Serhat Ozgel
Serhat Ozgel

Reputation: 23766

How to get the current user in ASP.NET MVC

In a forms model, I used to get the current logged-in user by:

Page.CurrentUser

How do I get the current user inside a controller class in ASP.NET MVC?

Upvotes: 279

Views: 426843

Answers (21)

Samif
Samif

Reputation: 107

If any one still reading this then, to access in cshtml file I used in following way.

<li>Hello @User.Identity.Name</li>

Upvotes: 2

Daniel King
Daniel King

Reputation: 142

In the IIS Manager, under Authentication, disable: 1) Anonymous Authentication 2) Forms Authentication

Then add the following to your controller, to handle testing versus server deployment:

string sUserName = null;
string url = Request.Url.ToString();

if (url.Contains("localhost"))
  sUserName = System.Security.Principal.WindowsIdentity.GetCurrent().Name;
else
  sUserName = User.Identity.Name;

Upvotes: 2

Rajeev Jayaswal
Rajeev Jayaswal

Reputation: 1501

You can use following code:

Request.LogonUserIdentity.Name;

Upvotes: 3

Raj Baral
Raj Baral

Reputation: 671

We can use following code to get the current logged in User in ASP.Net MVC:

var user= System.Web.HttpContext.Current.User.Identity.GetUserName();

Also

var userName = System.Security.Principal.WindowsIdentity.GetCurrent().Name; //will give 'Domain//UserName'

Environment.UserName - Will Display format : 'Username'

Upvotes: 9

radbyx
radbyx

Reputation: 9650

You can get the name of the user in ASP.NET MVC4 like this:

System.Web.HttpContext.Current.User.Identity.Name

Upvotes: 40

fbarikzehy
fbarikzehy

Reputation: 5405

In Asp.net Mvc Identity 2,You can get the current user name by:

var username = System.Web.HttpContext.Current.User.Identity.Name;

Upvotes: 2

Gilberto B. Terra Jr.
Gilberto B. Terra Jr.

Reputation: 313

UserName with:

User.Identity.Name

But if you need to get just the ID, you can use:

using Microsoft.AspNet.Identity;

So, you can get directly the User ID:

User.Identity.GetUserId();

Upvotes: 10

Beau D&#39;Amore
Beau D&#39;Amore

Reputation: 3392

If you happen to be working in Active Directory on an intranet, here are some tips:

(Windows Server 2012)

Running anything that talks to AD on a web server requires a bunch of changes and patience. Since when running on a web server vs. local IIS/IIS Express it runs in the AppPool's identity so, you have to set it up to impersonate whoever hits the site.

How to get the current logged-in user in an active directory when your ASP.NET MVC application is running on a web server inside the network:

// Find currently logged in user
UserPrincipal adUser = null;
using (HostingEnvironment.Impersonate())
{
    var userContext = System.Web.HttpContext.Current.User.Identity;
    PrincipalContext ctx = new PrincipalContext(ContextType.Domain, ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["AllowedDomain"], null,
                                                ContextOptions.Negotiate | ContextOptions.SecureSocketLayer);
    adUser = UserPrincipal.FindByIdentity(ctx, userContext.Name);
}
//Then work with 'adUser' from here...

You must wrap any calls having to do with 'active directory context' in the following so it's acting as the hosting environment to get the AD information:

using (HostingEnvironment.Impersonate()){ ... }

You must also have impersonate set to true in your web.config:

<system.web>
    <identity impersonate="true" />

You must have Windows authentication on in web.config:

<authentication mode="Windows" />

Upvotes: 2

Clay Smith
Clay Smith

Reputation: 1079

Use System.Security.Principal.WindowsIdentity.GetCurrent().Name.

This will get the current logged-in Windows user.

Upvotes: 5

MattC
MattC

Reputation: 134

In order to reference a user ID created using simple authentication built into ASP.NET MVC 4 in a controller for filtering purposes (which is helpful if you are using database first and Entity Framework 5 to generate code-first bindings and your tables are structured so that a foreign key to the userID is used), you can use

WebSecurity.CurrentUserId

once you add a using statement

using System.Web.Security;

Upvotes: 9

live-love
live-love

Reputation: 52366

If you are inside your login page, in LoginUser_LoggedIn event for instance, Current.User.Identity.Name will return an empty value, so you have to use yourLoginControlName.UserName property.

MembershipUser u = Membership.GetUser(LoginUser.UserName);

Upvotes: 4

Pieter
Pieter

Reputation: 2239

For what it's worth, in ASP.NET MVC 3 you can just use User which returns the user for the current request.

Upvotes: 4

Pieter
Pieter

Reputation:

I found that User works, that is, User.Identity.Name or User.IsInRole("Administrator").

Upvotes: 211

jrb
jrb

Reputation: 381

I realize this is really old, but I'm just getting started with ASP.NET MVC, so I thought I'd stick my two cents in:

  • Request.IsAuthenticated tells you if the user is authenticated.
  • Page.User.Identity gives you the identity of the logged-in user.

Upvotes: 21

dove
dove

Reputation: 20674

Try HttpContext.Current.User.

Public Shared Property Current() As System.Web.HttpContext
Member of System.Web.HttpContext

Summary:
Gets or sets the System.Web.HttpContext object for the current HTTP request.

Return Values:
The System.Web.HttpContext for the current HTTP request

Upvotes: 62

Sean
Sean

Reputation: 2463

I use:

Membership.GetUser().UserName

I am not sure this will work in ASP.NET MVC, but it's worth a shot :)

Upvotes: 16

Haacked
Haacked

Reputation: 59001

If you need to get the user from within the controller, use the User property of Controller. If you need it from the view, I would populate what you specifically need in the ViewData, or you could just call User as I think it's a property of ViewPage.

Upvotes: 272

Ognyan Dimitrov
Ognyan Dimitrov

Reputation: 6251

var ticket = FormsAuthentication.Decrypt(
                    HttpContext.Current.Request.Cookies[FormsAuthentication.FormsCookieName].Value);

if (ticket.Expired)
{
    throw new InvalidOperationException("Ticket expired.");
}

IPrincipal user =  (System.Security.Principal.IPrincipal) new RolePrincipal(new FormsIdentity(ticket));

Upvotes: 2

Gediminas Bukauskas
Gediminas Bukauskas

Reputation: 41

IPrincipal currentUser = HttpContext.Current.User;
bool writeEnable = currentUser.IsInRole("Administrator") ||
        ...
                   currentUser.IsInRole("Operator");

Upvotes: 3

heriawan
heriawan

Reputation: 146

This page could be what you looking for:
Using Page.User.Identity.Name in MVC3

You just need User.Identity.Name.

Upvotes: 6

tifoz
tifoz

Reputation: 301

getting logged in username: System.Web.HttpContext.Current.User.Identity.Name

Upvotes: 11

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