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I have a Windows Service that I want to use to programmatically unlock the workstation, using the account username and password.

This article https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn751047(v=ws.11).aspx explains the logon authentication workflow on Windows in the following image: authentication workflow

As seen above, on step 5, the user inputs the credentials into the Logon UI. What I want to achieve is to have the Windows Service input the credentials and have winlogon perform the login.

There is no winlogon API to achieve this. As seen in other questions, using winapi's LogonUser function successfully performs the authentication and returns a token, but it does not switch to the application desktop and the Logon UI remains on screen.

Most articles and SO answers hint towards credentials providers, but all credentials providers samples require user interaction with the Logon UI.

Update: I see some users haven't exactly understood the question and are proposing workarounds that are not useful for my case. The workflow that I'm trying to achieve is the following:

  1. Windows service starts on Windows boot (done).
  2. Same Windows service has a web service and accepts HTTP requests through an API (done).
  3. User provides credentials to the service through the API from another device (done).
  4. Provided credentials are used to log into the work station.
    4.1 Provided credentials are used to also unlock the work station in case of lock (WinKey + L).
  5. (Optional) The service exposes the Windows accounts via the API.
  6. (Optional) The user is able to specify to the service what account wants to use for login.

For now, I am interested in making steps 4 and 4.1.

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  • 4
    I would hope this is not possible, seems like a terrible security hole if it is. Dec 30, 2017 at 23:52
  • 4
    @SoronelHaetir: Where, specifically, do you see a "terrible security hole"? Dec 31, 2017 at 11:55
  • 3
    Nobody said anything about storing the credentials. Credentials are provided to the Windows service by someone who knows them and the Windows service passes them further to winlogon.
    – Dog
    Dec 31, 2017 at 22:58
  • 3
    @SoronelHaetir: That requirement is completely made up. It does not exist. And even if you were to store the password, this can still be done without compromising security. Uncounted passwords are stored in encrypted sections of web.config files, to allow web services access to secured database backends, for example. Jan 1, 2018 at 15:30
  • 3
    Heard about that too, very interested in how they did it. But apparently some people here try to gain rep by burying the question.
    – Dog
    Jan 2, 2018 at 21:43

5 Answers 5

3

Just while passing... But isn't there, among Microsoft's samples, a credential provider that takes asynchronous input? I've certainly written one that logs on a user who scans an acceptable fingerprint no matter what tile is displayed. To me, this means that interaction with LogonUI need be no more than implicit, but perhaps I'm missing something.

But perhaps I'm not. Though I don't doubt the intention is that the asynchronous input will come from a user acting on hardware, as with scanning a finger, I don't recall this as a rule. If it's not, then you may have your programmatic option in the form of presenting the credentials as if they've been collected asynchronously - not from a device that's obviously attached to the computer but from your side-channel of HTTP with who knows what.

So, can you have a credential provider listen for RPC from your service for notification of credentials that your service has collected via its side-channel? Or have your service listen for RPC from your credential provider to ask what credentials are available yet? I mightn't be surprised if one direction is closed off - for security, even - but I'd have thought one or other can be made to work.

Whether you should want to do any of this, I don't want to get into.

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+50

Not that i condone doing this, but just giving you a solution to the problem. And it isn't programmatically interacting with the WinLogon process. It is programmatically working around it.

Use Windows Autologin property. And reboot to change to that user. Note this does involve storing the Password in the registry, in clear text.

Specifically set these regkeys

HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon\AutoAdminLogin HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon\DefaultUserName HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon\DefaultPassword

* Edit *

Helps with 4. Doesn't help with 4.1. Unless you wanna reboot to unlock which i doubt.

Another alternative which sounds promising \ worth investigating is mentioned on an older question https://stackoverflow.com/a/35173886/4640588

1
  • Doesn't help with 4.1 which is actually more important than 4 since user behavior usually consists in performing unlocking more often than logging in. This solution also further kills perspectives for steps 5 and 6.
    – Dog
    Jan 18, 2018 at 0:27
0

I had almost the same requirements for a selenium based framework that I am building. Long story short, I needed to run an application in the windows station of a user (WinSTA0) - which meant that a user had to be logged in a VM.

I have already made a project with a credentials manager and used this to achieve the following workflow:

  • Start a VM, copy components with Powershell
  • Install CredManager, reboot VM
  • Cred manager creates a random user, saves it in a database
  • Logs in with that user
  • User has autostart in registry an application and the application starts a webserver that can be contacted to spin selenium sessions

If I understand your requirements correctly, you will need to create a Credentials Manager that will expose a server (http, named-pipes, etc) to be contacted with the credentials to autologin - no need to spend time on UI here. Use the Advice method under your ITestWindowsCredentialProvider implementation to start your server and the UnAdvice to stop it.

I would suggest the following to help you get there:

  • Use an external logging service (like app-insights) to get feedback of your service and ease debugging
  • Use a VM as good practice cause a critical failure in Winlogon will render the computer useless.
  • Use try catch on the higher level on all your methods at COM component implementation to swallow exception to save winlogon crashes

Also, for the bigger picture, you will have to have in mind that all those processes have different access (and lifetime for COM components) to windows stations, desktops and run as different users. I do not think however that this will be relevant for you much.

You can find the base credentials manager code here: https://github.com/phaetto/windows-credentials-provider

0

You task is to implement a credential provider interfaces and at the point where your service receive credentials they can be easily forwarded to LogonUI - look at this answer.

The goal is to implement default tile which can pack these credentials.

My own credential provider also has an auto logon/unlock behaviour in some use cases.

-7

Pro-grammatically bypassing/logging in on a user's behalf is scary with regards to cyber security.

I'm not sure what you are trying to do, but why not deploy a run task to do the work using a service account on the machine instead?

You can configure it to run even when the user is not logged in on a specified time/event. If that doesn't work for you, could you describe your scenario a little more?

1
  • I already have the service that runs in background. Its purpose is to unlock the station, there's nothing else it needs to do.
    – Dog
    Jan 9, 2018 at 8:06

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