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I am working on a WCF service with webHttpBinding for json ajax calls. The service works fine until I turned on the security part. Here is my web.config.

      <serviceCredentials >
        <userNameAuthentication userNamePasswordValidationMode="Custom" customUserNamePasswordValidatorType="UserNamePasswordValidator, WebServices" />
      </serviceCredentials>
      <serviceAuthorization principalPermissionMode="Custom">
        <authorizationPolicies>
          <add policyType="AuthorizationPolicy, WebServices" />
        </authorizationPolicies>
      </serviceAuthorization>
      <!---->
    </behavior>
  </serviceBehaviors>
  <endpointBehaviors>
    <behavior name="WebHttpBehaviour">
      <enableWebScript />
      <webHttp automaticFormatSelectionEnabled="false" defaultBodyStyle="Wrapped" defaultOutgoingResponseFormat="Json" helpEnabled="true" />
    </behavior>
  </endpointBehaviors>
</behaviors>

Here is my javascript call.

$.ajax({
       headers: {
                "Authorization": "Basic " + Base64.encode('John:Doe')
            },
            type: "POST",
            url: "https://localhost/StatusService.svc/CheckStatus",
            data: JSON.stringify({"companyName":"test"}),
            contentType: "text/json; charset=utf-8",
            dataType: "json",
            processdata: false,
            success: function (data) {
                alert('ok!');
            },
            error: function (jqXHR, textStatus, errorThrown) {
                alert(textStatus + ' / ' + errorThrown);
            }
        });

I got error message: object error when I do the ajax call. Is there anything I am doing wrong? Thanks.

1 Answer 1

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Find the following solution. Works great. http://sameproblemmorecode.blogspot.com/2011/10/creating-secure-restfull-wcf-service.html

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  • My only caution with this example is that it requires the client application to hold the username and password to the service. This means than any hacker also has the username:password. If you're okay with this then +1. But I would ask, why are you authenticating. You can't trust the client. You must assume that the client is a hacker. If you don't, you will be hacked. :-)
    – Mark Good
    Dec 19, 2013 at 17:01
  • 1
    @MarkGood your clients log into your web service with their own username and password. they are not a hacker
    – Julien
    Jan 26, 2015 at 18:39
  • @Julien, If you're using user credentials to log in to your service, then you must be storing these credentials somewhere on the client. Most web applications don't store these credentials, but set a session cookie instead. Is your site public facing or internal?
    – Mark Good
    Jan 27, 2015 at 19:16

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