if you ever tried to have mixed applications, with some regular ASP.NET pages and a bunch of Silverlight applications, where the forms authentication is made with a traditional ASP.NET login page, you have for sure found that you are forced to use the BrowserHttp stack into the Silverlight applications because the FormsAuthentication cookie is not shared between the ASP.NET page and the new ClientHttp stack that is available since Silverlight 3.0.
Since the new ClientHttp stack for many reasons is a huge improvement, is would be a beautiful thing being able to use this stack every time there is the need to place HTTP calls. Finally I found a way to share this cookie across the two stacks, but I want to warn you that the sole way to accomplish this task require a little "dirty hack", that someone might consider unacceptable while it opens some minor security concerns I will detail at the end of the post.
Before continue reading this post please have in mind that my suggestion is to always use the BrowserHttp stack in these scenario, until you do not really need the new stack, e.g. if you have to use some special verb or for some other particular reason. The dirty hack explained The first thing you have to know is that when you are using the ClientHttp stack you are free to access the cookies issued by the server and it is also possible to add some cookies to attach to a call. The task we would have to accomplish is simply to read a cookie (often called .ASPXAUTH) from the BrowserHttp stack and add it to the ClientHttp stack and it may seems and easy task.
Unfortunately the BrowserHttp Stack prevent us from accessing the cookies. The cookies management is one of the features that has been added by the new ClientHttp stack and there is not any way to pump out them from the old one.
So my first try was to use the HtmlPage.Document.Cookies property, as I found in some examples on the Internet. Perhaps this may work when the authentication cookie is issued by a custom authentication system, but with FormsAuthentication it is another failed try because the cookies issued by the ASP.NET engine are HttpOnly. This attribute, added since IE6 SP1, prevents the browser scripts - and Silverlight is considered a client script - from accessing these cookies that remain hidden.
So, how can we share these cookies? The only thing you can do is to add the cookie to the InitParams collection when you initialize the plugin in the html page. You have to change this page to be an aspx page and then you can create two keys into the InitParams collection like the following: public string GetFormsAuthenticationCookie()
{
Since the new ClientHttp stack for many reasons is a huge improvement, is would be a beautiful thing being able to use this stack every time there is the need to place HTTP calls. Finally I found a way to share this cookie across the two stacks, but I want to warn you that the sole way to accomplish this task require a little "dirty hack", that someone might consider unacceptable while it opens some minor security concerns I will detail at the end of the post.
Before continue reading this post please have in mind that my suggestion is to always use the BrowserHttp stack in these scenario, until you do not really need the new stack, e.g. if you have to use some special verb or for some other particular reason. The dirty hack explained The first thing you have to know is that when you are using the ClientHttp stack you are free to access the cookies issued by the server and it is also possible to add some cookies to attach to a call. The task we would have to accomplish is simply to read a cookie (often called .ASPXAUTH) from the BrowserHttp stack and add it to the ClientHttp stack and it may seems and easy task.
Unfortunately the BrowserHttp Stack prevent us from accessing the cookies. The cookies management is one of the features that has been added by the new ClientHttp stack and there is not any way to pump out them from the old one.
So my first try was to use the HtmlPage.Document.Cookies property, as I found in some examples on the Internet. Perhaps this may work when the authentication cookie is issued by a custom authentication system, but with FormsAuthentication it is another failed try because the cookies issued by the ASP.NET engine are HttpOnly. This attribute, added since IE6 SP1, prevents the browser scripts - and Silverlight is considered a client script - from accessing these cookies that remain hidden.
So, how can we share these cookies? The only thing you can do is to add the cookie to the InitParams collection when you initialize the plugin in the html page. You have to change this page to be an aspx page and then you can create two keys into the InitParams collection like the following: public string GetFormsAuthenticationCookie()
{
return string.Format(
}Read more: Silverlight Playground"FormsCookieName={0},FormsCookieValue={1}",FormsAuthentication.FormsCookieName,this.Request.Cookies[FormsAuthentication.FormsCookieName].Value);
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