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Home/ Questions/Q 4106822
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T21:25:33+00:00 2026-05-20T21:25:33+00:00

Here’s an issue with IIS 7.5 and ASP.NET that I’ve been researching and getting

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Here’s an issue with IIS 7.5 and ASP.NET that I’ve been researching and getting nowhere with. Any help would be greatly appreciated.

My question is: using ASP.NET in IIS 7.5, how does IIS and/or the operating system allow the web application to write to a folder like C:\dump when running under full trust? How is it that I don’t have to explicitly add write access for the application pool user (in this case ApplicationPoolIdentity)?

This much I know:

  • In IIS 7.5, the default Identity for an Application Pool is ApplicationPoolIdentity.
  • ApplicationPoolIdentity represents a Windows user account called “IIS APPPOOL\AppPoolName”, which is created when the Application Pool is created, where AppPoolName is the name of the Application Pool.
  • The “IIS APPPOOL\AppPoolName” user is by default a member of the IIS_IUSRS group.
  • If you are running under Full Trust, your web application can write to many areas of the file system (excluding folders like C:\Users, C:\Windows, etc). For example, your application will have access to write to some folders, like, C:\dump.
  • By default, the IIS_IUSRS group is not given read or write access to C:\dump (at least not access that is visible through the “Security” tab in Windows Explorer).
  • If you deny write access to IIS_IUSRS, you will get a SecurityException when trying to write to the folder (as expected).

So, taking all of that into account, how is write access granted to the “IIS APPPOOL\AppPoolName” user? The w3wp.exe process runs as this user, so what allows this user to write to a folder it doesn’t seem to have explicit access to?

Please note that I understand this was probably done for the sake of convenience, since it would be a pain to grant a user access to every folder it needs to write to if you are running under Full Trust. If you want to limit this access, you can always run the application under Medium Trust. I am interested in finding out about the way the operating system and/or IIS allows these writes to take place, even though there appears to be no explicit file system access granted.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T21:25:34+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 9:25 pm

    The ApplicationPoolIdentity is assigned membership of the Users group as well as the IIS_IUSRS group. On first glance this may look somewhat worrying, however the Users group has somewhat limited NTFS rights.

    For example, if you try and create a folder in the C:\Windows folder then you’ll find that you can’t. The ApplicationPoolIdentity still needs to be able to read files from the windows system folders (otherwise how else would the worker process be able to dynamically load essential DLL’s).

    With regard to your observations about being able to write to your c:\dump folder. If you take a look at the permissions in the Advanced Security Settings, you’ll see the following:

    enter image description here

    See that Special permission being inherited from c:\:

    enter image description here

    That’s the reason your site’s ApplicationPoolIdentity can read and write to that folder. That right is being inherited from the c:\ drive.

    In a shared environment where you possibly have several hundred sites, each with their own application pool and Application Pool Identity, you would store the site folders in a folder or volume that has had the Users group removed and the permissions set such that only Administrators and the SYSTEM account have access (with inheritance).

    You would then individually assign the requisite permissions each IIS AppPool\[name] requires on it’s site root folder.

    You should also ensure that any folders you create where you store potentially sensitive files or data have the Users group removed. You should also make sure that any applications that you install don’t store sensitive data in their c:\program files\[app name] folders and that they use the user profile folders instead.

    So yes, on first glance it looks like the ApplicationPoolIdentity has more rights than it should, but it actually has no more rights than it’s group membership dictates.

    An ApplicationPoolIdentity‘s group membership can be examined using the SysInternals Process Explorer tool. Find the worker process that is running with the Application Pool Identity you’re interested in (you will have to add the User Name column to the list of columns to display:

    enter image description here

    For example, I have a pool here named 900300 which has an Application Pool Identity of IIS APPPOOL\900300. Right clicking on properties for the process and selecting the Security tab we see:

    enter image description here

    As we can see IIS APPPOOL\900300 is a member of the Users group.

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