Self-hosted WCF REST service and Basic authentication
I've created a self-hosted WCF REST service (with some extra's from WCF REST Starter Kit Preview 2). This is all working fine.
I'm now trying to add Basic authentication to the service. But I'm hitting some rather large roadblocks in the WCF stack which is preventing me from doing this.
It appears that the HttpListener
(which self-hosted WCF services use internally at a low level in the WCF stack) is blocking my attempts to insert a WWW-Authenticate
header on a self-generated 401 Unauthorized
response. Why?
I can get the authentication working if I forget about this WWW-Authenticate
header (which it seems 开发者_Python百科Microsoft did as well). But that's the issue. If I don't send back a WWW-Authenticate
header then the web browser won't display its standard "logon" dialog. The user will merely be faced with a 401 Unauthorized
error page with no way to actually log on.
REST services should be accessible to both computers and humans (well at least on the GET request level). Therefore, I feel that WCF REST is not complying with a fundamental part of REST here. Does anyone agree with me?
Has anyone got Basic authentication working with a self-hosted WCF REST service? If so, how did you do it?
PS: Obviously my intentions to use unsecure Basic authentication are on the premise that I'd also get HTTPS/SSL working for my service too. But that's another matter.
PPS: I've tried WCF REST Contrib (http://wcfrestcontrib.codeplex.com/) and that has exactly the same issue. It appears this library has not been tested in self-hosted scenarios.
Thanks.
Unfortunately I have determined (by analysing the WCF reference source code and the help of the Fiddler tool for HTTP session sniffing) that this is a bug in the WCF stack.
Using Fiddler, I noticed that my WCF service was behaving unlike any other web site which uses Basic authentication.
To be clear, this is what SHOULD happen:
- Browser sends
GET
request with no knowledge that a password is even needed. - Web server rejects request with a
401 Unauthorized
status and includes aWWW-Authenticate
header containing information about acceptable authentication methods. - Browser prompts user to enter credentials.
- Browser resends
GET
request and includes appropriateAuthentication
header with the credentials. - If the credentials were correct, the web server responds with
200 OK
and the web page. If the credentials were wrong, the web server responds with401 Unauthorized
and includes the sameWWW-Authenticate
header that it did in Step #2.
What was ACTUALLY happening with my WCF service was this:
- Browser sends
GET
request with no knowledge that a password is even needed. - WCF notices there is no
Authentication
header in the request and blindly rejects request with a401 Unauthorized
status and includes aWWW-Authenticate
header. All normal so far. - Browser prompts user for credentials. Still normal.
- Browser resends
GET
request including the appropriateAuthentication
header. - If the credentials were correct, the web server responds with
200 OK
. All is fine. If the credentials were wrong however, WCF responds with403 Forbidden
and does not include any additional headers such asWWW-Authenticate
.
When the browser gets the 403 Forbidden
status it does not perceive this to be a failed authentication attempt. This status code is intended to inform the browser that the URL it tried to access is off limits. It doesn't relate to authentication in any way. This has the terrible side affect that when the user types their username/password incorrectly (and the server rejects with 403) then the web browser doesn't reprompt the user to type their credentials again. In fact the web browser believes authentication has succeeded and so stores those credentials for the rest of the session!
With this in mind, I sought clarification:
The RFC 2617 (http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2617.html#ixzz0eboUfnrl) does not mention anywhere the use of the 403 Forbidden
status code. In fact, what it actually has to say on the matter is the following:
If the origin server does not wish to accept the credentials sent with a request, it SHOULD return a 401 (Unauthorized) response. The response MUST include a WWW-Authenticate header field containing at least one (possibly new) challenge applicable to the requested resource.
WCF does neither of these. It neither correctly sends an 401 Unauthorized
status code. Nor does it include a WWW-Authenticate
header.
Now to find the smoking gun within the WCF source code:
I discovered that in the HttpRequestContext
class is a method called ProcessAuthentication
, which contains the following (excerpt):
if (!authenticationSucceeded)
{
SendResponseAndClose(HttpStatusCode.Forbidden);
}
I defend Microsoft on a lot of things but this is indefensible.
