Question

I have a WCF service method that calls a SQL stored proc. I'm developing using IIS 5 (can't do much about that, II6/7 not available)

To get some gains, I'm doing a number of async calls to this stored proc by putting the call into a c# TPL Task.

When run as a Task, I'm getting an SQL Exception... "Login failed. The login is from an untrusted domain and cannot be used with Windows authentication"

However, If I run the exact same process without using a Task, I have no problems with SQL connection

It would appear to me that the credentials for the IIS Virtual folder (WCF) are not being delegated to the Task? Any ideas how I can specificy credentials for the TPL Task thread, ie to use the same as the parent etc ?

I am using Windows Authentication (sspi), and impersonation to be able to connect to the seperate SQL box.

Your help appreciated.

Était-ce utile?

La solution

You have two choices.

1) Opt your entire application into always flowing the identity using:

<runtime>
    <alwaysFlowImpersonationPolicy enabled="true"/>
</runtime>

This has a side effect of overhead and the danger of accidentally executing some unintended code with the priviledges of the currently calling user rather than the application identity. I would personally avoid this and go with #2 where you explicitly opt-in.

2) Capture the WindowsIdentity before setting up your TPL tasks and explicitly impersonate where you need to make the calls using Impersonate + WindowsImpersonationContext:

public void SomeWCFOperation()
{
    WindowsIdentity currentIdentity = WindowsIdentity.GetCurrent();

    Task.Factory.StartNew(() =>
    {
         // some unpriviledged code here


         using(WindowsImpersonationContext impersonationContext = currentIdentity.Impersonate())
         {
            // this code will execute with the priviledges of the caller
         }

         // some more unpriviledged code here
    });  
}

Autres conseils

As another workaround, you can create extensions to the TPL as follows:

public static class TaskFactoryExtensions
{
    public static Task StartNewImpersonated(this TaskFactory taskFactory, Action action)
    {
        var identity = WindowsIdentity.GetCurrent();
        return taskFactory.StartNew(() =>
        {
            using (identity.Impersonate()) 
            {
                action();
            }
        });
    }

    public static Task<TResult> StartNewImpersonated<TResult>(this TaskFactory taskFactory, Func<TResult> function)
    {
        var identity = WindowsIdentity.GetCurrent();
        return taskFactory.StartNew<TResult>(() =>
        {
            using (identity.Impersonate())
            {
                return function();
            }
        });
    }
}

You would then call these new methods in place of the standard StartNew methods.

The downside to this is that there are a lot of methods to override.

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