As you can see this is a question from a non web developer. I would like to have an ASPX page which, under certain circumstances, can generate a 401 error from code. Ideally it would show the IIS standard page.
5 Answers
Response.StatusCode = 401;
Response.End();
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8I've no idea why this has been voted down - it's pretty much the same as my (voted up) answer, just in code form. Sure, it doesn't have the links which may be useful, but it's still a perfectly good answer... Oct 20, 2008 at 7:10
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I totally agree with Jon. Since I can't accept two answers, I accepted Jon's answer and voted up this one. The are a few things I should figure out by myself though but it gave me a head start. Thanks! Oct 20, 2008 at 9:08
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3It was probably voted down because it was submitted just after @jon's so it looked like a piggy-back answer (although they were both written simultaneously). Thanks for the upvotes though : ) Oct 20, 2008 at 9:11
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1The problem this Jon's approach, and this one, is that Forms authentication will see someone trying to return
401
, intercept it, re-write it as302
. So rather than returning401
, the user agent is presented302 Found
.– Ian BoydFeb 18, 2016 at 22:18
Set Response.StatusCode and then - if you need to stop execution - call Response.End().
I think I still prefer:
throw new HttpException(401, "Auth Failed")
I don't think the Response.StatusCode
method triggers custom errors defined in the web.config file, e.g.
<customErrors mode="On" defaultRedirect="GenericErrorPage.htm">
<error statusCode="401" redirect="AuthFailed.htm" />
<error statusCode="403" redirect="NoAccess.htm" />
<error statusCode="404" redirect="FileNotFound.htm" />
</customErrors>
Throwing a new exception definitely triggers custom errors.
Also, you might be using an application-wide error logging facility, like ELMAH or something, and I don't think the Response.StatusCode
method would be logged there, either.
Note: I see now the question said that, ideally, the standard IIS error page should be shown. Obviously, the custom error pages are not wanted. I would use the Response.StatusCode
method in that case.
You should be able to just use the following, according to MSDN.
Throw New HttpException(401, "Auth Failed")
Edit After seeing the other responses setting the status code would be more appropriate.
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3I tried this and when I checked the http response in the browser, I got an 500 (Internal Server Error) instead of a 401 (Unauthorized) Nov 2, 2013 at 17:11
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I really don't care what is preferred. This method is shorter and easier to remember so I use it.– BradMay 20, 2016 at 18:26
One additional comment.
If a portion of the page has already been written to the output buffer then it is important that you clear any buffered content or the page may not appear correctly.
This is quite likely in a templated environment. e.g. Master pages...
Response.ClearContent();
Response.StatusCode = 401;
Response.End();