How do you do Impersonation in .NET?

Here is some good overview of .NET impersonation concepts.

  • Michiel van Otegem: WindowsImpersonationContext made easy
  • WindowsIdentity.Impersonate Method (check out the code samples)

Basically you will be leveraging these classes that are out of the box in the .NET framework:

  • WindowsImpersonationContext
  • WindowsIdentity

The code can often get lengthy though and that is why you see many examples like the one you reference that try to simplify the process.


"Impersonation" in the .NET space generally means running code under a specific user account. It is a somewhat separate concept than getting access to that user account via a username and password, although these two ideas pair together frequently.

Impersonation

The APIs for impersonation are provided in .NET via the System.Security.Principal namespace:

  • Newer code should generally use WindowsIdentity.RunImpersonated, which accepts a handle to the token of the user account, and then either an Action or Func<T> for the code to execute.

    WindowsIdentity.RunImpersonated(userHandle, () =>
    {
        // do whatever you want as this user.
    });
    

    or

    var result = WindowsIdentity.RunImpersonated(userHandle, () =>
    {
        // do whatever you want as this user.
        return result;
    });
    

    There's also WindowsIdentity.RunImpersonatedAsync for async tasks, available on .NET 5+, or older versions if you pull in the System.Security.Principal.Windows Nuget package.

    await WindowsIdentity.RunImpersonatedAsync(userHandle, async () =>
    {
        // do whatever you want as this user.
    });
    

    or

    var result = await WindowsIdentity.RunImpersonated(userHandle, async () =>
    {
        // do whatever you want as this user.
        return result;
    });
    
  • Older code used the WindowsIdentity.Impersonate method to retrieve a WindowsImpersonationContext object. This object implements IDisposable, so generally should be called from a using block.

    using (WindowsImpersonationContext context = WindowsIdentity.Impersonate(userHandle))
    {
        // do whatever you want as this user.
    }
    

    While this API still exists in .NET Framework, it should generally be avoided.

Accessing the User Account

The API for using a username and password to gain access to a user account in Windows is LogonUser - which is a Win32 native API. There is not currently a built-in managed .NET API for calling it.

[DllImport("advapi32.dll", SetLastError = true, CharSet = CharSet.Unicode)]
internal static extern bool LogonUser(String lpszUsername, String lpszDomain, String lpszPassword, int dwLogonType, int dwLogonProvider, out IntPtr phToken);

This is the basic call definition, however there is a lot more to consider to actually using it in production:

  • Obtaining a handle with the "safe" access pattern.
  • Closing the native handles appropriately
  • Code access security (CAS) trust levels (in .NET Framework only)
  • Passing SecureString when you can collect one safely via user keystrokes.

Instead of writing that code yourself, consider using my SimpleImpersonation library, which provides a managed wrapper around the LogonUser API to get a user handle:

using System.Security.Principal;
using Microsoft.Win32.SafeHandles;
using SimpleImpersonation;

var credentials = new UserCredentials(domain, username, password);
using SafeAccessTokenHandle userHandle = credentials.LogonUser(LogonType.Interactive);  // or another LogonType

You can now use that userHandle with any of the methods mentioned in the first section above. This is the preferred API as of version 4.0.0 of the SimpleImpersonation library. See the project readme for more details.

Remote Computer Access

It's important to recognize that impersonation is a local machine concept. One cannot impersonate using a user that is only known to a remote machine. If you want to access resources on a remote computer, the local machine and the remote machine must be attached to the same domain, or there needs to be a trust relationship between the domains of the two machines. If either computer is domainless, you cannot use LogonUser or SimpleImpersonation to connect to that machine.


Here's my vb.net port of Matt Johnson's answer. I added an enum for the logon types. LOGON32_LOGON_INTERACTIVE was the first enum value that worked for sql server. My connection string was just trusted. No user name / password in the connection string.

  <PermissionSet(SecurityAction.Demand, Name:="FullTrust")> _
  Public Class Impersonation
    Implements IDisposable

    Public Enum LogonTypes
      ''' <summary>
      ''' This logon type is intended for users who will be interactively using the computer, such as a user being logged on  
      ''' by a terminal server, remote shell, or similar process.
      ''' This logon type has the additional expense of caching logon information for disconnected operations; 
      ''' therefore, it is inappropriate for some client/server applications,
      ''' such as a mail server.
      ''' </summary>
      LOGON32_LOGON_INTERACTIVE = 2

