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CRED (Windows CE 5.0)

Windows CE 5.0
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This structure is used by the Credential Manager API to read credentials from, and write credentials to, the registry. This structure replaces CREDENTIAL structure.

typedef struct _CRED {
  DWORD dwVersion;
  DWORD dwType;
  WSTR wszUser;
  DWORD dwUserLen;
  WSTR wszTarget;
  DWORD dwTargetLen;
  PBYTE pBlob;
  DWORD dwBlobSize;
  DWORD dwFlags;
} CRED, *PCRED,**PPCRED;

Members

dwVersion
Denotes the credential structure version, and is set to CRED_VER_1.
dwType
Credential type that cannot be changed after the credential is created.

Applications should allow for credential types they do not recognize. The following table shows the pre-defined credential types.

Credential typeDescription
CRED_TYPE_NTLM Credential type used for NTLM.
CRED_TYPE_KERBEROSCredential type used for Kerberos.
CRED_TYPE_DOMAIN_PASSWORDCredential type used for domain authentication.
CRED_TYPE_CERTIFICATECredential is a certificate.
CRED_TYPE_PLAINTEXT_PASSWORDCredential is a plain password.
CRED_TYPE_GENERIC Credential is stored as an opaque blob, but has no identifying characteristics.
wszUser
The unique user identifier that is associated with the credential, and must be null-terminated.

The format of the user identifier is dependent on the credential type. Examples are Domain\User, User@Domain.com.

dwUserLen
Number of characters in the target string, including the null-terminator. Cannot exceed CRED_MAX_TARGET_LEN
wszTarget
Target identifier that is associated with the credential. Must be null-terminated, and cannot be NULL. The length of the target identifier is specified by the dwTargetLenth member.

The format of the target identifier is dependent on the credential type. Examples are serverName, domain.com.

Different applications may write credentials of the same type. If you are using credential manager as a private store of credentials specific to your application, make sure that you prepend an application-specific string to the credential target name so that there is less chance of collision.

dwTargetLen
Number of characters in the target string, including the null-terminator. Cannot exceed CRED_MAX_TARGET_LEN.
pBlob
Blob that represents the credential information. The contents of this blob are dependant on whether a read or write or update operation is being done and also on the credential type. For example during a write this may contain the password that needs to be stored. But the actual credential that gets cached in credential manager depends on the type. For instance in the case of NTLM only the hash of the password gets cached. Hence for the same credential the blobs obtained during read may be different from the blob written.
dwBlobSize
Size of the credential blob in bytes. The size cannot exceed CRED_MAX_BLOB_SIZE.
dwFlags
Bit field that specifies the credential's characteristics and it is a bit mask of the following flags.
FlagDescription
CRED_FLAG_PERSISTCredential will be persisted in the registry. If this flag is not set, then the credential is stored in memory and cannot be retrieved subsequent to a soft reset.
CRED_FLAG_DEFAULTMark this credential as the default for this type. The default credential is returned when a credential for a specific target is requested and Credential Manager is unable to find a matching credential.
CRED_FLAG_SENSITIVEBefore accessing this credential, the user has to authenticate to the local device. This is useful for protecting highly sensitive credentials. Also, this provides an extra layer of security without having to re-enter credentials. The actual mechanism used for local authentication is determined by the Local Authentication Subsystem (LASS).
CRED_FLAG_TRUSTEDThe credential can be read only by trusted parts.

Requirements

OS Versions: Windows CE 5.0 and later
Header: Cred.h.

See Also

Credential Manager Structures


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