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Thread: Web.config and security

  1. #1

    Thread Starter
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    Question Web.config and security

    I have an application which is protected using the web.config and setting the authorization and authentication tags.
    In the application I redirect to a new window (a printing facility) but then I need to reenter username and password again and that is not the meaning. How can I define not to go to the login when this page is opened?

    Code:
    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
    <configuration>
        
      <system.web>
    	
    	<!--<pages smartNavigation="true" />-->
    
        <!--  DYNAMIC DEBUG COMPILATION
              Set compilation debug="true" to insert debugging symbols (.pdb information)
              into the compiled page. Because this creates a larger file that executes
              more slowly, you should set this value to true only when debugging and to
              false at all other times. For more information, refer to the documentation about
              debugging ASP.NET files.
        -->
        <compilation defaultLanguage="vb" debug="true" />
    
        <!--  CUSTOM ERROR MESSAGES
              Set customErrors mode="On" or "RemoteOnly" to enable custom error messages, "Off" to disable. 
              Add <error> tags for each of the errors you want to handle.
        -->
        <customErrors mode="Off" />
    
        <!--  AUTHENTICATION 
              This section sets the authentication policies of the application. Possible modes are "Windows", 
              "Forms", "Passport" and "None"
        -->
        <authentication mode="Forms"> 
    		<forms name=".hpl" loginUrl="login1.aspx" protection="All" timeout="20" />
    	</authentication>
        
        <!--  AUTHORIZATION 
              This section sets the authorization policies of the application. You can allow or deny access
              to application resources by user or role. Wildcards: "*" mean everyone, "?" means anonymous 
              (unauthenticated) users.
        -->
        <authorization>
            <deny users="?" /> <!-- Allow all users -->
    
                <!--  <allow     users="[comma separated list of users]"
                                 roles="[comma separated list of roles]"/>
                      <deny      users="[comma separated list of users]"
                                 roles="[comma separated list of roles]"/>
                -->
        </authorization>
    
        <!--  APPLICATION-LEVEL TRACE LOGGING
              Application-level tracing enables trace log output for every page within an application. 
              Set trace enabled="true" to enable application trace logging.  If pageOutput="true", the
              trace information will be displayed at the bottom of each page.  Otherwise, you can view the 
              application trace log by browsing the "trace.axd" page from your web application
              root. 
        -->
        <trace enabled="false" requestLimit="10" pageOutput="false" traceMode="SortByTime" localOnly="true" />
    
    
        <!--  SESSION STATE SETTINGS
              By default ASP.NET uses cookies to identify which requests belong to a particular session. 
              If cookies are not available, a session can be tracked by adding a session identifier to the URL. 
              To disable cookies, set sessionState cookieless="true".
        -->
        <sessionState 
                mode="InProc"
                stateConnectionString="tcpip=127.0.0.1:42424"
                sqlConnectionString="data source=127.0.0.1;user id=sa;password="
                cookieless="false" 
                timeout="20" 
        />
    
        <!--  GLOBALIZATION
              This section sets the globalization settings of the application. 
        -->
        <globalization requestEncoding="utf-8" responseEncoding="utf-8" />
       
      </system.web>
    
    </configuration>

  2. #2
    Frenzied Member Fishcake's Avatar
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    I don't know a great deal about secruity but does this happen because opening a new window is starting a new session?

    You could place the new page in a sub folder with it's own web.config that allowed anonymous users.

    or maybe setting authentication ticket to be persistent would work, i'm not sure though.

  3. #3

    Thread Starter
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    I will try that. I will find out what "protection=all" in the authentication tag means, maybe I can define that the protection doesn't include print.aspx.

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