SecureConversationServiceCredential.SecurityContextClaimTypes Property
Definition
Important
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Gets a collection of the Type claims for cookie serialization.
public:
property System::Collections::ObjectModel::Collection<Type ^> ^ SecurityContextClaimTypes { System::Collections::ObjectModel::Collection<Type ^> ^ get(); };
public System.Collections.ObjectModel.Collection<Type> SecurityContextClaimTypes { get; }
member this.SecurityContextClaimTypes : System.Collections.ObjectModel.Collection<Type>
Public ReadOnly Property SecurityContextClaimTypes As Collection(Of Type)
Property Value
A collection of the Type claims for cookie serialization.
Examples
The following code shows how to get this property.
static void Configure(ServiceHost serviceHost)
{
/*
* There are certain settings that cannot be configured via app.config.
* The security state encoder is one of them.
* Plug in a SecurityStateEncoder that uses the configured certificate
* to protect the security context token state.
*
* Note: You don't need a security state encoder for cookie mode. This was added to the
* sample to illustrate how you would plug in a custom security state encoder should
* your scenario require one.
* */
serviceHost.Credentials.SecureConversationAuthentication.SecurityStateEncoder =
new CertificateSecurityStateEncoder(serviceHost.Credentials.ServiceCertificate.Certificate);
Collection<Type> myClaimTypes = new Collection<Type>();
myClaimTypes = serviceHost.Credentials.SecureConversationAuthentication.SecurityContextClaimTypes;
}
Remarks
To serialize claims into SCT cookies, Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) uses DataContractSerializer as the default. Because the Claim resource is extensible, WCF allows you to provide a list of known resource types. This assists the DataContractSerializer during deserialization of the claims in the cookie so that it can return the original strongly-typed objects.
Applies to
.NET