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Professional ASP.NET 2.0 Security, Membership, and Role Management View Larger Image | Stefan Schackow Wrox Press, Paperback, Published January 2006, 648 pages, ISBN 0764596985 | List Price: $39.99 Our Price: $24.95 You Save: $15.04 (38% Off)
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Customer Reviews: 1 Average Customer Rating:      Write a Review and tell the world about this title! People who purchase this book frequently purchase: Books on similar topics, in best-seller order:Books from the same publisher, in best-seller order:
- Now in its second version, ASP.NET has over one million programmers, and they all need to know how to use the new, tighter security model
- Helps programmers build better sites, control user access, and interface securely with other parts of the Microsoft platform, such as Windows Server, Active Directory, LDAP, and SQL Server 2005
- Explains in depth all the security and user management functionality of ASP.NET 2.0, including many new built-in security functions that free the developer from hand-coding.
Table of Contents
PART I
1. Initial Phases of a Web Request.
2. Security Processing for Each Request.
3. A Matter of Trust.
4. Configuration System Security.
PART II
5. Forms Authentication.
6. Integrating ASP.NET Security with Classic ASP.
7. Session State.
8. Security for Pages and Compilation.
9. The Provider Model.
PART III
10. Membership.
11. SqlMembershipPrivider.
12. Active Directory Membership Provider.
13. Role Manager.
14. SqlRoleProvider.
PART IV
15. Authorization Store Role Provider.
Customer Reviews
Customer Reviews: 1 Average Customer Rating:      Aug 25, 2007     needs to be edited While this book has some useful information in it, it is hidden to say the least. It is like the author was reading out of one book and writing drunken comments as filler (One of the books is clearly the Gang of Fours). I say this because I don't believe someone actually writing from their own thoughts can make the mistakes that are in this book. As well, I don't think an editor would ever let the following sentence thought. "ProviderBase is abstract because that forces you to derive from it and it also would make little sense to new() up ProviderBase." Page 342 last paragraph. Chapter 9 is the best for Heres your sign comments. Of course this book is comical if read with co-workers. Do yourself a favor. Save time and money by just reading the MSDN help files. They are must more concise then this books rambling. Wrox books need editors badly.
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