Rediģēt

Kopīgot, izmantojot


Service Principal Names (SPNs) in Client Connections (ODBC)

Applies to: SQL Server Azure SQL Database Azure SQL Managed Instance Azure Synapse Analytics Analytics Platform System (PDW)

Important

SQL Server Native Client (SNAC) isn't shipped with:

  • SQL Server 2022 (16.x) and later versions
  • SQL Server Management Studio 19 and later versions

The SQL Server Native Client (SQLNCLI or SQLNCLI11) and the legacy Microsoft OLE DB Provider for SQL Server (SQLOLEDB) aren't recommended for new application development.

For new projects, use one of the following drivers:

For SQLNCLI that ships as a component of SQL Server Database Engine (versions 2012 through 2019), see this Support Lifecycle exception.

This topic describes ODBC attributes and functions that support service principal names (SPNs) in client applications. For more information about SPNs in client applications, see Service Principal Name (SPN) Support in Client Connections and Get Mutual Kerberos Authentication.

Connection String Keywords

The following connection string keywords enable client applications to specify an SPN.

Keyword Value
ServerSPN The SPN for the server. The default value is an empty string, which causes SQL Server Native Client to use the default, driver-generated SPN.
FailoverPartnerSPN The SPN for the failover partner. The default value is an empty string, which causes SQL Server Native Client to use the default, driver-generated SPN.

Connection Attributes

The following connection attributes enable client applications to specify an SPN and query for the authentication method.

Name Type Usage
SQL_COPT_SS_SERVER_SPN

SQL_COPT_SS_FAILOVER_PARTNER_SPN
SQLTCHAR, read/write Specifies the SPN for the server. The default value is an empty string, which causes SQL Server Native Client to use the default, driver-generated SPN.

This attribute can be queried only after it has been set programmatically, or after a connection has been opened. If an attempt is made to query this attribute on a connection that is not open and the attribute has not been set programmatically, SQL_ERROR is returned, and a diagnostic record is logged with SQLState 08003 and the message "Connection not open".

If an attempt is made to set this attribute when a connection is open, SQL_ERROR is returned, and a diagnostic record is logged with SQLState HY011 and the message "Operation invalid at this time".
SQL_COPT_SS_INTEGRATED_AUTHENTICATION_METHOD SQLTCHAR, read-only Returns the authentication method used for the connection. The value returned to the application is the value that Windows returns to SQL Server Native Client. Possible values are:

"NTLM", which is returned when a connection is opened using NTLM authentication.

"Kerberos", which is returned when a connection is opened using Kerberos authentication.



This attribute can only be read for an open connection that used Windows Authentication. If an attempt is made to read it before a connection has been opened, SQL_ERROR is returned, and an error is logged with SQLState 08003 and the message "Connection not open".

If this attribute is queried on a connection that did not use Windows Authentication, SQL_ERROR is returned, and an error is logged with SQLState HY092 and the message "Invalid attribute/option identifier (SQL_COPT_SS_INTEGRATED_AUTHENTICATION_METHOD is only available for Trusted Connections)".

If the authentication method cannot be determined, SQL_ERROR is returned, and an error is logged with SQLState HY000 and the message "General error".
SQL_COPT_SS_MUTUALLY_AUTHENTICATED SQLSMALLINT, read-only Returns SQL_TRUE if the server in the connection was mutually authenticated; otherwise, returns SQL_FALSE.

This attribute can only be read for an open connection. If an attempt is made to read it before a connection has been opened, SQL_ERROR is returned, and an error is logged with SQLState 08003 and the message "Connection not open".

If this attribute is queried for a connection that did not use Windows Authentication, SQL_FALSE is returned.

ODBC Function Support for Specifying SPNs

The following ODBC functions support client applications and SPNs:

See Also

SQL Server Native Client (ODBC)