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Home/ Questions/Q 773045
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T18:54:07+00:00 2026-05-14T18:54:07+00:00

I am working on an ASP.NET website which uses forms authentication with a custom

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I am working on an ASP.NET website which uses forms authentication with a custom authentication mechanism (which sets e.Authenticated programmatically on protected void Login_Authenticate(object sender, AuthenticateEventArgs e)).

I have an ASP.NET sitemap. Some elements must be displayed only to logged in users. Others must be displayed only to one, unique user (ie. administrator, identified by a user name which will never change).

What I want to avoid:

  • Set a custom role provider: too much code to write for a such basic thing,
  • Transform the existing code, for example by removing sitemap and replacing it by a code-behind solution.

What I want to do:

  • A pure code-behind solution which will let me assign roles on authenticate event.

Is it possible? How? If not, is there an easy-to-do workaround?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T18:54:08+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 6:54 pm

    As Matthew says, building a principal and setting it yourself at the right moment is the easiest way to take advantage of all of the built in Role based goodies like SiteMap.

    But there is a much easier standards based method of implementing this than shown by MSDN.

    This is how I implement a simple role provider

    Global.asax

    using System;
    using System.Collections.Specialized;
    using System.Security.Principal;
    using System.Threading;
    using System.Web;
    using System.Web.Security;
    
    namespace SimpleRoles
    {
        public class Global : HttpApplication
        {
            private static readonly NameValueCollection Roles =
                new NameValueCollection(StringComparer.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase)
                    {
                        {"administrator", "admins"},
                        // note, a user can be in more than one role
                        {"administrator", "codePoets"},
                    };
    
            protected void Application_AuthenticateRequest(object sender, EventArgs e)
            {
                HttpCookie cookie = Request.Cookies[FormsAuthentication.FormsCookieName];
                if (cookie != null)
                {
                    FormsAuthenticationTicket ticket = FormsAuthentication.Decrypt(cookie.Value);
                    Context.User = Thread.CurrentPrincipal =
                                   new GenericPrincipal(Context.User.Identity, Roles.GetValues(ticket.Name));
                }
            }
        }
    }
    

    To manually check the user in the context of a Page codebehind:

    if (User.IsInRole("admins"))
    {
      // allow something
    }
    

    Elsewhere just get the user off of the current context

    if (HttpContext.Current.User.IsInRole("admins"))
    {
      // allow something
    }
    
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