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Encrypting and Decrypting Configuration Sections

You can use the ASP.NET IIS Registration Tool (Aspnet_regiis.exe) to encrypt or decrypt sections of a Web configuration file. ASP.NET will automatically decrypt encrypted configuration elements when the Web.config file is processed.

Note

The Aspnet_regiis.exe tool is located in the %windows%\Microsoft.NET\Framework\versionNumber folder.

You can also use the protected configuration classes in the System.Configuration namespace to encrypt and decrypt sections of a Web configuration file, sections of a configuration file for an executable (.exe), or sections in the machine-level and application-level configuration files. For more information, see the ProtectSection method of the SectionInformation class. For information on referencing a section of a Web.config file, see the WebConfigurationManager class. For information on referencing configuration sections of files other than the Web.config file, see the ConfigurationManager class.

Encrypting a Web Configuration Section

To encrypt configuration file contents, use the Aspnet_regiis.exe tool with the –pe option and the name of the configuration element to be encrypted.

Use the –app option to identify the application for which the Web.config file will be encrypted and the -site option to identify which Web site the application is a part of. The Web site is identified using the site number from the Internet Information Services (IIS) metabase. You can retrieve the site number from the INSTANCE_META_PATH server variable in the ServerVariables collection. For example, when IIS is installed, a Web site named "Default Web Site" is created as site 1. In pages served from that site, the INSTANCE_META_PATH server variable returns "/LM/W3SVC/1". If you do not specify a -site option, site 1 is used.

Use the –prov option to identify the name of the ProtectedConfigurationProvider that will perform the encryption and decryption. If you do not specify a provider using the -prov option, the provider configured as the defaultProvider is used.

Note

If you are using an RsaProtectedConfigurationProvider instance that specifies a custom key container, you must create the key container before running the Aspnet_regiis.exe tool. For more information, see Importing and Exporting Protected Configuration RSA Key Containers.

The following command encrypts the connectionStrings element in the Web.config file for the application SampleApplication. Because no -site option is included, the application is assumed to be from Web site 1 (most commonly Default Web Site in IIS). The encryption is performed using the RsaProtectedConfigurationProvider specified in the machine configuration.

aspnet_regiis -pe "connectionStrings" -app "/SampleApplication" -prov "RsaProtectedConfigurationProvider"

When a page or other ASP.NET resource in the application is requested, ASP.NET calls the provider for the protected configuration section to decrypt the information for use by ASP.NET and your application code.

Note

To decrypt and encrypt a section of the Web.config file, the ASP.NET process must have permission to read the appropriate encryption key information. For more information, see Importing and Exporting Protected Configuration RSA Key Containers.

Decrypting a Web Configuration Section

To decrypt encrypted configuration file contents, you use the Aspnet_regiis.exe tool with the -pd switch and the name of the configuration element to be decrypted. Use the –app and -site switches to identify the application for which the Web.config file will be decrypted. You do not need to specify the –prov switch to identify the name of the ProtectedConfigurationProvider, because that information is read from the configProtectionProvider attribute of the protected configuration section.

The following command decrypts the connectionStrings element in the Web.config file for the ASP.NET application SampleApplication:

aspnet_regiis -pd "connectionStrings" -app "/SampleApplication"

See Also

Tasks

Walkthrough: Encrypting Configuration Information Using Protected Configuration

Concepts

Specifying a Protected Configuration Provider

Other Resources

Encrypting Configuration Information Using Protected Configuration