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Home/ Questions/Q 306955
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T07:30:52+00:00 2026-05-12T07:30:52+00:00

I have a WCF service written in C# being hosted on a remote machine,

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I have a WCF service written in C# being hosted on a remote machine, running as the local administrator account. From my machine logged in as an active directory user, I am sending a command that simply tells it to open a file on the network. I have access to the file, but the administrator account on the host machine does not. I’m using the [OperationBehavior(Impersonation=ImpersonationOption.Required)] meta tag on the method that requires impersonation, and I have the credential type and security modes set correctly. I can verify that account is indeed trying to be impersonated by comparing Windows Identities, but I still get an access denied exception. I’m thinking it has something to do with active directory not authenticating the impersonated user. Is there something I’m missing?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T07:30:52+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 7:30 am

    You are entering the domain of Kerberos security and two hops-authentication.
    You have two options:

    • Take the red pill: try to get the two hops-authentication to work. Make sure you have at least a Windows Server 2003 domain, time properly synchronized between all machines and setup proper delegation for the spefic users/computer accounts. If you’re really “lucky” you’ll have to configure SPNs with SetSPN.

    • Take the blue pill: forget two hops-authentication, impersonate the WCF service under an account that has just enough rights, and check authorization in an earlier step.

    Forgive my frustration, but I do think that my brief experience with this topic has cost me at least 10 years of my life. I hate to see that happend to anyone else. Anyways, this post should give you enough Google keywords if you’re feeling brave.

    Eventlog and network monitor are useful for debugging…

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