开发者

How do I protect static files with ASP.NET form authentication on IIS 7.5?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-31 06:59 出处:网络
I have a website running on a IIS 7.5 server with ASP.NET 4.0 on a shared host, but in full trust. The site is a basic "file browser" that allows the visitors to login and have a list of fil

I have a website running on a IIS 7.5 server with ASP.NET 4.0 on a shared host, but in full trust.

The site is a basic "file browser" that allows the visitors to login and have a list of files available to them displayed, and, obviously, download the files. The static files (mostly pdf files) are located in a sub folder on the site called data, e.g. http://example.com/data/...

The site uses ASP.NET form auth开发者_JAVA百科entication.

My question is: How do I get the ASP.NET engine to handle the requests for the static files in the data folder, so that request for files are authenticated by ASP.NET, and users are not able to deep link to a file and grab files they are not allowed to have?


If you application pool is running in Integrated mode then you can do the following.

Add the following to your top level web.config.

  <system.webServer>
    <modules>
      <add  name="FormsAuthenticationModule"  type="System.Web.Security.FormsAuthenticationModule" />
      <remove  name="UrlAuthorization" />
      <add  name="UrlAuthorization" type="System.Web.Security.UrlAuthorizationModule"  />
      <remove  name="DefaultAuthentication" />
      <add  name="DefaultAuthentication"  type="System.Web.Security.DefaultAuthenticationModule" />
    </modules>
  </system.webServer>

Now you can use the standard ASP.NET permissions in your web.config to force forms authentication for all files in the directory.

<system.web>
    <authorization>
        <deny users="?" />
    </authorization>
    <authentication mode="Forms" />
</system.web>


I had the same problem with getting roles to authenticate. Through trial and error I finally got it to work with a small edit to @Joel Cunningham's code:

<modules runAllManagedModulesForAllRequests="true" >

I used these two sites as references: http://forums.iis.net/t/1177964.aspx and http://learn.iis.net/page.aspx/244/how-to-take-advantage-of-the-iis-integrated-pipeline/


This is an old thread, but I happened on it and ran into the same problem as Egil. Here is the version of Joel's fix that includes roles:

<modules runAllManagedModulesForAllRequests="false">
      <remove name="FormsAuthenticationModule" />
      <add name="FormsAuthenticationModule" type="System.Web.Security.FormsAuthenticationModule" />
      <remove name="UrlAuthorization" />
      <add name="UrlAuthorization" type="System.Web.Security.UrlAuthorizationModule"  />
      <remove name="RoleManager" />
      <add name="RoleManager" type="System.Web.Security.RoleManagerModule" />
      <remove name="DefaultAuthentication" />
      <add name="DefaultAuthentication" type="System.Web.Security.DefaultAuthenticationModule" />
</modules>


Addendum:

As @eych noted the accepted answer also blocks access to the ~/Content folder (or wherever you have your CSS), and ~/Scripts, and so on.

If you want to allow exceptions -- i.e. allow certain files/folders to be accessible by unauthenticated users -- you can do that by means of the location element. Add the following to web.config:

  <location path="Content">
    <system.web>
      <authorization>
        <allow users="*" />
      </authorization>
    </system.web>
  </location>

Update: An alternative solution is to is to leave access on by default -- which will allow access to your CSS / JavaScript / etc. -- and apply the "lock" (only) to the folder where the static content is stored:

<location path="data">
  <system.web>
    <authorization>
      <deny users="?"/>
    </authorization>
  </system.web>
</location>

Caveat: in our case (an MVC site) we needed to decorate all our controller actions (except login) with [AuthorizeAttribute]. Which is a good idea anyway, but had previously not been necessary (because previously any unauthorized request was redirected to the login page).


I wanted to know why it would be required to re-add modules (with default options) that are added by default for the Integrated Pipeline, so I dug a little deeper.

You need to remove and re-add the modules because, by default, the modules aren't added with the default options. They have a precondition added for backwards compatibility to run only for content handled by a registered ASP.NET handler (e.g., .aspx pages).

The default looks like this:

<add name="FormsAuthentication" type="System.Web.Security.FormsAuthenticationModule" 
         preCondition="managedHandler" />

By removing the modules and re-adding them without a precondition, those individual modules run for every request (including your static content). It is more granular than enabling runAllManagedModulesForAllRequests.

You can read about it in a couple articles from when the Integrated Pipeline was introduced with IIS 7:

  • ASP.NET Integration with IIS 7
  • How to Take Advantage of the IIS 7.0 Integrated Pipeline

Note that there is a typo or the module name in the second article (and @John's answer) was changed from FormsAuthenticationModule to FormsAuthentication at some point.

The set of working modules in IIS 7.5 thru 8.5 looks like this for me:

<system.webServer>
  <modules>
    <!-- Re-add auth modules (in their original order) to run for all static and dynamic requests -->
    <remove name="FormsAuthentication" />
    <add name="FormsAuthentication" type="System.Web.Security.FormsAuthenticationModule" />
    <remove name="DefaultAuthentication" />
    <add name="DefaultAuthentication" type="System.Web.Security.DefaultAuthenticationModule" />
    <remove name="RoleManager" />
    <add name="RoleManager" type="System.Web.Security.RoleManagerModule" />
    <remove name="UrlAuthorization" />
    <add name="UrlAuthorization" type="System.Web.Security.UrlAuthorizationModule" />
  </modules>
</system.webServer>


If you application pool is running in Classic mode, you can do the following. You will have to repeat these steps for each file extension you'd like to handle, but I'm using .html here.

First, add a page build provider to the Web.config:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<configuration>
  <system.web> 
    <compilation>
      <buildProviders>
        <add type="System.Web.Compilation.PageBuildProvider" extension=".html"/>
      </buildProviders>
    </compilation>
  </system.web> 
</configuration>

Then add a page handler factory:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<configuration>
  <system.web> 
    <httpHandlers>
      <add type="System.Web.UI.PageHandlerFactory" path="*.html" verb="*"/>
    </httpHandlers>
  </system.web> 
</configuration>

Then add a page handler:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<configuration> 
  <system.webServer>
    <handlers>
      <add scriptProcessor="C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v4.0.30319\aspnet_isapi.dll" requireAccess="Script" preCondition="classicMode,runtimeVersionv2.0,bitness32" path="*.html" verb="GET,HEAD,POST,DEBUG" modules="IsapiModule" name="HtmlHandler-Classic-32" />
      <add scriptProcessor="C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework64\v4.0.30319\aspnet_isapi.dll" requireAccess="Script" preCondition="classicMode,runtimeVersionv2.0,bitness64" path="*.html" verb="GET,HEAD,POST,DEBUG" name="HtmlHandler-Classic-64"/>
    </handlers>
  </system.webServer>
</configuration>

This worked for me. (Credit: http://www.ifinity.com.au/Blog/EntryId/66/How-To-301-Redirect-htm-or-html-pages-to-DotNetNuke-aspx-pages.)

0

精彩评论

暂无评论...
验证码 换一张
取 消

关注公众号