I was using Fiddler see on-the-field how web sites use cookies in their login systems. Although I have some HTTP knowledge, I'm just just learning about cookies and how they are used within sites.
Initially I assumed that when submitting the form I'd see no cookies sent, and that the response would contain some cookie info that would then be saved by the browser.
In fact, just the opposite seems to be the case. It is the request that's sending in info, and the server returns nothing.
When fiddling about the issue, I noticed that even with a browser cleaned of cookies, the client seems to always be sending a RequestVerificationToken to the server, even when just looking around withot being signed in.
Why is this so?
Thanks
Cookies are set by the server with the Set-Cookie HTTP response header, and they can also be set through JavaScript.
A cookie has a path. If the path of a cookie matches the path of the document that is being requested, then the browser will include all such cookies in the Cookie HTTP request header.
You must make sure to be careful when setting or modifying cookies in order to avoid XSS attacks against your users. As such, it might be useful to include a hidden and unique secret within your login forms, and use such secret prior to setting any cookies. Alternatively, you can simply check that HTTP Referer header matches your site. Otherwise, a malicious site can copy your form fields, and create a login form to your site on their site, and do form.submit(), effectively logging out your user, or performing a brute-force attack on your site through unsuspecting users that happen to be visiting the malicious web-site.
The RequestVerificationToken that you mention has nothing to do with HTTP Cookies, it sounds like an implementation detail that some sites written in some specific site-scripting language use to protect their cookie-setting-pages against XSS attacks.
When you hit a page on a website, usually the response(the page that you landed on) contains instructions from the server in the http response to set some cookies.
Websites may use these to track information about your behavior or save your preferences for future or short term.
Website may do so on your first visit to any page or on you visit to a particular page.
The browser would then send all cookies that have been set with subsequent request to that domain.
Think about it, HTTP is stateless. You landed on Home Page and clicked set by background to blue. Then you went to a gallery page. The next request goes to your server but the server does not have any idea about your background color preference.
Now if the request contained a cookie telling the server about your preference, the website would serve you your right preference.
Now this is one way. Another way is a session. Think of cookies as information stored on client side. But what if server needs to store some temporary info about you on server side. Info that is maybe too sensitive to be exposed in cookies, which are local and easily intercepted.
Now you would ask, but HTTP is stateless. Correct. But Server could keep info about you in a map, whose is the session id. this session id is set on the client side as a cookie or resent with every request in parameters. Now server is only getting the key but can lookup information about you, like whether you are logged in successfully, what is your role in the system etc.
Wow, that a lot of text, but I hope it helped. If not feel free to ask more.
The related domain cookie attack (more info) allows machines in the same DNS domain to add additional cookies that will also be sent to other computers in the same domain.
This can cause issues with authentication, or at worst be a component in a confused deputy attack.
Question
How can I protect ASP.NET or ASP.NET MVC from this type of attack?
One possible attack scenario
I log into a "secure" web app
I get the credentials for my account
I trick the user into visiting my site on the same DNS domain
I insert the cookie (of my creds)
the user goes back to your app.
Both cookies (or an overwritten one) is sent to the server
User is doing things under my account
That is a simplified example, but the idea can be ported other style of attacks, Im just picking the scenario that doesn't seem "too bad".
One idea how it can "get bad" is if this was step 1 of a two-step attack. Suppose the user uploaded a bad file that was accessible only in his account; the other user then unwittingly downloads that file, running any executable code that is there.
There are a ton of other scenarios that are possible... rather than list them all here I'm trying to figure out how I can protect my server from this type of attack.
Channel Bound Cookies
The following Proposed RFC comes from a Google employee and describes a way for Clients use a self-signed Browser Certificate (thus requiring no confusing "pop-up" for the end user) which can also address the cookie security issue known as "Related Domain Cookies"
What follows below is an extract of http://www.browserauth.net/ , a section of the RFC, some interesting commentary, and some criticism on this extension.
