Having read lots of articles and making lots of false starts I need some advise on adding Microsoft ASP.NET Identity to my existing ASP.NET Web Forms application. There are so many subtle differences between my existing application and typical samples out there that I don't know how to get off the ground. Here are some points about my existing application:
- It is a ASP.NET Web Forms application (.NET Framework 4.6) that has evolved over about 4-5 years
- It uses SQL Server database though Entity Framework (not Code First but Database First). The database pre-dates the web application and is based on 10 year old designs. It does however have good table relationships etc.
- My database's schema for Users and Roles are not structured as per "ASP.NET Identity / EntityFramework". It has a [User] table with
ID int PK
, no username (as such), Password, First Name, Surname, Email and some other properties. It also has a Roles table (4-5 entries) and a UserRoles table that provides many-many relationships. There is no "claims" as such other than properties on the User table. - Existing login is based on entering a user id (primary key) and password which is then checked against the user table and on successful login (stored proc), details are then stored in Session - something that in itself isn't quite right!
- Although using Entity Framework, the Connection String is formed at runtime based on a template connection string in
web.config
(basically, the database name and server instance name is populated dynamically)
So, here are some the barriers, issues, questions I've come up with. Any advise on any of the questions below would be most appreciated:
- Should I use as "User.Username" when my web application doesn't have one? Should I use Email Address or UserID? Email address unfortunately isn't unique across the existing [User] data set. Should I use a string version of my (int) UserID?
- Should I allow ASP.NET Identity to set up its own code first tables into my own database and then add a mapping to my legacy [User] table?
- How can I inject a "resolver" to provide a (dynamically generated) connection string to the existing ASP.NET Identity Data Stored/Data Access Layer?
- How much of the Store classes am I likely needing to replace?
- I've read that NOT using an ORM/EntityFramework can provide very inefficient data access. Does this mean that if implementing my own Storage classes, I can't simply use some of my existing Stored Procedures?
- My Web Forms application isn't making use of any
async
code. Is this going to cause me problems with the ASP.NET Identity framework? I've heard thatasync
works best if implemented right through the call stack. - Do I need to somehow disable the existing Forms Based Authentication? Are they two going to clash over writing to
HttpContext.User
for example?
My Schema
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[User](
[ID] [int] IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL,
[OrganisationID] [int] NOT NULL,
[SaltHashPassword] [nvarchar](128) NOT NULL,
[FirstName] [nvarchar](64) NOT NULL,
[Surname] [nvarchar](64) NOT NULL,
[Email] [nvarchar](128) NULL,
--...
CONSTRAINT [PK_User] PRIMARY KEY NONCLUSTERED ([ID] ASC)
) ON [PRIMARY]
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[Roles](
[Role] [varchar](8) NOT NULL,
[Name] [varchar](32) NOT NULL,
[Description] [varchar](1000) NOT NULL,
[OrderNo] [tinyint] NOT NULL,
CONSTRAINT [PK_Roles] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED ([Role] ASC)--...
CONSTRAINT [IX_Roles] UNIQUE NONCLUSTERED ([Role] ASC)--...
) ON [PRIMARY]
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[UserRole](
[UserID] [int] NOT NULL,
[Role] [varchar](8) NOT NULL,
CONSTRAINT [PK_UserRole] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED ([UserID] ASC,[Role] ASC)
) ON [PRIMARY]