4

I overrode Application_AuthenticateRequest() in my Global.asax to try to understand the event flow better. I'm using the Membership Provider that comes with the default MVC2 application.

I thought if I did this:

    public void Application_AuthenticateRequest(object sender, EventArgs args)
    {
        HttpCookie authCookie = Request.Cookies[FormsAuthentication.FormsCookieName];
        if (authCookie != null)
        {
            authCookie.Expires = System.DateTime.Now.AddDays(-1);  // Set the cookie expires time in order to delete it
            Response.Cookies.Add(authCookie);
        }
    }

A user could log in, but upon the page loading after they submit the login form, they would show up as not logged in since I destroyed their auth cookie.

However that is not the case. Instead they can successfully log in and it will show them logged in when the page loads. The next page they hit will log them out.

I thought I didn't destroy their cookie in time, so I placed that code into Application_BeginRequest() inside of my Global.asax. It produced the same results.

Does this mean I still did not destroy their cookie in time, or am I not properly understanding the flow of events?

2 Answers 2

1

There a two cookie collections used here; Request.Cookies and Response.Cookies

Request.Cookies are cookies that have come from the browser for the current page. Most/all processes read from this collection.

Response.Cookies are the cookies that are going to be sent back to the browser. When you set the Expires value on the Response cookie, it first has to go back to the browser, the browser sees it has expired and then there will be no cookie on the next page.

You can try to set the Request.Cookies, but i believe it is read-only.

1
  • That make sense. Apparently I thought that upon sending the response back their cookie would be deleted, which would magically retroactively affect the response being sent back. Har har. I can live with the 1 off page hit to log them out. That being said, is Application_AuthenticateRequest() a good location for logic such as this?
    – Sgraffite
    Jan 9, 2011 at 18:10
0

Use FormsAuthentication.SignOut(); it's the preferred way to log out an authenticated user.

1
  • I need to log out users that are not the current user, forgot to mention that. It's for banning.
    – Sgraffite
    Jan 9, 2011 at 7:43

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