Overview of Channel Bound Cookies
Once the underlying TLS channel uses TLS client authentication (with the TLS-OBC extension), the server can bind its cookies to the TLS channel by associating them with the client's public key, and ensuring that the cookies are only ever used over TLS channels authenticated with that public (client) key.
This means that if such a channel-bound cookie is ever stolen off a client's machine, that cookie won't be able to authenticate an HTTP session to the server from other machines. This includes man-in-the-middle attackers that inject themselves into the connection between client and server, perhaps by tricking users into clicking through certificate-mismatch warnings: such a man-in-the-middle will have to generate its own TLS session with the server, which won't match the channel that the cookie is bound it.
Channel Binding
It's up to the server to decide whether to bind cookies to TLS channels. If the client doesn't support TLS-OBC, or if the cookie it's about to set will be used across different origins, then the server will not channel-bind the cookie. If it does decide to channel-bind the cookie, it should associate the cookie with the client's public key. This is similar to RFC 5929, but instead of the client binding data to the server's public key, in this case the server would be binding data (the cookie) to the client's public key. The server can do this either by simply storing, in a backend database, the fact that a certain HTTP session is expected to be authenticated with a certain client public key, or it can use suitable cryptography to encode in the cookie itself which TLS client public key that cookie is bound to.
In the figure above, the server includes the client's public key into a cryptographically signed datastructure that also includes the authenticated user's id. When the server receives the cookie back from the client, it can verify that it indeed issued the cookie (by checking the signature on the cookie), and verify that the cookie was sent over the correct channel (by matching the TLS client key with the key mentioned in the cookie).
To be continued here.... http://www.browserauth.net/channel-bound-cookies
RFC Snip
TLS Origin-Bound Certificates RFC Draft
(Excerpt)
4.3. Cookie Hardening
One way TLS-OBC can be used to strengthen cookie-based
authentication is by "binding" cookies to an origin-bound
certificate. The server, when issuing a cookie for an HTTP
session, would associate the client's origin-bound certificate with
the session (either by encoding information about the certificate
unforgeably in the cookie, or by associating the certificate with
the cookie's session through some other means). That way, if and
when a cookie gets stolen from a client, it cannot be used over a
TLS connection initiated by a different client - the cookie thief
would also have to steal the private key associated with the
client's origin-bound certificate, a task considerably harder
especially when we assume the existence of a Trusted Platform
Module or other Secure Element that can store the
origin-bound-certificate's private key.
Additional Commentary from public-web-security#w3.org
Also, note that somewhat counter-intuitively, channel-bound cookies protect against many related-domain attacks even if the client cert that they are bound to has broader scope than a web origin.
Imagine, for a moment, that a user-agent creates a single self-signed certificate that it uses as a TLS client cert for all connections to all servers (not a good idea in terms of privacy, but follow me along for this thought experiment). The servers then set cookies on their respective top-level domains, but channel-bind them to the user-agent's one-and-only client cert.
So, let's say that an app app.heroku.com sets a (channel-bound) cookie on my browser for domain .heroku.com, and that there is an attacker on attacker.heroku.com. One attack we might be concerned about is that the attacker simply harvests the .heroku.com cookie from my browser by luring me to attacker.heroku.com. They won't be able to actually use the cookie, however, because the cookie is channel-bound to my browser's client cert, not to the attacker's client cert.
Another attack we might be concerned about is that attacker.heroku.com sets an .heroku.com cookie on my user agent in order to make me log into app.heroku.com as himself. Again, assuming that the only way the attacker can obtain the cookies is by getting them from app.heroku.com, this means that the cookies he has at his disposal will be channel-bound to his client cert, not to my client cert - thus when my browser sends them to app.heroku.com they won't be valid.
The TLS-OBC proposal, of course, assumes more fine-grained "scopes" for the client certificates. The reason for that, however, is purely to prevent tracking across unrelated domains. Related-domain attacks are already mitigated even if we used coarse-grained client certificates and coarse-grained (i.e., domain) cookies. I, at least, found this a little counter-intuitive at first, since the other proposed defense it to forbid coarse-grained cookies altogether and use origin cookies instead.
