For starters, don't use the OpenWithNewPassword method. Not only does it have known issues with with various versions of ODP.net and the DB, but it forces you to have two different branches of code when you only need one - IIRC it doesn't work if the user's password has already expired.
Instead the basic logic works like this:
Make sure you can authenticate with the user's old account and password
If you're successful, close that connection and open a separate account that has no access other than exec privs on a ChangePassword stored procedure.
Here's the code:
protected void BtnChangePassword_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
String connectionStringFormat = "Data Source={0};User Id={1};Password={2};pooling=false;";
if (Page.IsValid)
{
Boolean hasHasError = false;
String connectionString = String.Format(
connectionStringFormat,
IptDatabase.Text,
IptUserName.Text,
IptOldPassword.Text);
OracleCommand cmd = new OracleCommand();
using (cmd.Connection = new OracleConnection(connectionString))
{
try
{
cmd.Connection.Open();
}
catch (OracleException ex)
{
//allow to continue if the password is simply expired, otherwise just show the message
if (ex.Number != 28001)
{
ShowErrorMessage(ex.Message);
hasHasError = true;
}
}
if (!hasHasError)
{
//successful authentication, open as password change account
cmd.Connection.Close();
cmd.Connection.ConnectionString = ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings[IptDatabase.Text].ConnectionString;
cmd.Connection.Open();
cmd.CommandText = "SysChangePassword";
cmd.CommandType = CommandType.StoredProcedure;
cmd.Parameters.Add("username", IptUserName.Text);
cmd.Parameters.Add("newpassword", IptPassword.Text);
try
{
cmd.ExecuteNonQuery();
ShowInfoMessage("Password Changed");
}
catch (OracleException ex)
{
ShowErrorMessage(ex.Message);
}
}
}
}
In it's simplest form, the proc executes 'alter user identified by and would be similar to the one documented here: http://www.adp-gmbh.ch/ora/plsql/change_password.html. However the dbms_output lines don't do you much good so you could throw custom exceptions instead:
create or replace procedure SysChangePassword(
pUserName in varchar2,
pPassWord in Varchar2) as
begin
-- Check for system users here and reject
if upper(pUserName) in ('SYS','SYSTEM') then
raise_application_error(-20012, 'not allowed');
else
execute immediate 'alter user '||pUserName||' identified by ' ||
pPassWord;
end if;
exception --this isn't necessary if you'd rather examine and handle the specific exceptions on the .net side
when others then
raise_application_error(-20012, sqlerrm);
end;
/
The schema that owns this procedure needs 'alter any user' privleges. For safety's sake, your app should connect as a separate user that only has execute privs on this proc. Rather