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The latest version of ASP.NET includes the new authentication framework ASP.NET Identity, which should be the core building block for user management in all new and near future ASP.NET projects and websites.

I have seen that it can integrate with the WebAPI quite nicely, but haven't seen any example of integration as authentication for mobile client devices. For example - suppose I have a ASP.NET website with Identity implemented in use. Now I want to build client applications for Windows 8.1 and Windows Phone 8. I see two main issues that are limiting this.

Firstly - ASP.NET Identity apparently issues only short-lived auth. tokens, which is quite a bad user experience for mobile applications. I have seen some attempts to create a refresh token mechanism - http://leastprivilege.com/2013/11/15/adding-refresh-tokens-to-a-web-api-v2-authorization-server/ . This is quite a nice approach, but it would still be more interesting to see a really built in solution.

Second - and maybe more important - external authentication provider support. On the ASP.NET Identity website it is quite clear and easy to see a way to authenticate via WebAPI, but I haven't seen this in use with external authentication. How is it possible to get the authentication URLs for Facebook, Microsoft and Twitter and how can the authentication flow be completed from within the app?

Has anyone some experience with this? It would be great to find a complete walkthrough, I will gladly reward the correct solution with some bounty points :-) .

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The problem is that security is complicated and that Microsoft's solutions only address the simple scenarios.

Also, you're consing terminology (which increases everyone's confusion, including your own). ASP.NET Identity manages users' credentials stored in a database. It's unrelated to the type of application that needs to validate credentials (mobile, api, browser, desktop, etc).

Katana middleware is what allows an application to authenticate the caller. There's cookie middleware for browser applications, external middleware for google, facebook, WS-Fed, etc, and then there's OAuth2 for API applications. Each work differently based upon the nature of the application. Some of them interact as well, depending on the requirements of the application.

I don't mean to pick on you -- this is more of a complaint about Microsoft's lack of education/documentation in the frameworks they provide. And I suppose this is an answer to your question -- Microsoft doesn't have what you're asking for. They have bits and pieces, but you're left to connect the dots.

Some links that might help:

http://www.asp.net/identity

http://www.asp.net/web-api/overview/security

http://www.asp.net/vnext/overview/authentication

http://brockallen.com/category/owin-katana/

http://leastprivilege.com/category/katana/

http://leastprivilege.com/category/webapi/

HTH

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  • Hello, apparently I forgot to mark your answer, so doing it now, sorry for the delay :-) . Aug 28, 2014 at 5:55
  • is this still the case 2 years later?
    – TWilly
    Sep 15, 2016 at 18:31
  • 1
    @TWilly see this: leastprivilege.com/2016/01/11/… Sep 15, 2016 at 21:18
  • @BrockAllen thanks for the link, does this only support .net core? Any options for .net 4.6?
    – TWilly
    Sep 15, 2016 at 21:50
  • ASP.NET Core runs on both .NET Core, and .NET 4.6. Sep 17, 2016 at 0:12

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