160

I have an MVC webapi site that uses OAuth/token authentication to authenticate requests. All the relevant controllers have the right attributes, and authentication is working ok.

The problem is that not all of the request can be authorised in the scope of an attribute - some authorisation checks have to be performed in code that is called by controller methods - what is the correct way to return a 401 unauthorised response in this case?

I have tried throw new HttpException(401, "Unauthorized access");, but when I do this the response status code is 500 and I get also get a stack trace. Even in our logging DelegatingHandler we can see that the response is 500, not 401.

3
  • 5
    To anyone picking up this answer down the line, I'd suggest thinking about the appropriate time to throw a HttpResponseException versus when to return an Unauthorized(). Using the exception for an 'expected' error is a bit of an anti-pattern, so if there are cases you expect the call to make this mistake, returning Unauthorized() is probably the right call. Save HttpResponseException for the truly unexpected.
    – Rikki
    Sep 17, 2018 at 18:06
  • See github.com/aspnet/Mvc/issues/5507 for some discussion.
    – Rikki
    Sep 17, 2018 at 18:07
  • @Rikki, 401 is not an "expected" error. -- It's an exceptional circumstance that should cause you to abort your workflow (except maybe for logging, which you should already be doing for any exception...) -- Anyway, if you want to return a strong typed result from your controller (e.g. for ease of unit testing), an Exception is clearly the best route. Oct 9, 2018 at 20:58

10 Answers 10

188

You should be throwing a HttpResponseException from your API method, not HttpException:

throw new HttpResponseException(HttpStatusCode.Unauthorized);

Or, if you want to supply a custom message:

var msg = new HttpResponseMessage(HttpStatusCode.Unauthorized) { ReasonPhrase = "Oops!!!" };
throw new HttpResponseException(msg);
4
  • 11
    HttpResponseException is part of NuGet package Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.WebApiCompatShim which provides compatibility in ASP.NET Core MVC with ASP.NET Web API 2. That is, it allows you to go the non-Core way in Core projects. So for Core projects, this is not the "Correct way". Mar 16, 2021 at 6:33
  • 2
    Wasnt' HttpResposeException removed from .netcore? stackoverflow.com/questions/47142142/… Oct 18, 2021 at 15:56
  • 2
    This returns 500, not 401. Sep 12, 2022 at 6:42
  • I definitely don't want to throw an exception when I could return Unauthorized(); Sep 21, 2023 at 20:10
176

Just return the following:

return Unauthorized();
7
  • 5
    I think the accepted answers the OP's question specifically. My answer answers the question's title "ASP.NET Web API : Correct way to return a 401/unauthorised response" Dec 18, 2016 at 21:34
  • 3
    Anybody know why there's no overloaded version of this with a message? Jul 9, 2018 at 8:07
  • 11
    @Simon_Weaver No idea why, but you could use a return Content<string>(HttpStatusCode.Unauthorized, "Message"); to do this.
    – Rikki
    Sep 17, 2018 at 18:03
  • 4
    This should be the correct answer. 1 it is correct. 2) If this changes in a later framework, you don't have to change code. 3) You don't need to provide a reason to a 401. This should be handled by the client and not the server. Jan 2, 2019 at 20:15
  • 2
    Which library is this in?
    – Nae
    May 13, 2019 at 11:46
48

As an alternative to the other answers, you can also use this code if you want to return an IActionResult within an ASP.NET controller.

ASP.NET

 return Content(HttpStatusCode.Unauthorized, "My error message");

Update: ASP.NET Core

Above code does not work in ASP.NET Core, you can use one of these instead:

 return StatusCode((int)System.Net.HttpStatusCode.Unauthorized, "My error message");
 return StatusCode(Microsoft.AspNetCore.Http.StatusCodes.Status401Unauthorized, "My error message");
 return StatusCode(401, "My error message");

Apparently the reason phrase is pretty optional (Can an HTTP response omit the Reason-Phrase?)