Criticism from public-web-security#w3.org
There are a number of issues that need to be considered for TLS-OBC; I'll highlight a couple here that I'm aware of.
Some SSL handshake logic may need to be modified slightly; see https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681839 for technical discussion.
There are potential privacy considerations; in particular if the unique client certificate is sent in cleartext before the negotiation of the master secret, a passive network observer may be able to uniquely identify a client machine. The attacker would already have the client's IP address, so this isn't a huge problem if the certificate is regenerated on an IP address change, but that would nullify much of the authentication benefit. A proposal to allow a client certificate to be sent after the master secret negotiation has been made. (can't find the bug right now, sorry)
One proposal how #2 could be addressed is here: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-agl-tls-encryptedclientcerts
There are tricky interactions with SPDY. There will be updates on browserauth.net for this.
Fix the RFCs
The core issue here seems to be that any host can write a cookie that can be overwritten by any other host in the same domain. What if there is a way to write a value to the client that absolutely can not be overwritten by any other host? I haven't found anything like that is also automatically included in the HTTP header (like a cookie)
Here are three solutions that might work, though I like Solution 2 or #3 if browsers implement it correctly
Solution 1: Add more information when uploading cookies to the server
When the client sends cookies to the server, also include the domain of the cookie that was sent. The server then knows what domain and path to look for. This means the client adds a new HTTP header Cookie-Details on every request:
GET /spec.html HTTP/1.1
Host: www.example.org
Cookie: name=value; name2=value2
Cookie-Details: name="value":"domain":"path":"IsSecure":"IsHTTPOnly"; name2="value2":"domain2":"path2":"IsSecure":"IsHTTPOnly"
Accept: */*
The server can then ignore the details field, or prefer it over the one that doesn't provide the details. The reason I included the "value" field in the details section is because the server would not be able to tell the difference between two cookies that have the domain set to example.com and secure.example.com if they both cookies have the same name. Most browsers will send the values in a random order.
Perhaps this can be optimized so that the server can tell the client if this new cookie format is supported or not, and the client can respond accordingly.
Solution 2: Extend HTML5 LocalStorage so that data is (optionally) automatically inserted into the HTTP header
If we could extend HTML5's LocalStorage to allow a Secure/HTTPOnly data, we can imitate what is done in Solution #1 above, but have the change driven by the HTML5 LocalStorage W3C Working Group
The benefit of this is that there is less overhead than solution #1, since the more verbose cookie details are only sent to the server when its needed. In other words if a sensitive value is saved using the "new cookie details" format into LocalStorage, then there is a clear separation of what data needs to be sent, and in what format.
Solution 3 "Cookie validation"
A user visits a web app that has this "special" validation mode enabled.
On the HTTP response some cookies are sent to the browser. The cookies can be HTTP Only, Secure, ...anything)
A alongside the cookies, another header is sent to the cookies: Set-CookieValidationHash. It contains A JSON array of SHA-256 hashed cookie keys and values, and specifies the expiration of the value
The browser then logically ties this header to the cookies with the following behavior
This header is placed into a "Cookie Validation Jar" that can only be written to by the same DNS Domain, and DNS Scope
This header is opaque to the client and is returned to the server on every HTTP request (like a cookie)
The server will use this field to validate the cookies that are sent, and issue an error (or whatever) if the checksum fails.
Sourced from: http://www.w2spconf.com/2011/papers/session-integrity.pdf
5.2. Integrity through Custom Headers
Instead of securing cookies, we can achieve session integrity
by choosing a new method of storing and transmitting session
state. While this could be done using special browser plugins
like Flash, we would rather choose a design with the fewest
dependencies, so we will focus only on basic HTTP tools.
The basic form of an HTTP request has very few places that
are suitable for sending data with integrity. Data in the URL
or entity body of HTTP requests has no integrity, because
those parts of the HTTP request are writable across origins
and thus spoofable by an attacker. Cookies are also weak in
this regard, as they can be overwritten by the attacker in our
threat model. However, through the use of a JavaScript API
called XMLHttpRequest (XHR), we can send data in a custom
header.
