Choosing Network Security Credentials
The symbol proxy server must run from a security context with the appropriate privileges for access to the symbol stores that you plan to use. If you obtain symbols from an external Web store such as https://msdl.microsoft.com/download/symbols, the symbol proxy server must access the Web from outside of any firewalls. If you obtain files from other computers on your network, the symbol proxy server must have appropriate privileges to read files from those locations. Two possible choices are to set the symbol proxy server to authenticate as the Network Service account or to create a user account that is managed within Active Directory Domain Services along with other user accounts.
Note It is a good practice to limit privileges of this account to only those necessary to read files and copy them to c:\symstore. This restriction prevents clients that access your HTTP store from corrupting the system.
Note Make sure the options presented here make sense in your environment. Different organizations have different security needs and requirements. Modify the process outlined here to support the security requirements of your organization.
Authenticate as a Network Service
The Network Service account is built in to Windows, so there is no extra step of creating a new account. For this example, we name the computer where the symbol proxy server is being configured SymMachineName on a domain named corp.
External symbol stores or Internet proxies must be configured to allow this computer's Network Service account (Machine Account) to authenticate successfully. There are two ways to achieve this:
Allow access to the Authenticated Users group on the external store or Internet proxy.
Allow access to the Machine Account corp\SymMachineName$. This option is more secure because it limits access to just the symbol proxy server's "Network Service" account.
Authenticate as a Domain User
For this example, we will presume the user account is named SymProxyUser on a domain called corp.
To add the user account to the IIS_USRS group
From Administrative Tools open Computer Management.
Expand Local Users and Groups.
Click Groups.
Double-click IIS_USRS in the center pane and select Properties.
Under the Members section, click Add.
Type corp\SymProxyUser in the pane labeled Enter the object name to select.
To exit the Select Users, Computer, or Groups dialog box, click OK.
To exit IIS_USRS Properties, click OK.
Close the Computer Management console.
Set up IIS to use the account
From Administrative Tools open Internet Information Services (IIS) Manager.
Expand Web Sites.
Right click Default Web Site and choose Properties.
Click the Directory Security tab.
In the Authentication and access control section, click Edit….
Make sure that Enable anonymous access is checked.
Enter the credentials of the account that has permissions to access the remote symbol server store(s) (“corp\SymProxyUser”) , then click OK.
Re-enter the password when asked and click OK.
To exit Default Web Site Properties, click OK.
You may be presented with the Inheritance Overrides dialog. If so, select which virtual directories you want to have this apply to.
Authenticate as a Domain User Using the IIS_WPG group
For this example, the user account is named SymProxyUser on a domain named corp. To authenticate this user account, it must be added to the IIS_WPG group.
To add the user account to the IIS_WPG group
From Administrative Tools open Computer Management.
Expand Local Users and Groups.
Click Groups.
Double-click IIS_WPG in the right pane.
Click Add.
Type corp\SymProxyUser in the pane labeled Enter the object name to select.
To exit the Select Users, Computer, or Groups dialog box, click OK.
To exit IIS_WPG Properties, click OK.
Close the Computer Management console.