MessageProtectionOrder Enumeration
Assembly: System.ServiceModel (in system.servicemodel.dll)
| Member name | Description | |
|---|---|---|
| EncryptBeforeSign | Specifies that the SOAP message is encrypted before a digital signature is generated for the SOAP message. | |
| SignBeforeEncrypt | Specifies that a digital signature is generated for the SOAP message before any portion of the SOAP message is encrypted, but the digital signature is not encrypted. | |
| SignBeforeEncryptAndEncryptSignature | Specifies that a digital signature is generated for the SOAP message before any portion of the SOAP message is encrypted, and the digital signature is encrypted. |
This enumeration is used with the AsymmetricSecurityBindingElement.MessageProtectionOrder property of the AsymmetricSecurityBindingElement and the SymmetricSecurityBindingElement.MessageProtectionOrder property of the SymmetricSecurityBindingElement classes.
If a message is vulnerable to a digest attack (for example, if the message is short or the entropy is low), you should use the SignBeforeEncryptAndEncryptSignature or EncryptBeforeSign option. (Entropy is random data provided by a server, a client, or both, and is used to create a shared key for encrypting and decrypting data.)
What Is Ordered?
WCF offers three different protection levels that determine how messages are secured using SOAP message security. The default is SignBeforeEncryptAndEncryptSignature. This setting first signs the message, encrypts the message body, and then encrypts the XML signature. This reduces the likelihood of a successful cryptographic guessing attack against the signature.
However, using the default has performance implications. In effect, there is a tradeoff of performance for increased security. Encrypting the signature can decrease performance between 10 percent and 40 percent. If the data content of the message is of low value, and performance throughput is more significant, use SignBeforeEncrypt. With this setting, the signature digest is sent in clear text, and thus the message is more vulnerable to guess-and-verify attacks on low entropy.
Custom Bindings Only
To change the MessageProtectionOrder property requires the creation of a custom security binding. For more information about creating custom bindings, see Creating User-defined Bindings and Binding Elements. For more information about creating a custom binding for a specific authentication mode, see How To: Create a SecurityBindingElement for a Specified Authentication Mode.
The following example creates a SymmetricSecurityBindingElement element and sets its MessageProtectionOrder property to SignBeforeEncrypt.
public static Binding CreateCustomBinding() { // Create an empty BindingElementCollection to populate, // then create a custom binding from it. BindingElementCollection outputBec = new BindingElementCollection(); // Create a SymmetricSecurityBindingElement. SymmetricSecurityBindingElement ssbe = new SymmetricSecurityBindingElement(); // Set the algorithm suite to one that uses 128-bit keys. ssbe.DefaultAlgorithmSuite = SecurityAlgorithmSuite.Basic128; // Set MessageProtectionOrder to SignBeforeEncrypt. ssbe.MessageProtectionOrder = MessageProtectionOrder.SignBeforeEncrypt; // Use a Kerberos token as the protection token. ssbe.ProtectionTokenParameters = new KerberosSecurityTokenParameters(); // Add the SymmetricSecurityBindingElement to the BindingElementCollection. outputBec.Add ( ssbe ); outputBec.Add(new TextMessageEncodingBindingElement()); outputBec.Add(new HttpTransportBindingElement()); // Create a CustomBinding and return it; otherwise, return null. return new CustomBinding(outputBec); }
Windows 98, Windows Server 2000 SP4, Windows CE, Windows Millennium Edition, Windows Mobile for Pocket PC, Windows Mobile for Smartphone, Windows Server 2003, Windows XP Media Center Edition, Windows XP Professional x64 Edition, Windows XP SP2, Windows XP Starter Edition
The Microsoft .NET Framework 3.0 is supported on Windows Vista, Microsoft Windows XP SP2, and Windows Server 2003 SP1.Reference
System.ServiceModel.Security NamespaceMessageProtectionOrder
AsymmetricSecurityBindingElement
SymmetricSecurityBindingElement
Other Resources
How To: Create a Custom Binding Using the SecurityBindingElementCreating User-defined Bindings and Binding Elements
How To: Create a SecurityBindingElement for a Specified Authentication Mode
Encryption of Digital Signatures