5
  • 2
    This no-longer works in ASP.NET Core, the ControllerBase class (used by ASP.NET Core WebAPI) no-longer has a Content overload that accepts a HTTP status code.
    – Dai
    Sep 7, 2018 at 23:54
  • This is wrong. A Content response is a 200 Ok status. The server should send a 401 and the client should handle accordingly. You can't send a 200 as a 401. It doesn't make sense. If the client gets a 401, it's not an Oops, it's a your breaking the law. Jan 2, 2019 at 20:19
  • This code is sending a 401 status code(HttpStatusCode.Unauthorized), not 200. Content(...) simply a shorthand for returning any given content with a given HTTP status code. If you want to send 200 you can use Ok(...)
    – Alex AIT
    Jan 2, 2019 at 21:39
  • @NickTurner -- that's an argument for the webapi2 Content() method being poorly named not for this being the wrong answer. Since the (status,message) method is renamed in NetCore, I guess the devs agree it was poorly named. Apr 9, 2019 at 13:36
  • 2
    in the latest versions instead use StatusCodeResult() Dec 7, 2022 at 16:46
18

You get a 500 response code because you're throwing an exception (the HttpException) which indicates some kind of server error, this is the wrong approach.

Just set the response status code .e.g

Response.StatusCode = (int)HttpStatusCode.Unauthorized;
2
  • It's a bit odd then that the exception takes the HTTP status code as a parameter, and intellisense docs say that this is the status code sent to the client - I was hoping to avoid mutating the response myself directly as this seems error prone, seeing as its global state Jul 3, 2015 at 12:06
  • 3
    The base Web API controller doesn't expose a Response property.
    – LukeH
    Jul 3, 2015 at 12:07
7

To add to an existing answer in ASP.NET Core >= 1.0 you can

return Unauthorized();

return Unauthorized(object value);

To pass info to the client you can do a call like this:

return Unauthorized(new { Ok = false, Code = Constants.INVALID_CREDENTIALS, ...});

On the client besides the 401 response you will have the passed data too. For example on most clients you can await response.json() to get it.

5

In .Net Core You can use

return new ForbidResult();

instead of

return Unauthorized();

which has the advantage to redirecting to the default unauthorized page (Account/AccessDenied) rather than giving a straight 401

to change the default location modify your startup.cs

services.AddAuthentication(options =>...)
            .AddOpenIdConnect(options =>...)
            .AddCookie(options =>
            {
                options.AccessDeniedPath = "/path/unauthorized";

            })
3
  • The question is about an web API. So this would be an invalid answer if am not wrong? API should not return 'actions', only results. Jul 6, 2020 at 13:18
  • 3
    403 is Forbidden, not 401 Unauthorized. There's a great explanation about the difference here
    – Mars
    Nov 24, 2020 at 11:47
  • Totally wrong. as @Mars said 403 is Forbidden whereas 401 is for Unauthorized requests
    – pantonis
    Mar 4, 2022 at 7:07
4

you can use follow code in asp.net core 2.0:

public IActionResult index()
{
     return new ContentResult() { Content = "My error message", StatusCode = (int)HttpStatusCode.Unauthorized };
}
3

You also follow this code:

var response = new HttpResponseMessage(HttpStatusCode.NotFound)
{
      Content = new StringContent("Users doesn't exist", System.Text.Encoding.UTF8, "text/plain"),
      StatusCode = HttpStatusCode.NotFound
 }
 throw new HttpResponseException(response);
1
  • You do not need to set the StatusCode again if you pass it to the constructor - using either is fine
    – Jon Story
    Apr 27, 2020 at 20:38
1

Make sure that the lines order in "Startup.cs" is like this, not vise versa:

app.UseAuthentication(); // the order is important
app.UseAuthorization();

That was what cased the issue in my case.

0

Because I found this post as best match. For a ASP.NET Core Web Api the ReturnType ContentResult is a good choice:

[HttpPost]
[Route("api/my-controller")]
public async ContentResult Index([FromBody] MyRequestType request)
{
  


    if (!authenticate(request.User,request.Password)
    {
       return new ContentResult() { StatusCode = StatusCodes.Status401Unauthorized };
    }

    //Process request
    var myReturnObject = await processRequest(request);

    string errString = System.Text.Json.JsonSerializer.Serialize(myReturnObject);
    return new ContentResult()
    {
        Content = errString,
        StatusCode = StatusCodes.Status200OK,
    };

}

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