Background. XMLHttpRequest (XHR) allows HTTP
requests containing custom headers to be made, and the
responses read, but only to the origin of the executing
JavaScript.(See Note5) As a result, requests made via XHR can be
distinguished by a server as necessarily originating from the
site itself.
Design. We will not use cookies at all, and instead pass
a session identifying token in a custom HTTP header which is
only written via XMLHttpRequest. The server should treat all
requests lacking this custom header, or containing an invalid
token, as belonging to a new, anonymous session. In order to
persist this session identifying token across browser restarts
and between different pages of the same application, the token
can be stored in HTML5 localStorage by JavaScript upon
successful authentication.
Security. Observe that in this model, the session identifying token will only be sent to the origin server, and will
not be included in the URL or entity body. These properties
provide confidentiality and integrity, respectively. Unlike with
cookies, the token cannot be overwritten by the attacker, since
localStorage completely partitions data between origins in
most browsers (See Note 6). A site using HTTPS can ensure that the token
is only sent over HTTPS, thus ensuring the secrecy of the
token even in the presence of an active network attacker. In
addition, because this token is not sent automatically by the
browser, it also serves to protect against CSRF attacks.
Disadvantages. This approach, however, has several disadvantages. First, it requires all requests requiring access to
a user’s session to be made using XMLHttpRequest. Merely
adding a session identifying token explicitly to all requests,
much less doing them over XHR, would require major changes
to most existing websites, and would be cumbersome and
difficult to implement correctly without a framework. This
is even further complicated if requests for sub-resources like
images require access to session state, since it is not trivial
to load images via XHR. Third, since this design depends on
the presence and security of HTML5 localStorage, it will be
impossible to implement on some legacy browsers
(Note 5) Sites may make cross-site requests using XHR if supported by the
browser and authorized by the target server
(Note 6) True in Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Opera on OS X, several Linux
distributions, and Windows 7. Internet Explorer 8 does not partition HTTP
and HTTPS, but Internet Explorer 9 does.
Main Points
Not give permission for run in the upload directories (an attacker can be from inside).
Get all possible user information's that is connect to the server (cookie is only one).
Monitor the server and alerts (found/see him, stop him, close the door).
Answer to
Suppose the user uploaded a bad file that was accessible only in his
account; the other user then unwittingly downloads that file, running
any executable code that is there.
First of all you must not allow to run anything on your uploaded directories, because even your regular users can upload an aspx page and run it and browse your files. The first step for this is to add on your upload directories this web.config (but also set the permissions to not allow to run anything).
<configuration>
<system.web>
<authorization>
<deny users="*" />
</authorization>
</system.web>
</configuration>
relative : I've been hacked. Evil aspx file uploaded called AspxSpy. They're still trying. Help me trap them‼
Stealing the cookies
Lets see how we can identify the user.
Cookie
Browser ID
Ip including proxy and forward ips.
Browser have javascript enable (or not).
Direct ask for password.
Other file stored on client.
Now, for every logged in session, we can connect the first four information's together, and if any of them change we can log him out and ask again to sign in.
Also is critical to connect some how (with a line on the database) the cookie with the logged in status of the user, so if the user log out, no matter if some steal his cookie, not to be able to see the pages - what I mean is the cookie that let him log in must not the only one that we rely on, but also our data to track the status of the user.
In this case even if some steal the cookie, if the user log out after some actions, the cookie is not useful any more.
So what we do is that we connect the cookie+ip+browser id+javascript information's per login, and if any of them change, we not trust him any more, until log in again.
Cookies
One cookie is not enough. We need at least two cookies, one that work only on secure pages, and is required to be https secure and one that work on all pages. This two cookies must be connected together and this connection must also be hold on server.
