Troubleshooting anti-forgery token problems

Jerad Rose picture Jerad Rose · Apr 24, 2011 · Viewed 66.4k times · Source

I have a form post that consistently gives me an anti-forgery token error.

Here is my form:

@using (Html.BeginForm())
{
    @Html.AntiForgeryToken()
    @Html.EditorFor(m => m.Email)
    @Html.EditorFor(m => m.Birthday)
    <p>
        <input type="submit" id="Go" value="Go" />
    </p>
}

Here is my action method:

[HttpPost]
[ValidateAntiForgeryToken]
public ActionResult Join(JoinViewModel model)
{
    //a bunch of stuff here but it doesn't matter because it's not making it here
}

Here is the machineKey in web.config:

<system.web>
  <machineKey validationKey="mykey" decryptionKey="myotherkey" validation="SHA1" decryption="AES" />
</system.web>

And here is the error I get:

A required anti-forgery token was not supplied or was invalid.

I've read that changing users on the HttpContext will invalidate the token, but this isn't happening here. The HttpGet on my Join action just returns the view:

[HttpGet]
public ActionResult Join()
{
    return this.View();
}

So I'm not sure what's going on. I've searched around, and everything seems to suggest that it's either the machineKey changing (app cycles) or the user/session changing.

What else could be going on? How can I troubleshoot this?

Answer

Simon_Weaver picture Simon_Weaver · Feb 23, 2013

I don't know if you mean you are able to get the error on demand - or you're seeing it in your logs but in any case here's a way to guarantee an antiforgery token error.

Wait for it...

  • Make sure you're logged out, then enter your login
  • Double click on the login button
  • You'll get :

The provided anti-forgery token was meant for user "", but the current user is "[email protected]".

(For now I'm going to assume that this exact error message changed in MVC4 and that this is essentially the same message you're getting).

There's a lot of people out there that still double click on everything - this is bad! I just figured this out after just waking up so how this got through testing I really don't know. You don't even have to double click - I've got this error myself when I click a second time if the button is unresponsive.

I just removed the validation attribute. My site is always SSL and I'm not overly concerned about the risk. I just need it to work right now. Another solution would be disabling the button with javascript.

This can be duplicated on the MVC4 initial install template.