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I'm creating an intranet asp.net mvc application that everyone in the company should have access to. I need to run the website impersonated for database access etc., but I want to know who each user is.

When I look at Page.User.Identity.Name it's blank. Is it possible to get the user's windows account name even though the site is running impersonated?

Edit: Here's a little more info. I have a site in IIS 6 running with anonymous access enabled. The site is running under a system account that has access to the database (because all of the employees do not have access to the database).

My web.config has <authentication mode="Windows" /> and <identity impersonate="true"/ >.

My goal is that the users won't have to log in - that fact that they are logged into our network (and the fact that the site is not on an external IP) is enough authentication. I would just like to know who the user is in order to track changes they make, etc.

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4 Answers

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try this

Principal.WindowsIdentity.GetCurrent.Name

It should return a string with the users login name

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Thanks Gav - I tried this and it displays the name of the account that my site is setup to run under (see the Edit in the question for more info). – MrDustpan Aug 12 at 16:05
Think your going to need to disable annonymous access in IIS, when they visit the site assuming they are logged into the domain IIS will use their current login. The code above should then display their UserID rather than the one IIS runs under. – Gavin Draper Nov 6 at 15:55
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Unless this functionality has changed under the MVC framework, and I don't think it has, Page.User.Identity.Name should still work. Sounds like your site is set up to allow anonymous authentication. If so, try disabling it.

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Thanks Ryan. I added some more detail to the question, but basically I need anonymous authentication. – MrDustpan Aug 12 at 16:06
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Via the Environment.UserName property?

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With <authentication mode="Windows"/> in your application and Anonymous access enabled in IIS, you will see the following results:

System.Environment.UserName: Computer Name
Page.User.Identity.Name: Blank
System.Security.Principal.WindowsIdentity.GetCurrent().Name: Computer Name

With <authentication mode="Windows"/> in your application, and ‘Anonymous access’ disabled and only ‘Integrated Windows Authentication’ in IIS, you will see the following results:

System.Environment.UserName: ASPNET (user account used to run ASP.NET service)
Page.User.Identity.Name: Domain\ Windows Account Name 
System.Security.Principal.WindowsIdentity.GetCurrent().Name: Computer Name\ASPNET

With <authentication mode="Windows"/> and <identity impersonate ="true"/> in your application, and ‘Anonymous access’ disabled and only ‘Integrated Windows Authentication’ in IIS, you will see the following results:

System.Environment.UserName: Windows Account Name 
Page.User.Identity.Name: Domain\ Windows Account Name 
System.Security.Principal.WindowsIdentity.GetCurrent().Name: Domain\ Windows Account Name
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