So if one of this cookie not exist, or the connection is not match, then user again not have permission and need to log in again (with alert to us)
relative: Can some hacker steal the cookie from a user and login with that name on a web site?
An idea to connect cookies together. With this idea I connect the session cookie with the authentication cookie.
If all fails
There are some steps (or actions) that a hacker follow (do) when get to a site so be able to gain from this window opportunity and left a back door open.
Create a new administrator account.
Upload a file to run as browser and executable.
As I say we never allow to be able to upload a file that can be run, so this is easy.
The other to create a new administrator account is the one that we need to add an extra password that is not saved to any cookie, or nether exist anyway on client.
So for rare actions like, New User from backoffice, change the privilege of the users, delete a user, etc, we need to request a second password every time that only the administrator knows.
So second password is the final messure.
One final idea
One idea that I have not made, is to store some how information's on the client other than the cookie, the can not be stolen like the cookies, or even if he can be stolen is hidden somewhere on all the data that is impossible to find it.
This infomation's can be an extra id of the user together with the cookie, browser data, IP.
I am thing some possible places but not have tested or try them yet in real life. So this is some placed.
Custom extension, or plugin, unfortunately different for every browser that have the ability to save data and then we can use them to communicate with the server. This is required action from the user, to install this plugin - and for regular users this can make him afraid and go.
Hidden code inside a good cached image, on the header of it, eg on etag. This also is easy to not work because we can not be sure that the image request to reload...
Some other browser abilities, eg to read and use a client certificate, that can be used to exchange encrypted data with the server. This request action from the user to install this certificate, and from our part to create them different for every user. Good for bank accounts but not for simple users.
So this is my ideas... any critic, or a solution (for how to store small information's on client other than the cookie) is welcome.
Implementation
To make it real secure we need to keep track of the user on the server, and on database. A table that connect the user, with the ip, with the browser id, and other status, like if now is log in or not, is a measure that we can use to take decisions.
If not be able to use a database, or not like to make it difficult, then the connection can be bu hashing some data together and check if this hash is the same.
For example we can set a cookie with the hash of (Ip+BrowserID) and check if this much or not.
Alerts - Log
All the above they try to be automate. How ever I suggest also to show to the user and to the administrator some information's to diagnose and prevent an attack. This information's can be.
To the user
Last 10 sign in information's (IP, DateTime, Success or not)
Send email on user about some actions (for high security sites), like log in, log out, critical actions.
To the administrator.
Log and show any fail of the connection on the four parametres Cookie+IP+BroserID+Javascript Enable). The more the fail in short time, the more attention required.
Check for fail login.
Check for page read from user with out cookie enable (or save) and javascript is disabled, because this is how scanner identified from my experience.
Source: Origin Cookies Proposal from Web 2.0 Security and Privacy Conference
.
6. Session Integrity in Future Browsers Neither of the previous solutions, nor others considered using existing browser technologies,
provide sufficient security while remaining deployable for existing
sites. Therefore, we propose an extension to cookies called origin
cookies. Origin cookies allow existing web applications to secure
themselves against the described attacks, with very little complexity
of implementation on the part of either the web application or the
browser, with transparent backwards compatibility for browsers that do
not yet implement origin cookies, including legacy browsers that may
never support them, and imposing no burden on existing web sites that
have not enabled origin cookies. This is not a trivial problem to
solve, as evidenced by existing proposals that fail to meet one or
more of the above desired properties. For example, sending the origin
of every cookie on each request is one common idea. This is much more
complicated than necessary, and imposes a much larger burden on web
sites, including ones that don’t even know how to effectively use this
information.
6.1. Origin Cookies The real problem with using cookies for session management is lack of integrity, specifically due to the
ability of other origins to clear and overwrite cookies. While we
cannot disable this functionality from cookies without breaking many
existing sites, we can introduce new cookie-like functionality that
does not allow such cross-site modification.
