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18

How can I validate a username and password against Active Directory? I simply want to check if a username and password are correct.

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9 Answers

vote up 15 vote down

We do this on our Intranet

You have to use System.DirectoryServices;

Here are the guts of the code

DirectoryEntry adsEntry = new DirectoryEntry(path, strAccountId, strPassword);
DirectorySearcher adsSearcher = new DirectorySearcher( adsEntry );
//adsSearcher.Filter = "(&(objectClass=user)(objectCategory=person))";
adsSearcher.Filter = "(sAMAccountName=" + strAccountId + ")";

try 
 {
  SearchResult adsSearchResult = adsSearcher.FindOne();
  bSucceeded = true;

  strAuthenticatedBy = "Active Directory";
  strError = "User has been authenticated by Active Directory.";
  adsEntry.Close();
 }
catch ( Exception ex )
 {
  // Failed to authenticate. Most likely it is caused by unknown user
  // id or bad strPassword.
  strError = ex.Message;
  adsEntry.Close();
 }
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Does this code not need to run as an AD user itself? – bzlm Nov 14 '08 at 16:13
1  
What do you put in "path"? The name of the domain? The name of the server? The LDAP path to the domain? The LDAP path to the server? – Ian Boyd Dec 1 '08 at 15:00
Answer1: No we run it as a web service so it can be called from multiple locations in the main web app. Answer2: Path contains LDAP info... LDAP://DC=domainname1,DC=domainname2,DC=com – Dining Philanderer Dec 1 '08 at 18:21
vote up 11 vote down

very simple solution using DirectoryServices:

    using System.DirectoryServices;

    //srvr = ldap server, e.g. LDAP://domain.com
    //usr = user name
    //pwd = user password
    public bool IsAuthenticated(string srvr, string usr, string pwd)
    {
        bool authenticated = false;

        try
        {
            DirectoryEntry entry = new DirectoryEntry(srvr, usr, pwd);
            object nativeObject = entry.NativeObject;
            authenticated = true;
        }
        catch (DirectoryServicesCOMException cex)
        {
            //not authenticated; reason why is in cex
        }
        catch (Exception ex)
        {
            //not authenticated due to some other exception [this is optional]
        }
        return authenticated;
    }

the NativeObject access is required to detect a bad user/password

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This code doesn't work. Constructing a DirectoryEntry() object with invalid credentials does not throw an exception. – Ian Boyd Dec 1 '08 at 14:56
@[anonymousstackoverflowuser.openid.org]: eek! good catch! I accidentally posted the wrong code. Code corrected now. Thank you very much! – Steven A. Lowe Dec 1 '08 at 15:11
This worked create thanks! – corymathews May 28 at 19:52
vote up 8 vote down

If you work on .NET 3.5, you can use the System.DirectoryServices.AccountManagement namespace and easily verify your credentials:

// create a "principal context" - e.g. your domain (could be machine, too)
PrincipalContext pc = new PrincipalContext(ContextType.Domain, "YOURDOMAIN");

// validate the credentials
bool isValid = pc.ValidateCredentials("myuser", "mypassword")

It's simple, it's reliable, it's 100% C# managed code on your end - what more can you ask for? :-)

Cheers, Marc

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Are you sure??? I got a PrincipalServerdownException when I tried this... – Christian Payne May 29 at 4:59
1  
I tried: PrincipalContext pc = new PrincipalContext(ContextType.Domain, "yourdomain"); Your mileage may vary. – Christian Payne May 29 at 5:03
Christian: you're absolutely right. I didn't have a server at hand to test my assumptions - and they were wrong. You need the plain domain name - not the LDAP domain descriptor. Thanks for pointing that out! – marc_s May 29 at 6:38
This worked great, only for me I had to prefix the username with the domain name, ie pc.ValidateCredentials("DOMAN\\UserName", "Password"); – TheLameDuck Oct 29 at 16:23
vote up 7 vote down

Probably easiest way is to PInvoke LogonUser Win32 API.e.g.

http://www.pinvoke.net/default.aspx/advapi32/LogonUser.html

MSDN Reference here...

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa378184.aspx

Definitely want to use logon type

LOGON32_LOGON_NETWORK (3)

This creates a lightweight token only - perfect for AuthN checks. (other types can be used to build interactive sessions etc.)

