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I was wanting to use an attribute in some of my class methods that would make sure that the user is an authorized before using the method that they called.

I was wanting to do something like

[Authorized()]
public void updateSomething()
{
//TODO:
}

I here is my attribute class

class AuthorizedAttribute : Attribute
    {
        public bool IsAuthorized { get; set; }
        public string UserName { get; set; }
        public string Password { get; set; }
        public string UserEmail { get; set; }

        public AuthorizedAttribute()
        {
            //This is not the actual implementation
            this.IsAuthorized = false;
        }

        public AuthorizedAttribute(string userEmail, string userPassword)
        {
            this.UserEmail = userEmail;
            this.Password = userPassword;
            this.UserName = string.Empty;

            BusinessLogic bc = new BusinessLogic();
            if (bc.VerifyCredentials(userEmail, userPassword))
            {
                this.IsAuthorized = true;
            }
            else
            {
                this.IsAuthorized = false;
            }
        }
    }

Could someone point me in the right direction? Some link would be great as well.

Thank you.

3 Answers 3

2

I think the fundemental mistake you have made here is to look at passing the credentials to the attribute. What the attribute should do is force an action to occur before the function you have called will take place.

So your attribute must be checked for by the request processing pipeline. i.e. when the function updateSomething() is called the calling assembly should be looking for the attribute which will then force an authorisation to occur using the current HttpContext and the User.Identity.

I have experience with the MVC AuthorizeAttribute and which can be extended by deriving from this attribute and adding authentication logic to it.

public class TestAuthAttribute : AuthorizeAttribute
    {
        protected override bool AuthorizeCore(System.Web.HttpContextBase httpContext)
        {
            return ResultOfBusinsessLogic;
        }

    }

this can then be used on any controller action.

I hope this points you in the right direction.

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  • I am still confused on how to create a class to be user as a attribute. On your example I do not understand how the attribute tag will call your AuthorizeCore method. Also do I not need a constructor for it?
    – user673417
    Jul 27, 2011 at 16:37
  • Because the attribute descends from AuthorizeAttribute the MVC framework base will call the AuthorizeCore function on this attribute to find out if the user is able to continue. I think you may need to see BrokenGlass's answer to point in the right direction for asp.net forms.
    – Richard
    Jul 27, 2011 at 16:57
  • thanks. I actually did not know that attribute came from MVC.
    – user673417
    Jul 28, 2011 at 12:34
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Have you looked at the built-in AuthorizeAttribute?

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If you are using Forms authentication / roles this is already built in - check out the PrincipalPermission attribute.

Sample usage:

[PrincipalPermission(SecurityAction.Demand, Role = "Admin")]
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  • I am not. What I am creating is just a class library.
    – user673417
    Jul 27, 2011 at 16:34

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