29

Quite the mystery here. I have an ASP.NET MVC 4 web application using Windows Authentication that has been maintained for over 18 months without issue. Recently, it was deployed to a fresh site and I've encountered the following, very strange behavior.

I am using a jQuery 1.8.2 $.ajax call to POST data to the server endpoints to update data. This works just fine except on one page, where the AJAX POST triggers a new NTLM Negotiation. The same problem is exhibited in Chrome, IE, and Firefox. While the issue is the same in all the browsers, it manifests itself in slightly different ways:

  • Firefox : Received a 401 Challenge response from the server and brings up a username/password dialog asking for credential in an infinite loop. Canceling the credential checks causes the request to fail with an Unauthorized response.
  • IE : No response from the server and the request status shows as "(Aborted)" in the Network monitor
  • Chrome : No response from the server and the request status shows a "(failure)" in the Network monitor.

The core issue seems to be that the Connection: keep-alive header is not being sent with the problematic AJAX request, but is in the other cases. However, the underlying JavaScript code is nearly identical, and the AJAX calls function properly in a development environment that is also set up to use Windows authentication.

Also, attempting the set the Connection request header in the beforeSend callback has no effect.

Any insights into the root of the problem, or ways to isolate whatever difference exists between the two AJAX POSTs are most appreciated.

Working Code and Request Headers

$.ajax({
   url: url,
   type: "POST",
   data: $("#myForm").serialize(),
   cache: false,
   success: function (response) {
   }
});


Accept:*/*
Accept-Encoding:gzip, deflate
Accept-Language:en-US,en;q=0.8
Connection:keep-alive
Content-Length:621
Content-Type:application/x-www-form-urlencoded; charset=UTF-8
Host:www.xxx.yyy.zzz
Origin:http://www.xxx.yyy.zzz
Referer:http://www.xxx.yyy.zzz/app/resource/path
User-Agent:Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/42.0.2311.135 Safari/537.36
X-Requested-With:XMLHttpRequest

Failing Code and Request Headers

$.ajax({
    url: url,
    type: "POST",
    data: data,
    cache: false,
    success: function (data, status, xhr) {
    }
 });

 WARN: Provisional headers are shown
 Accept:*/*
 Content-Type:application/x-www-form-urlencoded; charset=UTF-8
 Origin:http://www.xxx.yyy.zzz
 Referer:http://www.xxx.yyy.zzz/app/resource/item/1
 User-Agent:Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/42.0.2311.135 Safari/537.36
 X-Requested-With:XMLHttpRequest

I have also looked at the network process in the Chrome chrome://net-internals/#events viewer. Here is the event log from the failed request at the point it deviates from the successful one. Where the failed request gets an "HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized" the successful request gets an "HTTP/1.1 200 OK" response, presumably due to the presence of the Connection: keep-alive header.

2303: URL_REQUEST
Start Time: 2015-04-28 13:53:41.788

t=14736 [st= 0] +REQUEST_ALIVE  [dt=71]
t=14736 [st= 0]    URL_REQUEST_DELEGATE  [dt=0]
t=14736 [st= 0]   +URL_REQUEST_START_JOB  [dt=70]
                   --> load_flags = 2688000 (BYPASS_DATA_REDUCTION_PROXY | MAYBE_USER_GESTURE | REPORT_RAW_HEADERS | VERIFY_EV_CERT)
               --> method = "POST"
               --> priority = "LOW"
               --> upload_id = "0"
               --> url = "http://..."
t=14736 [st= 0]      URL_REQUEST_DELEGATE  [dt=0]
t=14736 [st= 0]      HTTP_CACHE_GET_BACKEND  [dt=0]
t=14736 [st= 0]      URL_REQUEST_DELEGATE  [dt=0]
t=14736 [st= 0]     +HTTP_STREAM_REQUEST  [dt=0]
t=14736 [st= 0]        HTTP_STREAM_REQUEST_BOUND_TO_JOB
                       --> source_dependency = 2305 (HTTP_STREAM_JOB)
t=14736 [st= 0]     -HTTP_STREAM_REQUEST
t=14736 [st= 0]     +HTTP_TRANSACTION_SEND_REQUEST  [dt=0]
t=14736 [st= 0]        HTTP_TRANSACTION_SEND_REQUEST_HEADERS
                       --> POST ... HTTP/1.1
                       Host: www.xxx.yyy.zzz
                       Connection: keep-alive
                       Content-Length: 105
                       Accept: */*
                       Origin: http://www.xxx.yyy.zzz
                       User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/42.0.2311.135 Safari/537.36
                       X-Requested-With: XMLHttpRequest
                       Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded; charset=UTF-8
                       Referer: http://www.xxx.yyy.zzz/app/resource/item/1
                       Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate
                       Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.8
t=14736 [st= 0]        HTTP_TRANSACTION_SEND_REQUEST_BODY
                       --> did_merge = true
                       --> is_chunked = false
                       --> length = 105
t=14736 [st= 0]     -HTTP_TRANSACTION_SEND_REQUEST
t=14736 [st= 0]     +HTTP_TRANSACTION_READ_HEADERS  [dt=0]
t=14736 [st= 0]        HTTP_STREAM_PARSER_READ_HEADERS  [dt=0]
t=14736 [st= 0]        HTTP_TRANSACTION_READ_RESPONSE_HEADERS
                   --> HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized
                       Content-Type: text/html
                       Server: Microsoft-IIS/7.5
                       WWW-Authenticate: Negotiate
                       WWW-Authenticate: NTLM
                       X-Powered-By: ASP.NET
                       X-UA-Compatible: IE=9
                       Date: Tue, 28 Apr 2015 18:53:41 GMT
                       Content-Length: 1293

