Created
July 8, 2018 17:54
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Example on how to use a Windows VM Managed Service Identity (MSI) access token to authenticate to Azure AD PowerShell
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# Step 1 - Enable MSI on the resource - in this case a virtual machine | |
# Step 2 - Assign permissions to the MSI - in this example full permissions to Azure AD | |
$Principal = Get-AzureADServicePrincipal -searchstring MGMT-AZ-01 | |
$Role = Get-AzureADDirectoryRole | Where-Object DisplayName -Like 'Company Administrator' | |
Add-AzureADDirectoryRoleMember -ObjectId $Role.ObjectId -RefObjectId $Principal.ObjectId | |
# Step 3 - Get an access token. Note that the resource we are requesting a token for is https://graph.windows.net | |
$response = Invoke-WebRequest -UseBasicParsing -Uri 'http://169.254.169.254/metadata/identity/oauth2/token?api-version=2018-02-01&resource=https://graph.windows.net/' -Method GET -Headers @{Metadata="true"} | |
$content = $response.Content | ConvertFrom-Json | |
$AadGraphToken = $content.access_token | |
# Step 4 - Authenticate to Azure AD PowerShell using the token | |
Connect-AzureAD -AadAccessToken $AadGraphToken -AccountId 413b4ad1-87e4-4312-9d4a-1f00ca2fd3cb -TenantId b5fb2192-06f1-43f4-a44f-1d42a9106deb | |
# Run an Azure AD command against the API - for example Get-AzureADUser | |
Get-AzureADUser |
Good point - principle of least privileges should be followed
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If you make your MSI Company Administrator it will have a lot of permissions... Why not giving the permissions in the Azure AD that it only needs? Like this: