I am not a SharePoint expert by any means, and I've been having a really hard time finding the right information on this. Help, please!
I need a way to cause a claim token established with a call to SPFederationAuthenticationModule.SetPrincipalAndWriteSessionToken
to recalculate the claims on the token without logging out the current user. Is there any way to do this?
Some background on why I'm asking this:
We use a custom role & membership provider for authN/Z on our custom SharePoint 2010 web application. Without getting into the details of why (which are complex) the role provider creates dynamically generated role names for a user based on the state of the user in the main app database; these roles represent the permissions for the user and are used inside SharePoint to determine the user's access to sites and site collections in the app.
There are ways within our app for the user to change their permissions, effectively adding new roles through the role provider, granting the user additional access within the app. The problem we are running into is that the Claims based auth which we are forced to use in SP2010 precomputes permissions at login and encodes those permissions in the session token -- effectively forcing us to ask the user to log out and log back in before they can obtain their new permissions. This is creating all sorts of usability issues, hence my question.
Is there some way to programmatically recompute the session token without logging out the user?
Or are we barking up the wrong tree? In my normal happy ASP.NET land I'd use Forms Auth, which computes authorization at every request rather than at login. Unfortunately, that doesn't appear to be an option in SP2010, and I'm rather stuck with SharePoint at the moment. Is there some other action we can pursue?
RenewToken
(see msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms551886.aspx) followed by a call toValidateToken
? IF that doesn't do what you need I suspect you will have to either write your own custom SecurityToken/Provider etc. or keep the PW around in-memory (which I agree isn't good!).Authenticate
(see msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/…) to simulate the dynamic behaviour you described with "Forms Auth" case...