Design. Origin cookies are cookies that are only sent and only modifiable by requests to and responses from an exact origin. They are
set in HTTP responses in the same way as existing cookies (using the
Set-Cookie header), but with a new attribute named ‘Origin’. In order
to enable web applications to distinguish origin cookies from normal
cookies, origin cookies will be sent in an HTTP request in a new
header ‘OriginCookie’, while normal cookies will continue to be sent
in the existing header ‘Cookie’.
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
...
Set-Cookie: foo=bar; Origin
...
Fig. 2. An HTTP response setting an origin cookie.
GET / HTTP/1.1
Host: www.example.com
...
Origin-Cookie: foo=bar
...
Fig. 3. An HTTP request to a URI for which an origin
cookie has been set.
For example, if in response to a GET request for
http://www.example.com/, a response as in Figure 2 is received, then
an origin cookie would be set with the key ‘foo’ and the value ‘bar’
for the origin http://www.example.com, and would be sent on subsequent
requests to that origin. A subsequent GET request for
http://www.example.com/ would look like Figure 3. Requests made to any
other origin, even https://www.example.com and http://example.com
would be made exactly as if the origin cookie for
http://www.example.com was never set. The Origin attribute extending
the semantics of Set-Cookie itself is subtle and implies several
semantic changes to other settable attributes of cookies. If the
Origin attribute is set, the Domain attribute is no longer
appropriate, and therefore should be ignored. Similarly, the Secure
attribute is no longer appropriate, since it is implied by the scheme
of the origin for the cookie: if the scheme is https, the the origin
cookie effectively has the attribute – since it will only be sent over
a secure channel – and if the scheme is anything else, the cookie does
not have the attribute. Because the same-origin policy considers
different paths to be part of the same origin, the Path attribute of
cookies provides no security and should also be ignored. The semantics
of other attributes, such as HttpOnly, Max-Age, Expires, etc. remain
unchanged for origin cookies. Normal cookies are uniquely identified by
their key, the value of the Domain attribute, and the value of the
Path attribute: this means that setting a cookie with a key, Domain,
and Path that is already set does not add a new cookie, but instead
replaces that existing cookie. Origin cookies should occupy a separate
namespace, and be uniquely identified by their key and the full origin
that set it. This prevents sites from accidentally or maliciously
deleting origin cookies, in addition to the other protections against
reading and modifying, and makes server-side use of origin cookies
significantly easier.
Security. Because origin cookies are isolated between origins, the additional powers of the related-domain attacker and active network
attacker in overwriting cookies are no longer effective, since they
were specifically exploiting the lack of origin isolation with existing
cookies, whether the ‘confusion’ was due to the scheme or domain of
the origin. Absent these additional powers, the related-domain
attacker and active network attacker are equivalent to the web
attacker, who cannot break the security of existing session management
based on the combination of cookies and secret tokens.
Implementation. Integrating origin cookies into existing browsers will not involve significant modifications. As a proof of concept, we
implemented origin cookies in Chrome. The patch totals only 573 lines
Source: W3C Mailing Lists
IETF TLS working group has a proposal to bind cookies to TLS client certificates, so as long as the private key corresponding to the cert is only on one machine, the cookie can only be used on one machine.
If you want to emulate the TLS client cert approach, you could use localStorage to store a private key, and use JS crypto 1 to replace document.cookie with a signed version. It's a little clunky, but it might be made to work. (Obviously, would be better with web crypto 2)
1 for example: http://www.ohdave.com/rsa/
2 http://www.w3.org/community/webcryptoapi/
From http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/16645/ASP-NET-machineKey-Generator
Whenever you make use of ViewState, Session, Forms authentication, or other encrypted and/or secured values, ASP.NET uses a set of keys to do the encryption and decryption. Normally, these keys are hidden and automatically generated by ASP.NET every time your application recycles
If the two websites are different web applications, by default they will have different keys so one will not be able to read encrypted tokens generated by the other. The exception to this is if they are using common values in a global web.config or machine.config.
