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I need to impersonate myself as a domain user in a ASP.NET application running on VMWare machine. Since the VMWare machine is not itself in the domain, ASP.NET is unable to resolve the user token (specified in web.config). Is there a way to do that?

Thanks in advance, Petr

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2 Answers

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I use this class I wrote all the time and it works like a charm!

using System;
using System.Security.Principal;

/// <summary>
/// Changes the security context the application runs under.
/// </summary>
public class ImpersonateHelper : IDisposable
{
    [System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImport("Kernel32")]
    private extern static Boolean CloseHandle(IntPtr handle);

    private IntPtr _token = IntPtr.Zero;
    private WindowsImpersonationContext _impersonatedUser = null;

    public IntPtr Token
    {
    	get { return _token; }
    	set { _token = value; }
    }

    public ImpersonateHelper(IntPtr token)
    {
    	_token = token;
    }

    /// <summary>
    /// Switch the user to that set by the Token property
    /// </summary>
    public void Impersonate()
    {
    	if (_token == IntPtr.Zero)
    		_token = WindowsIdentity.GetCurrent().Token;

    	_impersonatedUser = WindowsIdentity.Impersonate(_token);
    }

    /// <summary>
    /// Revert to the identity (user) before Impersonate() was called
    /// </summary>
    public void Undo()
    {
    	if (_impersonatedUser != null)
    		_impersonatedUser.Undo();
    }

    #region IDisposable Members
    private bool _isDisposed;

    public void Dispose()
    {
    	Dispose(true);
    	GC.SuppressFinalize(this);
    }

    protected virtual void Dispose(bool disposing)
    {
    	if (!_isDisposed)
    	{
    		if (disposing)
    		{
    			if (_impersonatedUser != null)
    				_impersonatedUser.Dispose();

    		}
    		CloseHandle(_token);
    		_token = IntPtr.Zero;
    	}
    	_isDisposed = true;
    }

    ~ImpersonateHelper()
    {
    	Dispose(false);
    }
    #endregion
}

Then you call it from the client class as:

//Run task as the impersonated user and not as NETWORKSERVICE or ASPNET (in IIS5)
try{
   impersonate.Impersonate();
   //Do work that needs to run as domain user here...
}
finally
{
    		//Revert impersonation to NETWORKSERVICE or ASPNET
    		if (impersonate != null)
    		{
    			impersonate.Undo();
    			impersonate.Dispose();
    		}
}

Good Luck!

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This may be the dumb obvious answer, but you could add your VMWare machine to the domain.

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Not if you don't have domain administration rights you cant. – sascha Jan 5 at 4:10
I don't have domain admin rights, but my boss does. All I do is point out to him that I can't do any more work until the problem is resolved. As a result, my virtual machines get added fairly quickly. – Martin Brown Jan 5 at 9:42

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