Edit

Playing around with different request from the console gives the following table of results (under Chrome). The current base URL is http://IPAddress /app/topic/item and all test simply execute an $.ajax({ url: url, type: 'POST' })

+--------------------------------------+----------------------------+
|   URL                                | Response                   |
+--------------------------------------+----------------------------+
| http://IP/app/topic/item/1/subitem/1 | net::ERR_INVALID_HANDLE    |
| //IP/app/topic/item/1/subitem/1      | net::ERR_INVALID_HANDLE    |
| /app/topic/item/1/subitem/1          | net::ERR_INVALID_HANDLE    |
| 1/subitem/1                          | net::ERR_INVALID_HANDLE    |
| 1/foo                                | 404 (Not Found) [expected] |
| 1                                    | 302 (Redirect)  [expected] |
+--------------------------------------+----------------------------+

Because the error only affects a subset of the POST action methods in one controller, I had initially thought this was a server-side issue, but after uncovering the issue of the missing Connection header, it actually appear to be a client-side issue. Exactly how the problem is triggered remains a mystery to me.

I did also verify that the Response headers for the working page and the problematic page are the same. Most relevant, the Persistent-Auth: true header is always returned in both cases.

11
  • Have you tried implementing the error handler from the ajax call? you might get some extra information here? Apr 28, 2015 at 19:56
  • @christiandev Yes. Chrome returns a net::ERR_INVALID_HANDLE error code and IE has an error code of 12019, which is documented to be ERROR_INTERNET_INCORRECT_HANDLE_STATE. Firefox also reports an "Invalid Handle".
    – Lucas
    Apr 28, 2015 at 20:38
  • One other thing, I added [GET] routes that match all of my [POST] routes just in case this was a weird manifestation of the GET-before-POST issue that is known about IE and IWA. This had no effect.
    – Lucas
    Apr 29, 2015 at 1:20
  • I don't see any content length in the failing post. Are you posting any data?
    – Mike
    May 1, 2015 at 19:33
  • @Mike Yes, I just verified that there is form encoded data in the body of the POST. The headers were what Chrome Dev tools displayed and were marked as provisional headers. I captured the request from Fiddler and it does have a Content-Length of 106, which matches the body content.
    – Lucas
    May 4, 2015 at 16:23

2 Answers 2

1

Some wild guesses:

  • This happens when you request a Role that is not in the Claims of the currently logged-in user. Verify that, if you're using [Authorize(Roles = "xyz")], the current user actually has that role.

  • It is not clear if your application uses a cookie for authentication. If yes, you should see it with the request. Are you setting withCredentials: true for each request?

4
  • You might be on to something, here. We have a security setup that leverages our own ActionFilter attributes, so it could be a back-end data issue related to user->role mappings. Thanks for the suggestion.
    – Lucas
    May 1, 2015 at 13:08
  • No luck. The user has the correct roles and, in fact, the AuthorizeAttribute is set as a Global Filter, so all of the requests should fail if this were the problem. Also, using Glimpse, the AJAX request never even hits the .Net pipeline; it's immediately aborted. The only difference I noted between the development and production environment is that the problem occurs on IIS 7.5 and not on my local IIS 8.5. I'll try running locally under IIS Express 7.5 to see if that reproduces the issue.
    – Lucas
    May 1, 2015 at 14:50
  • @Lucas You should redact the MIME from the Negotiate header in your dumps. It can be decoded to get info you probably don't want exposed.
    – JamieSee
    May 8, 2015 at 18:47
  • Perhaps check out this answer, particularly consider browser configuration and ensure setting of withCredentials attribute - stackoverflow.com/a/47916916/5196274 Dec 21, 2017 at 2:08
0

What's happening in the action methods that are causing the NTLM challenge ? Are you sure these specific action methods aren't accessing another server, or the internet through a proxy which requires authentication ? In your development environment, your user or the user running the app pool on IIS may have the necessary permissions, but the user on the server may not.

Instead of throwing a clear security-related Exception, ASP.NET will translate this into an NTLM challenge being returned to the client, and a 401 in case of invalid credentials, instead of a 500 containing the stacktrace leading you to the point where the server account didn't have sufficient privileges...

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