Fortunately, I have got it working to an "acceptable" level. It just means that if the user accidently enters their username/password incorrectly then the only way to get another attempt is to fully close their web browser and restart it to retry. All because WCF is not responding to the failed authentication attempt with a 401 Unauthorized
and a WWW-Authenticate
header as per the specification.
I've found the solution based in this link and this.
The first is to override the method Validate in a class called CustomUserNameValidator wich inherits from System.IdentityModel.Selectors.UserNamePasswordValidator:
Imports System.IdentityModel.Selectors
Imports System.ServiceModel
Imports System.Net
Public Class CustomUserNameValidator
Inherits UserNamePasswordValidator
Public Overrides Sub Validate(userName As String, password As String)
If Nothing = userName OrElse Nothing = password Then
Throw New ArgumentNullException()
End If
If Not (userName = "user" AndAlso password = "password") Then
Dim exep As New AddressAccessDeniedException("Incorrect user or password")
exep.Data("HttpStatusCode") = HttpStatusCode.Unauthorized
Throw exep
End If
End Sub
End Class
The trick was change the attribute of the exception "HttpStatusCode" to HttpStatusCode.Unauthorized
The second is create the serviceBehavior in the App.config as follows:
<behaviors>
<endpointBehaviors>
<behavior name="HttpEnableBehavior">
<webHttp />
</behavior>
</endpointBehaviors>
<serviceBehaviors>
<behavior name="SimpleServiceBehavior">
<serviceMetadata httpGetEnabled="true"/>
<serviceDebug includeExceptionDetailInFaults="false"/>
<serviceCredentials>
<userNameAuthentication userNamePasswordValidationMode="Custom" customUserNamePasswordValidatorType="Service.CustomUserNameValidator, Service"/>
</serviceCredentials>
</behavior>
</serviceBehaviors>
</behaviors>
Finally we must to specify the configuration for the webHttpBinding and apply it to the endpoint:
<bindings>
<webHttpBinding>
<binding name="basicAuthBinding">
<security mode="TransportCredentialOnly">
<transport clientCredentialType="Basic" realm=""/>
</security>
</binding>
</webHttpBinding>
</bindings>
<service behaviorConfiguration="SimpleServiceBehavior" name="Service.webService">
<host>
<baseAddresses>
<add baseAddress="http://localhost:8000/webService" />
</baseAddresses>
</host>
<endpoint address="http://localhost:8000/webService/restful" binding="webHttpBinding" bindingConfiguration="basicAuthBinding" contract="Service.IwebService" behaviorConfiguration="HttpEnableBehavior"/>
</service>
Yes you can provide Basic authentication for REST based WCF services. However there are several steps which you must follow to have a complete and secure solution and thus far most responses are fragments of all the pieces needed.
Configure your self-hosted service to have a SSL certificate bound to the port which you are hosting your WCF service on. This is very different than applying a SSL cert when using managed hosting through something like IIS. You have to apply the SSL certificate using a command line utility. You DO NOT want to use Basic Authentication on a REST service without using SSL because the credentials in the header on not secure. Here are (2) detailed posts that I wrote on exactly how to do this. Your question is too big to have all the details on a forum post, so that is why I am providing the links with comprehensive details and step by step instructions:
Applying and Using a SSL Certificate With A Self-Hosted WCF Service
Creating a WCF RESTful Service And Secure It Using HTTPS Over SSL
Configure your service to use Basic authentication. This is a multi-part solution as well. 1st is configuring your service to use Basic authentication. The second is to create a 'customUserNamePasswordValidatorType' and inspect the credentials to authenticate the client. I see the last post eluded to this, however it did not use HTTPS and is only 1 very small part of the solution; be careful of guidance that does not provided an end-to-end solution inclusive of configuration and security. The last step is to look at the security context to provide authorization at the method level if needed. The following post I wrote takes you step-by-step on how to configure, authenticate, and authorize your clients.
RESTful Services: Authenticating Clients Using Basic Authentication
This is the end-to-end solution needed for using Basic Authentication with self-hosted WCF services.
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