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SecurityBindingElement Authentication Modes

Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) provides several modes by which clients and services authenticate to one another. You can create security binding elements for these authentication modes by using static methods on the SecurityBindingElement class or through configuration. This topic briefly describes the 18 authentication modes.

For an example of using the element for one of the authentication modes, see How to: Create a SecurityBindingElement for a Specified Authentication Mode.

Basic Configuration Programming

The following procedure describes how to set the authentication mode in a configuration file.

To set the authentication mode in configuration

  1. To the <bindings> element, add a customBinding Element.

  2. As a child element, add a <binding> element to the <customBinding> element.

  3. Add a <security> element to the <binding> element.

  4. Set the authenticationMode attribute to one of the values described below. For example, the following code sets the mode to AnonymousForCertificate.

    <bindings>
      <customBinding>
        <binding name="SecureCustomBinding">
         <security authenticationMode ="AnonymousForCertificate" />
        </binding>
      </customBinding>
    </bindings>
    

To set the mode programmatically

  1. Determine the return type, which can be one of the following: SymmetricSecurityBindingElement, TransportSecurityBindingElement, AsymmetricSecurityBindingElement, or SecurityBindingElement.

  2. Call the appropriate static method of the SecurityBindingElement class. For example, the following code calls the CreateAnonymousForCertificateBindingElement method.

    Dim b As SymmetricSecurityBindingElement = _
    SecurityBindingElement.CreateAnonymousForCertificateBindingElement()
    
    SymmetricSecurityBindingElement b =
        SecurityBindingElement.
        CreateAnonymousForCertificateBindingElement();
    
  3. Use the binding element to create the custom binding. For more information, see Custom Bindings.

Mode Descriptions

AnonymousForCertificate

With this authentication mode, the client is anonymous and the service is authenticated using an X.509 certificate. The security binding element is a SymmetricSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateAnonymousForCertificateBindingElement method. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute of the <security> element to AnonymousForCertificate.

AnonymousForSslNegotiated

With this authentication mode, the client is anonymous and the service is authenticated using an X.509 certificate that is negotiated at run time. The security binding element is a SymmetricSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateSslNegotiationBindingElement method when a value of false is passed for the first parameter. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute to AnonymousForSslNegotiated.

CertificateOverTransport

With this authentication mode, the client authenticates using an X.509 certificate that appears at the SOAP layer as an endorsing supporting token; that is, a token that signs the message signature. The service is authenticated using an X.509 certificate at the transport layer. The security binding element is a TransportSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateCertificateOverTransportBindingElement method. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute to CertificateOverTransport.

IssuedToken

With this authentication mode, the client does not authenticate to the service, as such; instead, the client authenticates to a security token service and receives a SAML token, which it then presents to the server to prove its knowledge of a shared key. The service is not authenticated to the client, as such, but the security token service encrypts the shared key as part of the issued token so that only the service can decrypt the key. The security binding element is a SymmetricSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateIssuedTokenBindingElement method. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute to IssuedToken.

IssuedTokenForCertificate

With this authentication mode, the client does not authenticate to the service, as such; instead, the client authenticates to a security token service and receives a SAML token, which it then presents to the server to prove its knowledge of a shared key. The issued token appears at the SOAP layer as either an endorsing supporting token or a bearer token; that is, a token that signs the message signature. The service authenticates to the client using an X.509 certificate. The security binding element is a SymmetricSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateIssuedTokenForCertificateBindingElement method. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute to IssuedTokenForCertificate.

IssuedTokenForSslNegotiated

With this authentication mode, the client does not authenticate to the service, as such; instead, the client authenticates to a security token service and receives a SAML token, which it then presents to the server to prove its knowledge of a shared key. The issued token appears at the SOAP layer as either an endorsing supporting token or a bearer token; that is, a token that signs the message signature. The service is authenticated using an X.509 certificate. The security binding element is a SymmetricSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateIssuedTokenForSslBindingElement method. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute to IssuedTokenForSslnegotiated.

IssuedTokenOverTransport

With this authentication mode, the client does not authenticate to the service, as such; instead, the client authenticates to a security token service and receives a SAML token, which it then presents to the server to prove its knowledge of a shared key. The issued token appears at the SOAP layer as either an endorsing supporting token or a bearer token; that is, a token that signs the message signature. The service is authenticated using an X.509 certificate at the transport layer. The security binding element is a TransportSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateIssuedTokenOverTransportBindingElement method. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute to IssuedTokenOverTransport.

Kerberos

With this authentication mode, the client authenticates to the service using a Kerberos ticket. That same ticket also provides server authentication. The security binding element is a SymmetricSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateKerberosBindingElement method. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute to Kerberos.

