I'm building Active Directory Authentication into my application and I am planning to link my application's internal accounts to a user's domain SID. It is easier for me to work with the string format of the sid than a byte array so I was planning to store it in the database as a string. How long should I make the field to ensure SID's will not get truncated?
I had the same question, and I believe the right answer is:
I haven't checked the math myself, but the technique used here looks valid: https://groups.google.com/d/msg/microsoft.public.dotnet.security/NpIi7c2Toi8/31SVhcepY58J
Refer to the program written by Russell Mangel on Aug 19, 2006, also copied here for reference:
So the answer to my question is:
varbinary(68)-- pure binary
varchar(136) -- (68*2) = hexString
varchar(184) -- SID StringI wrote a little program to test, notice that .NET 2.0 has SecurityIdentifier.MaxBinaryLength, I didn't know about this.
Console.WriteLine("SID Min. num Bytes: {0}", SecurityIdentifier.MinBinaryLength); Console.WriteLine("SID Max. num Bytes: {0}", SecurityIdentifier.MaxBinaryLength); Byte[] bytes = new byte[SecurityIdentifier.MaxBinaryLength]; for (Int32 i = 0; i < bytes.Length; i++) { bytes[i] = 0xFF; } bytes[0] = 0x01; // Must be 1 bytes[1] = 0x0F; // Max 15 (base10) SecurityIdentifier sid = new SecurityIdentifier(bytes, 0); String sidString = sid.ToString(); Console.WriteLine("Max length of SID in String format: {0} ", sidString.Length); Console.WriteLine(sidString);
Results
SID Min. num Bytes: 8 SID Max. num Bytes: 68 Max length of SID in String format: 184 S-1-281474976710655-4294967295-4294967295-4294967295-4294967295-4294967295- 4294967295-4294967295-4294967295-4294967295-4294967295-4294967295- 4294967295-4294967295-4294967295-4294967295