FormsAuthentication.Authenticate Method (String, String)
Validates a user name and password against credentials stored in the configuration file for an application.
Assembly: System.Web (in System.Web.dll)
[<ObsoleteAttribute("The recommended alternative is to use the Membership APIs, such as Membership.ValidateUser. For more information, see http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=252463.")>] static member Authenticate : name:string * password:string -> bool
Parameters
- name
-
Type:
System.String
The user name.
- password
-
Type:
System.String
The password for the user.
The Authenticate method verifies user credentials that are stored in the section of the application configuration file. Alternatively, you can use ASP.NET membership to store user credentials and call the ValidateUser to verify the credentials. For more information, see Managing Users by Using Membership.
For improved security, you can encrypt passwords stored in the configuration file for an application by using the HashPasswordForStoringInConfigFile method.
The following code example shows user credentials stored in the Web.config file for an application. The password values have been hashed using the HashPasswordForStoringInConfigFile method.
<authentication mode="Forms">
<forms loginUrl="login.aspx">
<credentials passwordFormat="SHA1">
<user name="user1" password="27CE4CA7FBF00685AF2F617E3F5BBCAFF7B7403C" />
<user name="user2" password="D108F80936F78DFDD333141EBC985B0233A30C7A" />
<user name="user3" password="7BDB09781A3F23885CD43177C0508B375CB1B7E9"/>
</credentials>
</forms>
</authentication>
The following code example shows a login page that uses the Authenticate method to validate user credentials.
Security Note
|
|---|
This example contains a text box that accepts user input, which is a potential security threat. By default, ASP.NET Web pages validate that user input does not include script or HTML elements. For more information, see Script Exploits Overview. |
Available since 1.1
