security.Principal.GenericIdentity ( "default" ), new String ( 0 ) { } )
End If
End Sub |
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C# |
VB |
ASP.NET Authentication