From machineKey Element, decryptionKey: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/w8h3skw9.aspx
AutoGenerate, IsolateApps Specifies that the key is automatically generated. This is the default value. The AutoGenerate modifier specifies that ASP.NET generates a random key and stores it in the Local Security Authority (LSA). The IsolateApps modifier specifies that ASP.NET generates a unique encrypted key for each application using the application ID of each application.
So unless the machineKey element is being used to set the decryptionKey at a global level, the method you described should not work. If it is set, you could override at application level using the web.config file.
You could set a unique machineKey in the web.config for your application. This way only authentication cookies emitted by that application can be decrypted. If the user visits a malicious site on the same domain, this other site might indeed add an cookie authentication cookie with the same name but different value, but it won't be able to encrypt and sign it with the same machine key used by your application and when the user navigates back an exception will be thrown.
The answer is simple: Always bind sessions to a specific client IP (this should be done in any modern web application anyway) and do not use cookies for any other purpose.
Explanation: you always send a single SESSIONID cookie back to the client, which holds no information - its just a very long random string. You store the SESSIONID along with the authenticated user IP within your webapps scope - like i.e. the database. Although the related cookie attack can be used to swap SESSIONID cookies around between different clients, no client can ever masquerade as another user or perform any actions, as the SESSIONID is only considered valid and the privileges are only granted, if its send from the associated IP address.
As long as you do not store actual data which is considered private into the cookie itself, but into the session state on the server side (which is selected solely by the SESSIONID cookie) the related cookie problem should be no problem for you.
Suppose I have logged into an application which is running from IIS. Now I haven't logged out, but closed the browser. And when I'm accessing the application again, it defaults to the login page. How does IIS recognize that it is a new request and redirects the user to the login page?
I have another question. Suppose if I'm not closing the browser, which I used when I logged in. I'm opening the new browser to request a page from same application. IIS recognizes that it's a new request to the application and redirects the user to login page. Why does it not use the existing session or cookies which the first browser uses?
Please don't get irritated of my continuous questions... I am having huge confusion.
We say HTTP is a stateless protocol. Once the page is requested I have logged in. And the HTTP protocol connection will be terminated between IIS and browser, right? Then I am navigating to other pages in that logged in application. Now IIS recognises the user has logged in on this browser. But when I open a new browser and request that application, how does IIS recognises it is a new request? Since the HTTP protocol is disconnected, how does it work in the first case?
As you've correctly said, HTTP itself is stateless, and each request is technically separate from every other. Sessions, as used by web sites, are a workaround for that. What happens, normally, is that the server stores whatever info it cares to maintain between requests (like the logged-in user's username and/or ID, for example), and assigns that information an ID (called a "session ID"). It then tells the browser that session ID, in such a way that the browser can hand the ID back when it's time to make another request. If the browser plays its part and provides the session ID, then the stored information can be retrieved, updated, etc with each request, providing some degree of state even over a stateless protocol.
Sessions are usually implemented using cookies. That is, the server hands the browser a cookie with the session ID, and the browser hands back that same cookie with each request until the cookie expires or is otherwise forgotten. Some cookies (so-called "session cookies") aren't saved, and are forgotten when the browser is closed. A freshly opened browser doesn't have any session cookies to pass, so if the server uses session cookies to do sessions (which it should), it will consider the user not yet logged in and bounce them to the login page if they need to be logged in.
Session cookies will usually be shared between tabs in the same browser, and will sometimes even be shared by windows opened by "File > New Window" from an already running browser, because both of those cases will typically just be a part of that browser. But if you start the browser from the Start menu, or however your OS lets you start a program, it's a whole other process -- and session cookies are rarely shared between processes.
The server typically also only remembers sessions on its end for a limited time (anywhere from seconds to years, depending on the server and/or site settings) after each request that uses the session. If the browser passes a cookie that corresponds to a session the server no longer remembers, it'll act as if there's no session at all. Which, in cases where you have to log in, will again bounce to the login page.
There are cookies that are passed always no matter are you logged or not. They are mapped to session in IIS.
Check out the following articles. They might be helpful.
IIS Dropping Sessions
Session Management in ASP.NET