Why this matters
Allowing anonymous LDAP connections exposes directory data to unauthorized users. Always require authentication.
Allowing anonymous LDAP connections exposes directory data to unauthorized users. Always require authentication.
Allowing anonymous LDAP connections exposes directory data to unauthorized users. Always require authentication.
Side-by-side examples engineers can pattern-match during review.
DirectoryEntry myDirectoryEntry = new DirectoryEntry(adPath);
myDirectoryEntry.AuthenticationType = AuthenticationTypes.None; // Noncompliant
DirectoryEntry myDirectoryEntry = new DirectoryEntry(adPath, "u", "p", AuthenticationTypes.None); // NoncompliantDirectoryEntry myDirectoryEntry = new DirectoryEntry(myADSPath); // Compliant; default DirectoryEntry.AuthenticationType property value is "Secure" since .NET Framework 2.0
DirectoryEntry myDirectoryEntry = new DirectoryEntry(myADSPath, "u", "p", AuthenticationTypes.Secure);DirectoryEntry myDirectoryEntry = new DirectoryEntry(adPath);
myDirectoryEntry.AuthenticationType = AuthenticationTypes.None; // Noncompliant
DirectoryEntry myDirectoryEntry = new DirectoryEntry(adPath, "u", "p", AuthenticationTypes.None); // NoncompliantDirectoryEntry myDirectoryEntry = new DirectoryEntry(myADSPath); // Compliant; default DirectoryEntry.AuthenticationType property value is "Secure" since .NET Framework 2.0
DirectoryEntry myDirectoryEntry = new DirectoryEntry(myADSPath, "u", "p", AuthenticationTypes.Secure);From the same buckets as this rule.