You can use WIF in MVC without an STS.
I used the default MVC2 template, but it should work with MVC 3 too.
You need to:
1- Plug WIF 's SessionAuthenticationModule (web.config)
< add name="SessionAuthenticationModule" type="Microsoft.IdentityModel.Web.SessionAuthenticationModule, Microsoft.IdentityModel, Version=3.5.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=31bf3856ad364e35" />
2- Wherever you authenticate your users, create a ClaimsPrincipal, add all required claims and then create a SessionSecurityToken. This is the LogOn Action in the AccountController created by MVC:
[HttpPost]
public ActionResult LogOn(LogOnModel model, string returnUrl)
{
if (ModelState.IsValid)
{
if (MembershipService.ValidateUser(model.UserName, model.Password))
{
var cp = new ClaimsPrincipal();
cp.Identities.Add(new ClaimsIdentity());
IClaimsIdentity ci = (cp.Identity as IClaimsIdentity);
ci.Claims.Add(new Claim(ClaimTypes.Name, model.UserName));
SessionSecurityToken sst = FederatedAuthentication
.SessionAuthenticationModule
.CreateSessionSecurityToken(cp,
"MVC Test",
DateTime.
UtcNow,
DateTime.
UtcNow.
AddHours
(1),
true);
FederatedAuthentication.SessionAuthenticationModule.CookieHandler.RequireSsl = false;
FederatedAuthentication.SessionAuthenticationModule.AuthenticateSessionSecurityToken(sst, true);
//FormsService.SignIn(model.UserName, model.RememberMe);
if (!String.IsNullOrEmpty(returnUrl))
{
return Redirect(returnUrl);
}
else
{
return RedirectToAction("Index", "Home");
}
}
else
{
ModelState.AddModelError("", "The user name or password provided is incorrect.");
}
}
// If we got this far, something failed, redisplay form
return View(model);
}
I just added the required lines and left everything else the same. So some refactoring might be required.
From there on, your app will now receive a ClaimsPrincipal. All automatically handled by WIF.
The CookieHandler.RequiresSsl = false is only because it's a dev machine and I'm not deploying on IIS. It can be defined in configuration too.
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