16

How do I determine and force users to view my website using HTTPS only? I know it can be done through IIS, but want to know how its done programmatically.

1

6 Answers 6

21

You can write an HttpModule like this:

/// <summary>
/// Used to correct non-secure requests to secure ones.
/// If the website backend requires of SSL use, the whole requests 
/// should be secure.
/// </summary>
public class SecurityModule : IHttpModule
{
    public void Dispose() { }

    public void Init(HttpApplication application)
    {
        application.BeginRequest += new EventHandler(application_BeginRequest);
    }

    protected void application_BeginRequest(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        HttpApplication application = ((HttpApplication)(sender));
        HttpRequest request = application.Request;
        HttpResponse response = application.Response;

        // if the secure connection is required for backend and the current 
        // request doesn't use SSL, redirecting the request to be secure
        if ({use SSL} && !request.IsSecureConnection)
        {
            string absoluteUri = request.Url.AbsoluteUri;
            response.Redirect(absoluteUri.Replace("http://", "https://"), true);
        }
    }
}

Where {use SSL} is a some condition whether to use SSL or not.

EDIT: and, of course, don't forget to add a module definition to a web.config:

<system.web>
    <httpModules>
        <!--Used to redirect all the unsecure connections to the secure ones if necessary-->
        <add name="Security" type="{YourNamespace}.Handlers.SecurityModule, {YourAssembly}" />
        ...
    </httpModules>
</system.web>
3
  • Most web applications have a global.asax page that can also include the same code as indicated by Alex. Just provide the Application_BeginRequest handler
    – Rajiv
    Sep 6, 2013 at 12:03
  • What helped me with my issue was Request.IsSecureConnection, making sure to capitalize the Request in this case, unless you create a var named request like Alex did. Just something to keep in mind.
    – Elon Zito
    Oct 20, 2015 at 17:08
  • 1
    There's a minor note to this: You have to disable integrated mode configuration under system.webServer with the validation tag's validateIntegratedModeConfiguration attribute set to false (see this answer for more details). In addition, if you want to use IIS Express or IIS 6 you should take note of this other answer May 10, 2016 at 16:25
13

A bit hard coded but straighforward!

if (!HttpContext.Current.Request.IsSecureConnection)
{
   Response.Redirect("https://www.foo.com/foo/");
}
1
  • 1
    +1 an http module seems like overkill here but i like this because it short and sweet, thanks. Aug 6, 2013 at 21:13
5

You'd have to convert this from VB.NET to C#, but this is what I use in my sites:

Imports System.Web.HttpContext

Public Shared Sub SetSSL(Optional ByVal bEnable As Boolean = False)
  If bEnable Then
    If Not Current.Request.IsSecureConnection Then
      Dim strHTTPS As String = "https://www.mysite.com"
      Current.Response.Clear()
      Current.Response.Status = "301 Moved Permanently"
      Current.Response.AddHeader("Location", strHTTPS & Current.Request.RawUrl)
      Current.Response.End()
    End If
  Else
    If Current.Request.IsSecureConnection Then
      Dim strHTTP As String = "http://www.mysite.com"
      Current.Response.Clear()
      Current.Response.Status = "301 Moved Permanently"
      Current.Response.AddHeader("Location", strHTTP & Current.Request.RawUrl)
      Current.Response.End()
    End If
  End If
End Sub

It's more code than some of the other techniques, but there's a reason for it. This method will only redirect when it's not in the mode it should be in. And when it does do a redirect, it does a 301 (permanent) redirection. The benefit there is that search engines will follow the 301 redirection and that will prevent any possibility of them indexing the same page twice (in http and https mode). You can compare this with the default behavior of Response.Redirect (302 temporary redirect) which Google, for example, doesn't treat the same way. They will not change their index based on a temporary redirect.

So if you're on a page that you want to be SSL-encrypted, call it like this:

SetSSL(True)

Otherwise:

SetSSL(False)

And if you really need this to be globally applied, I'd call SetSSL(True) in the Application_BeginRequest of your global.asax. Beware that SSL will slow things down a bit. For that reason I'm typically very selective when switching between http and https. In fact, out of dozens of sites I've developed there's only been two that use SSL throughout the entire site.

2

This article covers moving requests in and out of SSL. Sometimes you dont want the user viewing a page in SSL because it burns proc cycles for pages that dont need to be secured.

http://weblogs.asp.net/kwarren/archive/2005/07/08/418541.aspx

1

IIR you can check the request (HttpContext.Current.Request) for the domain which you then can check what protocol is being used (http,https, ftp, etc)

1

You can also set up a rewrite rule in your web.config under the system.webServer tag. eg:

   <rewrite>
      <rules>
        <rule name="Redirect to HTTPS" stopProcessing="true">
          <match url="(.*)" />
          <conditions>
            <add input="{HTTP_HOST}" matchType="Pattern" pattern="^localhost(:\d+)?$" negate="true" ignoreCase="true" />
            <add input="{HTTP_HOST}" matchType="Pattern" pattern="^127\.0\.0\.1(:\d+)?$" negate="true" />
            <add input="{HTTPS}" pattern="off" />
          </conditions>
          <action type="Redirect" url="https://{HTTP_HOST}/{R:1}" />
        </rule>
      </rules>
    </rewrite>

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