How to bind to a PasswordBox in MVVM

Maybe I am missing something, but it seems like most of these solutions overcomplicate things and do away with secure practices.

This method does not violate the MVVM pattern and maintains complete security. Yes, technically it is code behind, but it is nothing more than a "special case" binding. The ViewModel still has no knowledge of the View implementation, which in my mind it does if you are trying to pass the PasswordBox in to the ViewModel.

Code Behind != Automatic MVVM violation. It all depends on what you do with it. In this case, we are just manually coding a binding, so its all considered part of the UI implementation and therefore is ok.

In the ViewModel, just a simple property. I made it "write only" since there shouldn't be a need to retrieve it from outside the ViewModel for any reason, but it doesn't have to be. Note that it is a SecureString, not just a string.

public SecureString SecurePassword { private get; set; }

In the xaml, you set up a PasswordChanged event handler.

<PasswordBox PasswordChanged="PasswordBox_PasswordChanged"/>

In the code behind:

private void PasswordBox_PasswordChanged(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
    if (this.DataContext != null)
    { ((dynamic)this.DataContext).SecurePassword = ((PasswordBox)sender).SecurePassword; }
}

With this method, your password remains in a SecureString at all times and therefore provides maximum security. If you really don't care about security or you need the clear text password for a downstream method that requires it (note: most .NET methods that require a password also support a SecureString option, so you may not really need a clear text password even if you think you do), you can just use the Password property instead. Like this:

(ViewModel property)

public string Password { private get; set; }

(Code behind)

private void PasswordBox_PasswordChanged(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
    if (this.DataContext != null)
    { ((dynamic)this.DataContext).Password = ((PasswordBox)sender).Password; }
}

If you wanted to keep things strongly typed, you could substitute the (dynamic) cast with the interface of your ViewModel. But really, "normal" data bindings aren't strongly typed either, so its not that big a deal.

private void PasswordBox_PasswordChanged(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
    if (this.DataContext != null)
    { ((IMyViewModel)this.DataContext).Password = ((PasswordBox)sender).Password; }
}

So best of all worlds - your password is secure, your ViewModel just has a property like any other property, and your View is self contained with no external references required.


My 2 cents:

I developed once a typical login dialog (user and password boxes, plus "Ok" button) using WPF and MVVM. I solved the password binding issue by simply passing the PasswordBox control itself as a parameter to the command attached to the "Ok" button. So in the view I had:

<PasswordBox Name="txtPassword" VerticalAlignment="Top" Width="120" />
<Button Content="Ok" Command="{Binding Path=OkCommand}"
   CommandParameter="{Binding ElementName=txtPassword}"/>

And in the ViewModel, the Execute method of the attached command was as follows:

void Execute(object parameter)
{
    var passwordBox = parameter as PasswordBox;
    var password = passwordBox.Password;
    //Now go ahead and check the user name and password
}

This slightly violates the MVVM pattern since now the ViewModel knows something about how the View is implemented, but in that particular project I could afford it. Hope it is useful for someone as well.


Sorry, but you're doing it wrong.

People should have the following security guideline tattooed on the inside of their eyelids:
Never keep plain text passwords in memory.

The reason the WPF/Silverlight PasswordBox doesn't expose a DP for the Password property is security related.
If WPF/Silverlight were to keep a DP for Password it would require the framework to keep the password itself unencrypted in memory. Which is considered quite a troublesome security attack vector. The PasswordBox uses encrypted memory (of sorts) and the only way to access the password is through the CLR property.

I would suggest that when accessing the PasswordBox.Password CLR property you'd refrain from placing it in any variable or as a value for any property.
Keeping your password in plain text on the client machine RAM is a security no-no.
So get rid of that public string Password { get; set; } you've got up there.

When accessing PasswordBox.Password, just get it out and ship it to the server ASAP. Don't keep the value of the password around and don't treat it as you would any other client machine text. Don't keep clear text passwords in memory.

I know this breaks the MVVM pattern, but you shouldn't ever bind to PasswordBox.Password Attached DP, store your password in the ViewModel or any other similar shenanigans.

If you're looking for an over-architected solution, here's one:
1. Create the IHavePassword interface with one method that returns the password clear text.
2. Have your UserControl implement a IHavePassword interface.
3. Register the UserControl instance with your IoC as implementing the IHavePassword interface.
4. When a server request requiring your password is taking place, call your IoC for the IHavePassword implementation and only than get the much coveted password.

Just my take on it.

-- Justin


You can use this XAML:

<PasswordBox>
    <i:Interaction.Triggers>
        <i:EventTrigger EventName="PasswordChanged">
            <i:InvokeCommandAction Command="{Binding RelativeSource={RelativeSource Mode=FindAncestor, AncestorType=PasswordBox}}" CommandParameter="{Binding ElementName=PasswordBox}"/>
        </i:EventTrigger>
    </i:Interaction.Triggers>
</PasswordBox>

And this command execute method:

private void ExecutePasswordChangedCommand(PasswordBox obj)
{ 
   if (obj != null)
     Password = obj.Password;
}

This requires adding the System.Windows.Interactivity assembly to your project and referencing it via xmlns:i="clr-namespace:System.Windows.Interactivity;assembly=System.Windows.Interactivity".