4

In the constructor of my WCF service class I am setting the current principal to be that of the principal passed in the header of the message:

Thread.CurrentPrincipal = OperationContext.Current.IncomingMessageHeaders.GetHeader<BBPrincipal>("bbPrincipal", "ns");

This seems to work fine, however when I come to reference the principal in a method, the Thread.CurrentPrincipal has reverted to a WindowsPrincipal.

Presumably the method is firing on a different thread. How can I ensure that the method is using the principal set in the constructor of the service?

2
  • 1
    You need to explain what is the goal you are trying to achieve. Do you want to run your service under a different account/impersonate? Of course the thread for processing incoming request will be different from the one created the service.
    – Aliostad
    Sep 20, 2010 at 9:17
  • Where are you executing this code: "setting the current principal to be that of the principal passed in the header of the message" - I'm very interested because I have a similar problem. Aug 12, 2014 at 3:23

2 Answers 2

8

I've just found the answer to my original question. In order to stop WCF overriding the principal with a blank one, set the following in the behavior configuration:

<serviceAuthorization principalPermissionMode="None" />

Simple as that and no need to made sweeping changes to the existing code base.

See: http://connect.microsoft.com/VisualStudio/feedback/details/369445/wcf-service-configured-for-transport-security-shouldnt-change-thread-currentprincipal

1
  • I did the same thank you! I tried setting the principal while validating the user credential (in a UserNamePasswordValidator) and can retrieve it in my services. Anyway I was wondering if you experienced some misterious problem as everybody (and ms documentation) say: "set your principal in a custom authorization policy". Tnx again in advance. Sep 9, 2012 at 18:15
4

WCF always sets principal in AuthorizationPolicy so it probably overwrites your changes. You should implement custom authorization policy and set principal there.

1
  • +1 for principalPermissionMode="Custom". Another useful example of this is in the DotNetOpenAuth sample code for the OAuthResourceServer
    – Dylan Hogg
    Oct 5, 2012 at 6:15

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.