AuthorizationContext Class
The result of evaluating all authorization policies available from the tokens in the sent message and by calling the GetAuthorizationPolicies method.
Assembly: System.IdentityModel (in System.IdentityModel.dll)
Evaluating all of the authorization policies in an authorization manager results in a set of ClaimSet objects. These objects make up an authorization context.
An authorization context contains a set of claim set objects, an expiration time that specifies the span of time during which the authorization context is valid, and a unique identifier.
The AuthorizationContext for the current operation can be accessed via the AuthorizationContext property.
protected override bool CheckAccessCore(OperationContext operationContext) { // Extract the action URI from the OperationContext. Match this against the claims // in the AuthorizationContext. string action = operationContext.RequestContext.RequestMessage.Headers.Action; Console.WriteLine("action: {0}", action); // Iterate through the various claim sets in the AuthorizationContext. foreach(ClaimSet cs in operationContext.ServiceSecurityContext.AuthorizationContext.ClaimSets) { // Examine only those claim sets issued by System. if (cs.Issuer == ClaimSet.System) { // Iterate through claims of type "http://example.org/claims/allowedoperation". foreach (Claim c in cs.FindClaims("http://example.org/claims/allowedoperation", Rights.PossessProperty)) { // Write the Claim resource to the console. Console.WriteLine("resource: {0}", c.Resource.ToString()); // If the Claim resource matches the action URI then return true to allow access. if (action == c.Resource.ToString()) return true; } } } // If this point is reached, return false to deny access. return false; }
Windows 7, Windows Vista, Windows XP SP2, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2003
The .NET Framework and .NET Compact Framework do not support all versions of every platform. For a list of the supported versions, see .NET Framework System Requirements.