Aa751836.note(en-us,VS.85).gifNote:
In order to use this authentication mode, the service account must be associated with a service principal name (SPN). To do this, run the service under the NETWORK SERVICE account or the LOCAL SYSTEM account. Alternatively, use the SetSpn.exe tool to create an SPN for the service account. In either case, the client must use the correct SPN in the <servicePrincipalName> element, or by using the EndpointAddress constructor. For more information, see Service Identity and Authentication.

Aa751836.note(en-us,VS.85).gifNote:
When the Kerberos authentication mode is used, the Anonymous and Delegation impersonation levels are not supported.

KerberosOverTransport

With this authentication mode, the client authenticates to the service using a Kerberos ticket. The Kerberos token appears at the SOAP layer as an endorsing supporting token; that is, a token that signs the message signature. The service is authenticated using an X.509 certificate at the transport layer. The security binding element is a TransportSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateKerberosOverTransportBindingElement method. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute to KerberosOverTransport.

Aa751836.note(en-us,VS.85).gifNote:
In order to use this authentication mode, the service account must be associated with an SPN. To do this, run the service under the NETWORK SERVICE account or the LOCAL SYSTEM account. Alternatively, use the SetSpn.exe tool to create an SPN for the service account. In either case, the client must use the correct SPN in the <servicePrincipalName> element, or by using the EndpointAddress constructor. For more information, see Service Identity and Authentication.

MutualCertificate

With this authentication mode, the client authenticates using an X.509 certificate that appears at the SOAP layer as an endorsing supporting token; that is, a token that signs the message signature. The service is also authenticated using an X.509 certificate. The security binding element is a SymmetricSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateMutualCertificateBindingElement method. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute to MutualCertificate.

MutualCertificateDuplex

With this authentication mode, the client authenticates using an X.509 certificate that appears at the SOAP layer as an endorsing supporting token; that is, a token that signs the message signature. The service is also authenticated using an X.509 certificate. The binding is a AsymmetricSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateMutualCertificateDuplexBindingElement method. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute to MutualCertificateDuplex.

MutalSslNegotiation

With this authentication mode, the client and the service authenticate using X.509 certificates. The security binding element is a SymmetricSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateSslNegotiationBindingElement method when a value of true is passed for the first parameter. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute to MutualSslNegotiated.

SecureConversation

The security binding element is a SymmetricSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateSecureConversationBindingElement method. This method takes a SecurityBindingElement as a parameter, which is used during initialization to establish the secure session. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute to SecureConversation.

If no bootstrap binding is specified, then the SspiNegotiated authentication mode is used for bootstrap.

SspiNegotiation

With this authentication mode, a negotiation protocol is used to perform client and server authentication. Kerberos is used if possible; otherwise, NT LanMan (NTLM) is used. The security binding element is a SymmetricSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateSspiNegotiationBindingElement method. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute to SspiNegotiated.

SspiNegotiatedOverTransport

With this authentication mode, a negotiation protocol is used to perform client and server authentication. Kerberos protocol is used if possible; otherwise, NTLM is used. The resulting token appears at the SOAP layer as an endorsing supporting token; that is, a token that signs the message signature. The service is additionally authenticated at the transport layer by an X.509 certificate. The security binding element is a TransportSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateSspiNegotiationOverTransportBindingElement method. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute to SspiNegotiatedOverTransport.

UserNameForCertificate

With this authentication mode, the client authenticates to the service using a Username Token that appears at the SOAP layer as a signed supporting token; that is, a token that is signed by the message signature. The service authenticates to the client using an X.509 certificate. The security binding element is a SymmetricSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateUserNameForCertificateBindingElement method. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute to UserNameForCertificate.

For the UserNameForCertificate authentication mode, both the client and service must be using WS-Security 1.1.

UserNameForSslNegotiated

With this authentication mode, the client is authenticates using a Username Token which appears at the SOAP layer as a signed supporting token; that is, a token that is signed by the message signature. The service is authenticated using an X.509 certificate. The security binding element is a SymmetricSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateUserNameForSslBindingElement method. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute to UserNameForSslNegotiated.

UserNameOverTransport

With this authentication mode, the client authenticates using a Username Token that appears at the SOAP layer as a signed supporting token; that is, a token that is signed by the message signature. The service is authenticated using an X.509 certificate at the transport layer. The security binding element is a TransportSecurityBindingElement returned by the CreateUserNameOverTransportBindingElement method. Alternatively, set the authenticationMode attribute to UserNameOverTransport.

See Also

Tasks

How to: Create a SecurityBindingElement for a Specified Authentication Mode

Reference

SecurityBindingElement