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There are simpler ways of doing this in pure .net code. See answers below. – cciotti Dec 1 '08 at 15:25
As @Alan points out, LogonUser API has many useful traits beyond a System.DirectoryServices call. – stephbu Dec 1 '08 at 17:48
@cciotti: No, that's wrong. The BEST way to correctly authenticate someone is to use LogonUserAPI as @stephbu write. All other methods described in this post will NOT WORK 100%. Just a note however, I do believe you have to be domain joined inorder to call LogonUser. – Alan Apr 20 at 18:28
@Alan to generate credentials you have to be able to connect to the domain by handing in a valid domain account. However I'm pretty sure your machine doesn't necessarily need to be a member of the domain. – stephbu Apr 21 at 2:15
vote up 6 vote down

@Wolf5: No you can't. ActiveDirectory authentication performs an LDAP bind to verify credentials.

If AD allowed such feature, it would basically expose the ability to programatically dictionary check passwords against a DC.

@Scott:

Unfortunately there is no "simple" way to check a users credentials on AD.

With every method presented so far, you may get a false-negative: A user's creds will be valid, however AD will return false under certain circumstances:

User is required to Change Password at Next Logon. User's password has expired.

ActiveDirectory will not allow you to use LDAP to determine if a password is invalid due to the fact that a user must change password or if their password has expired.

To determine password change or password expired, you may call Win32:LogonUser(), and check the windows error code for the following 2 constants:

ERROR_PASSWORD_MUST_CHANGE = 1907 ERROR_PASSWORD_EXPIRED = 1330

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vote up 3 vote down

A full .Net solution is to use the classes from the System.DirectoryServices namespace. They allow to query an AD server directly. Here is a small sample that would do this:

using (DirectoryEntry entry = new DirectoryEntry())
{
    entry.Username = "here goes the username you want to validate";
    entry.Password = "here goes the password";

    DirectorySearcher searcher = new DirectorySearcher(entry);

    searcher.Filter = "(objectclass=user)";

    try
    {
        searcher.FindOne();
    }
    catch (COMException ex)
    {
        if (ex.ErrorCode == -2147023570)
        {
            // Login or password is incorrect
        }
    }
}

// FindOne() didn't throw, the credentials are correct

This code directly connects to the AD server, using the credentials provided. If the credentials are invalid, searcher.FindOne() will throw an exception. The ErrorCode is the one corresponding to the "invalid username/password" COM error.

You don't need to run the code as an AD user. In fact, I succesfully use it to query informations on an AD server, from a client outside the domain !

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vote up 3 vote down

Try this code (NOTE: Reported to not work on windows server 2000)

	#region NTLogonUser
	#region Direct OS LogonUser Code
	[DllImport( "advapi32.dll")]
	private static extern bool LogonUser(String lpszUsername, 
		String lpszDomain, String lpszPassword, int dwLogonType, 
		int dwLogonProvider, out int phToken);

	[DllImport("Kernel32.dll")]
	private static extern int GetLastError();

	public static bool LogOnXP(String sDomain, String sUser, String sPassword)
	{
		int token1, ret;
		int attmpts = 0;

		bool LoggedOn = false;

		while (!LoggedOn && attmpts < 2)
		{
			LoggedOn= LogonUser(sUser, sDomain, sPassword, 3, 0, out token1);
			if (LoggedOn) return (true);
			else
			{
				switch (ret = GetLastError())
				{
					case (126): ; 
						if (attmpts++ > 2)
							throw new LogonException(
								"Specified module could not be found. error code: " + 
								ret.ToString());
						break;

					case (1314): 
						throw new LogonException(
							"Specified module could not be found. error code: " + 
							ret.ToString());

					case (1326): 
						// edited out based on comment
						//  throw new LogonException(
						//	"Unknown user name or bad password.");
						return false;

					default: 
						throw new LogonException(
							"Unexpected Logon Failure. Contact Administrator");
				}
			}
		}
		return(false);
	}
	#endregion Direct Logon Code
	#endregion NTLogonUser

except you'll need to create your own custom exception for "LogonException"

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Don't use exception handling for returning information from a method. "Unknown user name or bad password" is not exceptional, it is standard behaviour for LogonUser. Just return false. – Treb Nov 14 '08 at 16:20
ahh you're right! old code... Thanks! – Charles Bretana Nov 14 '08 at 17:47
'old code' - sounds very familiar to me ;-) – Treb Nov 17 '08 at 13:58
yes... this was a port from an old VB6 library... written 2003 or so... (when .Net first came out) – Charles Bretana Nov 17 '08 at 15:18
If running on Windows 2000 this code will not work (support.microsoft.com/kb/180548) – Ian Boyd Dec 1 '08 at 14:58
vote up 1 vote down

www.c-sharpcorner.com has a nice article on how to do this.

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vote up 0 vote down

But will any of these attempts to validate actually add to the 3-count rule of account lock?

I would preferr a method that could validate without adding to it. 3 errors and yer out! :P

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1  
No - this wouldn't make sense. Otherwise I could write a password cracking program that just pounded the API until it succeeded. – stephbu Nov 14 '08 at 23:59

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