The answer appears to be no. No one has answered this question, and a blog question posted in 2004 along with some more recent comments appear to convey mostly negative experiences folks have had. NetSqlAzMan would be worth investigating.
http://weblogs.asp.net/lorenh/archive/2004/02/24/79218.aspx
Some choice comments from the link:
1.
Udi Dahan - The Software Simplist
said: Saw it at a local .Net user
group some time ago. Seemed nice,
except for the interop.
One other thing is the ability to
perform "business tasks" that are
really only script.
Should the interop go away, and be
able to call .Net code for business
tasks, this would truly be a killer.
2.
Chris Bilson said: We have it fully
integrated into our ASP.NET
application. The Interop part really
sucks when you have defined alot of
operations and are doing lots of
authorization checks. It's a real
performance killer.
I have my own wrapper class that
invokes my "Business Tasks" when an
access check is performed.
I feel kind of frustrated that there
isn't more information about this
tool, as I agree that it is nice way
to get out of hard coding role checks
into my application - something that
would not be acceptable in my case due
to varying customer defintions of what
a "Manager" is and what they can do.
3.
Dominick Baier said: hi,
i love azman! i have written some
stuff on it on www.leastprivilege.com
- especially that ability to use non-windows accounts is very cool!
dominick
4.
Mathertel said: Yes, we use it in a
.NET Web Application, built a wrapper
and a bunch of additional tools to
work with (a lot of tools are missing
in the MMC snapin)
5.
Tom Bruns said: I have used AzMan
extensively in a large .NET Web
application. I think that the
conceptual model is very good.
However, there is alot of "lessons
learned" concerning how to correctly
architect the application to use it
relative to performance, ongoing
maintaince of the policy store,
interaction with ADAM etc. If I can be
of any help please feel free to email
me. Replace nospam with com in my
email address. Used correctly it can
perform very well.
6.
Horea Hopartean said: We tried to
use it and keep its repository on a
Win2003 AD, but at 10000 users it took
13 (thirteen) seconds to do an
OpenApplication call.
That and the ugly API may be good
reasons why it hasn't got any traction
so far :)
7.
news75 said: Hi, I have the same
problem.
I'm comparing Visual Guard, AzMan,
NetSqlAzMan and the feature provided
from the framework .net 3.0.
At the moment I'm prefering
NetSqlAzMan. It's well integrated with
.net framework, the comunity is
active, is Open Source. Yes there are
some limitation: Only Window or custum
Authentication and Microsoft
SQLManager, but...
I'm wondering: why this argument is so
underestimates!?
8.
Riverway said: I am developing an
Enterprise RBAC system using Azman
with AD store. To overcome the slow
performance, I wrote a wrapper class
which access directly Azman in AD's OU
structure using LDAP query. Another
thing to mention is that Azman of
Windows Server 2008 version has
capability to create data store in
SQL2008 database. My biggest complain
is that Security Dialog for any
resources (folders, disks, etc) does
not recognize Azman defined groups or
roles as available identity. This
makes really difficult to integrate
RBAC which encompass ERP and other
enterprise roles AND Windows Resource
Access Control at the same time unless
you write an application which can
write on AD directly.
9.
James said: We used azman on our
project and it sucks. We've had a ton
of problems with interoperability, and
it didn't work for our developers
using Win7 when the .xml file was made
on a win2003 machine. We even went as
far as reporting a bug to Microsoft.
It does a ton of COM BS like randomly
not working and saying E_INVALIDARG,
whatever that means. This is one of
the technologies I want to remove from
our project when I get a chance.