Compartir a través de


Secure ClickOnce applications

Applies to: yesVisual Studio noVisual Studio for Mac

Note

This article applies to Visual Studio 2017. If you're looking for the latest Visual Studio documentation, see Visual Studio documentation. We recommend upgrading to the latest version of Visual Studio. Download it here

ClickOnce applications are subject to code access security constraints in the .NET Framework to help limit the access that code has to protected resources and operations. For that reason, it is important that you understand the implications of code access security to write your ClickOnce applications accordingly. Your applications can use Full Trust or use partial zones, such as the Internet and Intranet zones, to limit access.

Additionally, ClickOnce uses certificates to verify the authenticity of the application's publisher, and to sign the application and deployment manifests to prove that the files have not been tampered with. Signing is an optional step, which makes it easier to change the application files after the manifests are generated. However, without signed manifests, it is difficult to ensure that the application installer is not tampered in man-in-the-middle security attacks. For this reason, we recommend that you sign your application and deployment manifests to help secure your applications.

Zones

Applications that are deployed using ClickOnce technology are restricted to a set of permissions and actions that are defined by the security zone. Security zones are defined in Internet Explorer, and are based on the location of the application. The following table lists the default permissions based on the deployment location:

Deployment Location Security Zone
Run from Web Internet Zone
Install from Web Internet Zone
Install from network file share Local Intranet Zone
Install from CD-ROM Full Trust

The default permissions are based on the location from which the original version of the application was deployed; updates to the application will inherit those permissions. If the application is configured to check for updates from a Web or network location and a newer version is available, the original installation can receive permissions for the Internet or Intranet zone instead of full-trust permissions. To prevent users from being prompted, a system administrator can specify a ClickOnce deployment policy that defines a specific application publisher as a trusted source. For computers on which this policy is deployed, permissions will be granted automatically and the user will not be prompted. For more information, see Trusted Application Deployment Overview. To configure trusted application deployment, the certificate can be installed to the machine or enterprise level. For more information, see How to: Add a Trusted Publisher to a Client Computer for ClickOnce Applications.

Code access security policies

Permissions for an application are determined by the settings in the <trustInfo> Element element of the application manifest. Visual Studio automatically generates this information based on the settings on the project's Security property page. A ClickOnce application is granted only the specific permissions that it requests. For example, where file access requires full-trust permissions, if the application requests file-access permission, it will only be granted file-access permission, not full-trust permissions. When developing your ClickOnce application, you should make sure that you request only the specific permissions that the application needs. In most cases, you can use the Internet or Local Intranet zones to limit your application to partial trust. For more information, see How to: Set a security zone for a ClickOnce application. If your application requires custom permissions, you can create a custom zone. For more information, see How to: Set custom permissions for a ClickOnce application.

Including a permission that is not part of the default permission set for the zone from which the application is deployed will cause the end user to be prompted to grant permission at install or update time. To prevent users from being prompted, a system administrator can specify a ClickOnce deployment policy that defines a specific application publisher as a trusted source. On computers where this policy is deployed, permissions will automatically be granted and the user will not be prompted.

As a developer, it is your responsibility to make sure that your application will run with the appropriate permissions. If the application requests permissions outside of a zone during run time, a security exception may appear. Visual Studio enables you to debug your application in the target security zone and provides help in developing secure applications. For more information, see Debug ClickOnce apps that use System.Deployment.Application.

For more information about code access security and ClickOnce, see Code access security for ClickOnce applications.

Code-signing certificates

To publish an application by using ClickOnce deployment, you can sign the application and deployment manifests for the application by using a public/private key pair. The tools for signing a manifest are available on the Signing page of the Project Designer. For more information, see Signing Page, Project Designer.

After the manifests are signed, the publisher information based on the Authenticode signature will be displayed to the user in the permissions dialog box during installation, to show the user that the application originated from a trusted source.

For more information about ClickOnce and certificates, see ClickOnce and Authenticode.

ASP.NET form-based authentication

If you want to control which deployments each user can access, you should not enable anonymous access to ClickOnce applications deployed on a Web server. Rather, you would enable users access to the deployments you have installed based on a user's identity using Windows authentication.

ClickOnce does not support ASP.NET forms-based authentication because it uses persistent cookies; these present a security risk because they reside in the Internet Explorer cache and can be hacked. Therefore, if you are deploying ClickOnce applications, any authentication scenario besides Windows authentication is unsupported.

Pass arguments

An additional security consideration occurs if you have to pass arguments into a ClickOnce application. ClickOnce enables developers to supply a query string to applications deployed over the Web. The query string takes the form of a series of name-value pairs at the end of the URL used to start the application:

http://servername.adatum.com/WindowsApp1.application?username=joeuser

By default, query-string arguments are disabled. To enable them, the attribute trustUrlParameters must be set in the application's deployment manifest. This value can be set from Visual Studio and from MageUI.exe. For detailed steps on how to enable passing query strings, see How to: Retrieve query string information in an online ClickOnce application.

You should never pass arguments retrieved through a query string to a database or to the command line without checking the arguments to make sure that they are safe. Unsafe arguments are ones that include database or command line escape characters that could allow a malicious user to manipulate your application into executing arbitrary commands.

Note

Query-string arguments are the only way to pass arguments to a ClickOnce application at startup. You cannot pass arguments to a ClickOnce application from the command line.

Deploying obfuscated assemblies

Visual Studio includes the free PreEmptive Protection - Dotfuscator Community, which you can use to protect your ClickOnce applications through code obfuscation and active protection measures. For details, please see the ClickOnce section of the Dotfuscator Community User Guide.

See also