I'm creating a new ASP.NET web application and I'm not planning on making use of the concept of "roles". I do, however, want to make sure a user is logged in on certain pages. Is there any existing attribute that simply checks if a user is logged in and redirects them or throws an error if they're not? Every search I've done points to using roles (such as this one).
2 Answers
The [Authorize]
attribute will only return successfully if the user initiating the request is logged in and will only work on controllers and action methods.
It can be used to decorate a particular action:
public class FooController : Controller
{
// only FooAction requires authentication in FooController
[Authorize]
public async Task<ActionResult> FooAction()
{
}
public async Task<ActionResult> BarAction()
{
}
}
...or an entire controller:
// all actions in FooController require authentication
[Authorize]
public class FooController : Controller
{
public async Task<ActionResult> FooAction()
{
}
public async Task<ActionResult> BarAction()
{
}
}
You also have Request.IsAuthenticated
which can be used on both action and non-action methods:
if (Request.IsAuthenticated) //or @if in Razor
{
//request is authenticated
}
...and even User.Identity.IsAuthenticated
as @Darko correctly pointed out in his answer. Personally, I prefer Request.IsAuthenticated
over User.Identity.IsAuthenticated
as it also provides some useful null-checks for User
and User.Identity
. Here's how Request.IsAuthenticated
looks under the hood:
public bool IsAuthenticated
{
get
{
return(_context.User != null
&& _context.User.Identity != null
&& _context.User.Identity.IsAuthenticated);
}
}
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1
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But for aspx pages there is not attribute to check roles or authorization, like in MVC? You have to do this in code?– FrenkyBFeb 18, 2019 at 0:34
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1
You can use User property, just put if() where it can control access and that's it. protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
if (User.Identity.IsAuthenticated)
{
Page.Title = "Home page for " + User.Identity.Name;
}
else
{
Page.Title = "Home page for guest user.";
}
}
This should work after you set the web.config . Here is the documentation https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/9wff0kyh(v=vs.85).aspx
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2Problem with your link - it talks about Forms Authentication. And Identity framework which is question is about does not use that. Though the part of code where you check
IsAuthenticated
is correct, the rest of sample is not - in MVC there is noPage
object - you are talking about WebForms, and the question is not about WebForms.– trailmaxSep 5, 2015 at 11:21 -
Nothing more to add, just downvoted because it wasn't relevant to the user's question, though it's important information all the same. Feb 16, 2017 at 21:08
[Authorize]
attribute will only return successfully when the user is logged in. There's alsoRequest.IsAuthenticated