I have a large webform, and would like to prompt the user to login if their session expires, or have them login when they submit the form. It seems that having them login when they submit the form creates alot of challenges because they get redirected to the login page and then the postback data for the original form submission is lost.
So I’m thinking about how to prompt them to login asynchrounsly when the session expires. So that they stay on the original form page, have a panel appear telling them the session has expired and they need to login, it submits the login asynchronously, the login panel disapears, and the user is still on the original partially filled form and can submit it. Is this easily doable using the existing ASP.NET Membership controls? When they submit the form will I need to worry about the session key? I mean, I am wondering if the session key the form submits will be the original one from before the session expired which won’t match the new one generated after logging in again asynchrounously(I still do not understand the details of how ASP.NET tracks authentication/session IDs).
Edit: Yes I am actually concerned about authentication expiration. The user must be authenticated for the submitted data to be considered valid.
Very nice response @Mark Brackett reading the OP’s comment below I believe this is his end goal.
On the button / submit element you want to write a javascript method that via ajax will poll the server to see if they are still authenticated.
If they are auth’d still you want to return true and let the form do it’s regular submission, if it returns false you want to not allow the form to submit. At this point you will want to use javascript to display either a “window” inside the browser (think floating div) or to pop up a true new window for them to log in (I’d recommend the first method) that this new window will allow them to login via ajax and then hide/close itself.
Then with that window gone when they click the submit button again they will be able to successfully post the form.