ASP.NET Identity provider that users MongoDB for storage
ASP.NET MVC 5 shipped with a new Identity system (in the Microsoft.AspNet.Identity.Core package) in order to support both local login and remote logins via OpenID/OAuth, but only ships with an Entity Framework provider (Microsoft.AspNet.Identity.EntityFramework).
02-11-2014 - [http://blogs.msdn.com/b/webdev/archive/2014/02/11/announcing-preview-of-microsoft-aspnet-identity-2-0-0-beta1.aspx](Microsoft has released Microsoft.AspNet.Identity v2 Beta 1). I will be addressing these issues and introducing them into the MongoDB.AspNet.Identity provider.
- Drop-in replacement ASP.NET Identity with MongoDB as the backing store.
- Requires only 1 mongo document type, while EntityFramework requires 5 tables
- Contains the same IdentityUser class used by the EntityFramework provider in the MVC 5 project template.
- Supports additional profile properties on your application's user model.
- Provides UserStore implementation that implements the same interfaces as the EntityFramework version:
- IUserStore
- IUserLoginStore
- IUserRoleStore
- IUserClaimStore
- IUserPasswordStore
- IUserSecurityStampStore
These instructions assume you know how to set up MongoDB within an MVC application.
- Create a new ASP.NET MVC 5 project, choosing the Individual User Accounts authentication type.
- Remove the Entity Framework packages and replace with MongoDB Identity:
Uninstall-Package Microsoft.AspNet.Identity.EntityFramework
Uninstall-Package EntityFramework
Install-Package MongoDB.AspNet.Identity
- In ~/Models/IdentityModels.cs:
- Remove the namespace: Microsoft.AspNet.Identity.EntityFramework
- Add the namespace: MongoDB.AspNet.Identity
- Remove the ApplicationDbContext class completely.
- In ~/Controllers/AccountController.cs
- Remove the namespace: Microsoft.AspNet.Identity.EntityFramework
- Add the connection string name to the constructor of the UserStore. Or empty constructor will use DefaultConnection
public AccountController()
{
this.UserManager = new UserManager<ApplicationUser>(
new UserStore<ApplicationUser>("Mongo");
}
The UserStore has multiple constructors for handling connection strings. Here are some examples of the expected inputs and where the connection string should be located.
UserStore(string connectionNameOrUrl)
UserStore("Mongo")
web.config
<add name="Mongo" connectionString="Server=localhost:27017;Database={YourDataBase}" />
UserStore(string connectionNameOrUrl)
UserStore("Mongo")
web.config
<add name="Mongo" connectionString="mongodb://localhost/{YourDataBase}" />
OR
UserStore(string connectionNameOrUrl)
UserStore("mongodb://localhost/{YourDataBase}")
Special thanks to David Boike whos RavenDB AspNet Identity project gave me the base for jumpstarting the MongoDB provider