I've read plenty of SO questions similar to my issue, but nothing that seems to touch all of it at the same time.
I have an ASP.NET MVC application using Windows Authentication with the application pool identity set to a dedicated service account. This allows us to use the WindowsPrincipal to authenticate the users against our system roles, but have any external systems (i.e., databases) authenticate our application against just the service account.
Everything works fine until we want to push data changes to the user's AD account, as company policy is that we have to do this as the authenticated user, but we obviously don't have users' passwords in order to use the DirectoryEntry overload.
In this case, the following returns a valid DirectoryEntry instance, but CommitChanges throws UnauthorizedAccessException "Access is denied". Even though the current Identity (on Thread.CurrentPrincipal and the request) are the current user; ImpersonationLevel is Impersonation.
using (var de = new DirectoryEntry("LDAP://" + userPath))
{
de.Properties["telephoneNumber"].Value = phone;
de.CommitChanges();
}
I've also tried using HostingEnvironment.Impersonate and WindowsIdentity.Impersonate on the WindowsIdentity from the user, but that returns an invalid DirectoryEntry with DirectoryServicesCOMException "An operations error occurred".
e.g. (not actual code),
using (var hei = System.Web.Hosting.HostingEnvironment.Impersonate(wi.Token))
using (var de = new DirectoryEntry("LDAP://" + userPath));
and
WindowsImpersonationContext ctx = wi.Impersonate();
using (var de = new DirectoryEntry("LDAP://" + userPath));
From what I've read, LDAP doesn't support this type of impersonation.
The only way I've been able to make it work (for myself only) is to set the application pool identity to myself, proving that the LDAP code is correct, but getting me no closer to how to authenticate correctly. I've tried <identity impersonate="true"/> (we normally have it false), but it didn't change anything.
Any guidance would be appreciated, as I'm running out of things to tweak.
Edit for some extra context
Almost a TL;DR:
This is a new piece of functionality, so the system is working as expected with regards to authenticating users through IIS. We get the valid WindowPrincipal and WindowsIdentity for the user.
Our users have the ability to modify certain fields within AD, such as "telephoneNumber", so we do not have access to (because we shouldn't need) a privileged account with which to make changes to users.
I'm able to make changes to my own AD data if I set everything to myself, but I'm unable to get impersonation to work while the application is running as the service account (or even as anonymous).