Question

I am using the System.DirectoryServices.AccountManagement part of the .Net library to interface into ActiveDirectory.

Having called GetMembers() on a GroupPrincipal object and filter the results, I now have a collection of UserPrincipal objects

GroupPrincipal myGroup;  // population of this object omitted here 

foreach (UserPrincipal user in myGroup.GetMembers(false).OfType<UserPrincipal>())
{
    Console.WriteLine(user.SamAccountName);
}

The above code sample will print out usernames like "TestUser1". I need to compare these to a list coming from another application in "DOMAIN\TestUser1" format.

How do I get the "DOMAIN" part from the UserPrincipal object?

I can't just append a known domain name as there are multiple domains involved and I need to differentiate DOMAIN1\TestUser1 and DOMAIN2\TestUser2.

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Solution

You have two choices that I can think of.

  1. Parse, or take everything that is on, the right of name@fully.qualified.domain.name;
  2. Use the System.DirectoryServices namespace.

I don't know about UserPrincipal, neither do I about GroupPrincipal. On the other hand, I know of a working way to achive to what you want.

[TestCase("LDAP://fully.qualified.domain.name", "TestUser1")] 
public void GetNetBiosName(string ldapUrl, string login)
    string netBiosName = null;
    string foundLogin = null;

    using (DirectoryEntry root = new DirectoryEntry(ldapUrl))
        Using (DirectorySearcher searcher = new DirectorySearcher(root) {
            searcher.SearchScope = SearchScope.Subtree;
            searcher.PropertiesToLoad.Add("sAMAccountName");
            searcher.Filter = string.Format("(&(objectClass=user)(sAMAccountName={0}))", login);

            SearchResult result = null;

            try {
                result = searcher.FindOne();

                if (result == null) 
                    if (string.Equals(login, result.GetDirectoryEntry().Properties("sAMAccountName").Value)) 
                        foundLogin = result.GetDirectoryEntry().Properties("sAMAccountName").Value
            } finally {
                searcher.Dispose();
                root.Dispose();
                if (result != null) result = null;
            }
        }

    if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(foundLogin)) 
        using (DirectoryEntry root = new DirectoryEntry(ldapUrl.Insert(7, "CN=Partitions,CN=Configuration,DC=").Replace(".", ",DC=")) 
            Using DirectorySearcher searcher = new DirectorySearcher(root)
                searcher.Filter = "nETBIOSName=*";
                searcher.PropertiesToLoad.Add("cn");

                SearchResultCollection results = null;

                try {
                    results = searcher.FindAll();

                    if (results != null && results.Count > 0 && results[0] != null) {
                        ResultPropertyValueCollection values = results[0].Properties("cn");
                        netBiosName = rpvc[0].ToString();
                } finally {
                    searcher.Dispose();
                    root.Dispose();

                    if (results != null) {
                        results.Dispose();
                        results = null;
                    }
                }
            }

    Assert.AreEqual("INTRA\TESTUSER1", string.Concat(netBiosName, "\", foundLogin).ToUpperInvariant())
}

Other related information or links available in this SO question.
C# Active Directory: Get domain name of user?
How to find the NetBIOS name of a domain

OTHER TIPS

Use the ActiveDs COM library, it has built-in name translation that works and does not make any assumptions (like other answers here).

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using ActiveDs;

namespace Foo.Repository.AdUserProfile
{
    public class ADUserProfileValueTranslate
    {
        public static string ConvertUserPrincipalNameToNetBiosName(string userPrincipleName)
        {
            NameTranslate nameTranslate = new NameTranslate();
            nameTranslate.Set((int)ADS_NAME_TYPE_ENUM.ADS_NAME_TYPE_USER_PRINCIPAL_NAME, userPrincipleName);
            return nameTranslate.Get((int) ADS_NAME_TYPE_ENUM.ADS_NAME_TYPE_NT4);
        }
    }
}

Have you tried passing the fully qualified domain name to this other app? Most windows API's won't complain if you do fully_qualified_domain\USER.

You could look for the possible domains in the user.DistinguishedName property. A user in Domain 1 should contain the string "DC=DOMAIN1". It definitely shouldn't contain the string "DC=DOMAIN2".

As mentioned in one of the comments to the question I think this is a good answer for more recent times:

 user.Sid.Translate(typeof(System.Security.Principal.NTAccount)).ToString()
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