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Smashed my head against this a bit too long. How do I prevent a user from browsing a site's pages after they have been logged out using FormsAuthentication.SignOut? I would expect this to do it:

FormsAuthentication.SignOut();
Session.Abandon();
FormsAuthentication.RedirectToLoginPage();

But it doesn't. If I type in a URL directly, I can still browse to the page. I haven't used roll-your-own security in a while so I forget why this doesn't work.

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7 Answers

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The code you posted looks like it should correctly remove the forms authentication token, so it is possible that the folders/pages in question are not actually protected.

Have you confirmed that the pages cannot be accessed before a login has occured?

Can you post the web.config settings and login code that you are using?

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vote up 1 vote down

Sounds to me like you don't have your web.config authorization section set up properly within . See below for an example.

<authentication mode="Forms">
  <forms name="MyCookie" loginUrl="Login.aspx" protection="All" timeout="90" slidingExpiration="true"></forms>
</authentication>
<authorization>
  <deny users="?" />
</authorization>
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vote up 0 vote down

Are you testing/seeing this behaviour using IE? It's possible that IE is serving up those pages from the cache. It is notoriously hard to get IE to flush it's cache, and so on many occasions, even after you log out, typing the url of one of the "secured" pages would show the cached content from before.

(I've seen this behaviour even when you log as a different user, and IE shows the "Welcome " bar at the top of your page, with the old user's username. Nowadays, usually a reload will update it, but if it's persistant, it could still be a caching issue.)

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vote up 0 vote down

It could be that you are logging in from one subdomain (sub1.domain.com) and then trying to logout from a different subdomain (www.domain.com).

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vote up 0 vote down

I have been writing a base class for all of my Pages and I came to the same issue. I had code like the following and It didn't work. By tracing, control passes from RedirectToLoginPage() statement to the next line without to be redirected.

if (_requiresAuthentication)
{
	if (!User.Identity.IsAuthenticated)
		FormsAuthentication.RedirectToLoginPage();

	// check authorization for restricted pages only
	if (_isRestrictedPage) AuthorizePageAndButtons();
}

I found out that there are two solutions. Either to modify FormsAuthentication.RedirectToLoginPage(); to be

if (!User.Identity.IsAuthenticated)
	Response.Redirect(FormsAuthentication.LoginUrl);

OR to modify the web.config by adding

<authorization>
  <deny users="?" />
</authorization>

In the second case, while tracing, control didn't reach the requested page. It has been redirected immediately to the login url before hitting the break point. Hence, The SignOut() method isn't the issue, the redirect method is the one.

I hope that may help someone

Regards

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Also you could call Response.End() just after calling FormsAuthentication.RedirectToLoginPage() – murki Oct 21 at 16:50
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Users can still browse your website because cookies are not cleared when you call FormsAuthentication.SignOut() and they are authenticated on every new request. In MS documentation is says that cookie will be cleared but they don't, bug? Its exactly the same with Session.Abandon(), cookie is still there.

You should change your code to this:

FormsAuthentication.SignOut();
Session.Abandon();

// clear authentication cookie
HttpCookie cookie1 = new HttpCookie(FormsAuthentication.FormsCookieName, "");
cookie1.Expires = DateTime.Now.AddYears(-1);
Response.Cookies.Add(cookie1);

// clear session cookie (not necessary for your current problem but i would recommend you do it anyway)
HttpCookie cookie2 = new HttpCookie("ASP.NET_SessionId", "");
cookie2.Expires = DateTime.Now.AddYears(-1);
Response.Cookies.Add(cookie2);

FormsAuthentication.RedirectToLoginPage();
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vote up 0 vote down

I just had the same problem, where SignOut() seemingly failed to properly remove the ticket. But only in a specific case, where some other logic caused a redirect. After I removed this second redirect (replaced it with an error message), the problem went away.

The problem must have been that the page redirected at the wrong time, hence not triggering authentication.

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