Source Code
Recently I worked with a customer assisting them in implementing their Web APIs using the new ASP.NET Web API framework. Their API would be public so obviously security came up as the key concern to address. Claims-Based-Security is widely used in SOAP/WS-* world and we have rich APIs available in .NET Framework in the form of WCF, WIF & ADFS 2.0. Even though we now have this cool library to develop Web APIs, the claims-based-security story for REST/HTTP is still catching up. OAuth 2.0 is almost ready, OpenID Connect is catching up quickly however it would still take sometime before we have WIF equivalent libraries for implementing claims-based-security in REST/HTTP world. DotNetOpenAuth seems to be the most prominent open-source library claiming to support OAuth 2.0 so I decided to give it a go to implement the ‘Resource Owner Password Credentials’ authorization grant. Following diagram shows the solution structure for my target scenario.
1. OAuth 2.0 issuer is an ASP.NET MVC application responsible for issuing token based on OAuth 2.0 ‘Password Credentials’ grant type.
2. Web API Host exposes secured Web APIs which can only be accessed by presenting a valid token issued by the trusted issuer
3. Sample thick client which consumes the Web API
I have used the DotNetOpenAuth.Ultimate NuGet package which is just a single assembly implementing quite a few security protocols. From OAuth 2.0 perspective, AuthorizationServer is the main class responsible for processing the token issuance request, producing and returning a token for valid & authenticated request. The token issuance action of my OAuthIssuerController looks like this:
public class OAuthIssuerController : Controller { public ActionResult Index() { var configuration = new IssuerConfiguration { EncryptionCertificate = new X509Certificate2(Server.MapPath("~/Certs/localhost.cer")), SigningCertificate = new X509Certificate2(Server.MapPath("~/Certs/localhost.pfx"), "a") }; var authorizationServer = new AuthorizationServer(new OAuth2Issuer(configuration)); var response = authorizationServer.HandleTokenRequest(Request).AsActionResult(); return response; } }
AuthorizationServer handles all the protocol details and delegate the real token issuance logic to a custom token issuer handler (OAuth2Issuer in following snippet)
Now with my issuer setup, I can acquire access tokens by POSTing following request to the token issuer endpoint
POST /Issuer HTTP/1.1
Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded; charset=utf-8
scope=http%3A%2F%2Flocalhost%2F&grant_type=client_credentials&client_id=zamd&client_secret=test1243
In response, I get 200 OK with following payload
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Cache-Control: no-cache, no-store, max-age=0, must-revalidate
Pragma: no-cache
Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8
Server: Microsoft-IIS/7.5
Content-Length: 685
{“access_token”:”gAAAAC5KksmbH0FyG5snks_xOcROnIcPldpgksi5b8Egk7DmrRhbswiEYCX7RLdb2l0siW8ZWyqTqxOFxBCjthjTfAHrE8owe3hPxur7Wmn2LZciTYfTlKQZW6ujlhEv6N4V1HL4Md5hdtwy51_7RMzGG6MvvNbEU8_3GauIgaF7JcbQJAEAAIAAAABR4tbwLFF57frAdPyZsIeA6ljo_Y01u-2p5KTfJ2xa6ZhtEpzmC46Omcvps9MbFWgyz6536_77jx9nE3sePTSeyB5zyLznkGDKhjfWwx3KjbYnxCVCV-n2pqKtry0l8nkMj4MrjqoTXpvd_P0c_VGfVXCsVt7BYOO68QbD-m7Yz9rHIZn-CQ4po0FqS2elDVe9qwu_uATbAmOXlkWsbnFwa6_ZDHcSr2M-WZxHTVFin7vEWO7FxIQStabu_r4_0Mo_xaFlBKp2hl9Podq8ltx7KvhqFS0Xu8oIJGp1t5lQKoaJSRTgU8N8iEyQfCeU5hvynZVeoVPaXfMA-gyYfMGspLybaw7XaBOuFJ20-BZW0sAFGm_0sqNq7CLm7LibWNw”,”token_type”:”bearer”,”expires_in”:”300″,”scope”:”http:\/\/localhost\/ adminstrator poweruser”}
DotNetOpenAuth also has a WebServerClient class which can be used to acquire tokens and I have used in my test application instead of crafting raw HTTP requests. Following code snippet generates the same above request/response
Ok Now the 2nd part is to use this access token for authentication & authorization when consuming ASP.NET Web APIs.
On line 8, I’m creating an instance of a customized HttpClient passing in the access token. The httpClient would use this access token for all subsequent HTTP requests
Finally on the RP side, I have used standard MessageHandler extensibility to extract and validate the ‘access token’. The OAuth2 message handler also extracts the claims from the access token and create a ClaimsPrincipal which is passed on the Web API implementation for authorization decisions.
Inside my Web API, I access the claims information using the standard IClaimsIdentity abstraction.
Once I got the “access token”, I can test few scenarios in fiddler by attaching and tweaking the token when calling my web api.
Source code attached. Please feel free to download and use.
Original Post by ZulfiqarAhmed on May4th, 2012
Here: http://zamd.net/2012/05/04/claim-based-security-for-asp-net-web-apis-using-dotnetopenauth/