      ''' <summary>
      ''' This logon type is intended for high performance servers to authenticate plaintext passwords.
      ''' The LogonUser function does not cache credentials for this logon type.
      ''' </summary>
      LOGON32_LOGON_NETWORK = 3

      ''' <summary>
      ''' This logon type is intended for batch servers, where processes may be executing on behalf of a user without 
      ''' their direct intervention. This type is also for higher performance servers that process many plaintext
      ''' authentication attempts at a time, such as mail or Web servers. 
      ''' The LogonUser function does not cache credentials for this logon type.
      ''' </summary>
      LOGON32_LOGON_BATCH = 4

      ''' <summary>
      ''' Indicates a service-type logon. The account provided must have the service privilege enabled. 
      ''' </summary>
      LOGON32_LOGON_SERVICE = 5

      ''' <summary>
      ''' This logon type is for GINA DLLs that log on users who will be interactively using the computer. 
      ''' This logon type can generate a unique audit record that shows when the workstation was unlocked. 
      ''' </summary>
      LOGON32_LOGON_UNLOCK = 7

      ''' <summary>
      ''' This logon type preserves the name and password in the authentication package, which allows the server to make 
      ''' connections to other network servers while impersonating the client. A server can accept plaintext credentials 
      ''' from a client, call LogonUser, verify that the user can access the system across the network, and still 
      ''' communicate with other servers.
      ''' NOTE: Windows NT:  This value is not supported. 
      ''' </summary>
      LOGON32_LOGON_NETWORK_CLEARTEXT = 8

      ''' <summary>
      ''' This logon type allows the caller to clone its current token and specify new credentials for outbound connections.
      ''' The new logon session has the same local identifier but uses different credentials for other network connections. 
      ''' NOTE: This logon type is supported only by the LOGON32_PROVIDER_WINNT50 logon provider.
      ''' NOTE: Windows NT:  This value is not supported. 
      ''' </summary>
      LOGON32_LOGON_NEW_CREDENTIALS = 9
    End Enum

    <DllImport("advapi32.dll", SetLastError:=True, CharSet:=CharSet.Unicode)> _
    Private Shared Function LogonUser(lpszUsername As [String], lpszDomain As [String], lpszPassword As [String], dwLogonType As Integer, dwLogonProvider As Integer, ByRef phToken As SafeTokenHandle) As Boolean
    End Function

    Public Sub New(Domain As String, UserName As String, Password As String, Optional LogonType As LogonTypes = LogonTypes.LOGON32_LOGON_INTERACTIVE)
      Dim ok = LogonUser(UserName, Domain, Password, LogonType, 0, _SafeTokenHandle)
      If Not ok Then
        Dim errorCode = Marshal.GetLastWin32Error()
        Throw New ApplicationException(String.Format("Could not impersonate the elevated user.  LogonUser returned error code {0}.", errorCode))
      End If

      WindowsImpersonationContext = WindowsIdentity.Impersonate(_SafeTokenHandle.DangerousGetHandle())
    End Sub

    Private ReadOnly _SafeTokenHandle As New SafeTokenHandle
    Private ReadOnly WindowsImpersonationContext As WindowsImpersonationContext

    Public Sub Dispose() Implements System.IDisposable.Dispose
      Me.WindowsImpersonationContext.Dispose()
      Me._SafeTokenHandle.Dispose()
    End Sub

    Public NotInheritable Class SafeTokenHandle
      Inherits SafeHandleZeroOrMinusOneIsInvalid

      <DllImport("kernel32.dll")> _
      <ReliabilityContract(Consistency.WillNotCorruptState, Cer.Success)> _
      <SuppressUnmanagedCodeSecurity()> _
      Private Shared Function CloseHandle(handle As IntPtr) As <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.Bool)> Boolean
      End Function

      Public Sub New()
        MyBase.New(True)
      End Sub

      Protected Overrides Function ReleaseHandle() As Boolean
        Return CloseHandle(handle)
      End Function
    End Class

  End Class

You need to Use with a Using statement to contain some code to run impersonated.


This is probably what you want:

using System.Security.Principal;
using(WindowsIdentity.GetCurrent().Impersonate())
{
     //your code goes here
}

But I really need more details to help you out. You could do impersonation with a config file (if you're trying to do this on a website), or through method decorators (attributes) if it's a WCF service, or through... you get the idea.

Also, if we're talking about impersonating a client that called a particular service (or web app), you need to configure the client correctly so that it passes the appropriate tokens.

Finally, if what you really want do is Delegation, you also need to setup AD correctly so that users and machines are trusted for delegation.

Edit:
Take a look here to see how to impersonate a different user, and for further documentation.