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I have an Asp.net MVC project authenticating through AD. I would like to store audit information in tables for the current logged in user. What should I be storing in the database? I am currently using SamAccountName for my membership and role providers. Should I be using this? Should I use the more verbose and modern UserPrincipalName? What if we eventually end up using multiple domains?

What about Guid? Guid would seem like the obvious choice but I know nothing about it. Why is it nullable? Does this value change? What is it used for?

Update

According to SID vs. GUID ...

The reason for using SIDs at all, and not GUIDs, is for backward compatibility. Windows NT uses SIDs to identify users and groups in ACLs on resources.

SIDs will actually change if you move a user to a new domain, the GUID will remain constant. It looks to me like GUID is the way to go unless you intend to authenticate against a NT4 AD server.

I'm not sure what to do here as I cannot accept my own answer for 2 days. Most in-depth explanation wins?

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  • FYI. Documentation for .NET 4.5 says "This property will always return null when the ContextType property is set to Machine"
    – d0001
    Jun 24, 2014 at 22:35

4 Answers 4

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According to SID vs. GUID ...

The reason for using SIDs at all, and not GUIDs, is for backward compatibility. Windows NT uses SIDs to identify users and groups in ACLs on resources.

That being said, I've decided to go with GUID. SIDs will actually change if you move a user to a new domain, the GUID will remain constant. So long as you don't plan on running your application against an NT4 AD server, GUID is the way to go.

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You might want to use the SID -- that's what the OS itself uses in most cases. SIDs are also unique across domains or workgroups.

The problem with user name alone is that it can be changed, whereas the SID is fixed.

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    Also, the class representing the SID is System.Security.Principal.SecurityIdentifier, not System.Guid as the question and some other comments suggest.
    – Aaronaught
    Dec 16, 2009 at 0:14
  • @Aaron Principal has both Guid and SID. Dec 16, 2009 at 0:16
  • There is a separate field in the Principal object called "Guid"; however, there is no requirement to associate a GUID with a user, so that field can be null.
    – RickNZ
    Dec 16, 2009 at 0:18
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    According to technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc961625.aspx SIDs will change when you switch domains. GUIDs will remain constant. It looks like Guids are the best solution here. Dec 16, 2009 at 1:01
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    You can use the objectGUID property if you want. Neither the SID nor the GUID are the "best", they are just different. If the information you are storing is security-related, use SID. If it is identity-related, use GUID. If it is both, use the GUID but store the SID to make it easier to query Active Directory and communicate with other AD libraries and AD-enabled apps.
    – Aaronaught
    Dec 17, 2009 at 16:19
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If you are using ASP.NET MVC (or Webforms for that matter) with Windows Authentication, why not just use the user name that you get from this property:

HttpContext.Current.User.Identity.Name

This returns Domain/Username of the user. I have worked on corporate web apps that used this for auditing purposes. I would be curious to know if you think this is not unique enough for your purposes.

Also I'm not sure why you would want to store a SID or GUID of the user, as it is very hard to read compared to domain/user when you are viewing audit logs.

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  • Usernames can be changed. I'm also currently using SamAccountName so there is no domain information in Identity.Name, it's just a username. My primary concern is scaling in the future. Dec 16, 2009 at 1:43
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    How common is it that the user name changes (not the display name mind you, we're talking about the account name)? I've seen this being used for auditing in an org with 100K+ user accounts without complaints. Are you sure you're not overthinking this problem?
    – dso
    Dec 16, 2009 at 6:49
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    Also I have seen cases where a user account name does change: when an employee leaves the company and returns. In this case however even the SID would change since it is considered a new account, even though it is actually the same person. If you want to truly ensure that its the same person then you would need to use a globally recognized unique identifier such as SSN.
    – dso
    Dec 16, 2009 at 6:52
  • While I do see your point, did this 100k+ organization have policies in place to ensure username conflicts didn't arise? Such as never allowing the same username? What if an employee leaves with a common name, say "sjohnson" and their account is deleted. A new employee then comes on and gets the username sjohnson. This would cause some confusion in the application as to who did what. While I understand this would be quite rare, especially in a smaller organization, it could still happen. I'd rather be proactive about it. Dec 16, 2009 at 7:53
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    User names change every time someone gets married or divorced unless the organization implements a username format that does not include any part of the user's name,e.g. employeeid, etc. Username changes are a very real headache for orgs > 1000 people. I know of a 10K org that had a security admin dedicated to handling name changes.
    – JimSTAT
    Sep 9, 2012 at 14:13
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samAccountName is the user name the user uses to log in with. You can get a little more 'complete' by prepending the domain too, but there's no reason not to use the obvious username field.

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    Can't usernames change? What if, for example, a woman gets married and her surname changes, which also results in a username change?
    – Sam
    Oct 17, 2013 at 0:07
  • Change the samAccountname to be a different name... that new login is still unique, so it still uniquely identifies the user.
    – gbjbaanb
    Oct 17, 2013 at 8:23

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