Openid AzureAD
(Created page with "To protect your turnkey application with your active directory you can do so via Azure AD. 1.      You should already have a Turnkey-webApp 2.      You should ha...")
 
No edit summary
Line 29: Line 29:
[[File:2018-05-28 13h34 52.png|none|thumb|384x384px]]
[[File:2018-05-28 13h34 52.png|none|thumb|384x384px]]
If this was the first login a new SysUser object was created - you are done with Single Sign On (SSO) via OpenId.
If this was the first login a new SysUser object was created - you are done with Single Sign On (SSO) via OpenId.
[[Category:MDriven Turnkey]]
[[Category:Authentication]]

Revision as of 15:58, 28 May 2018

To protect your turnkey application with your active directory you can do so via Azure AD.

1.      You should already have a Turnkey-webApp

2.      You should have sufficient rights to register web-apps in your organizations Azure AD

Login into Portal Azure, go to Azure Active Directory:

2018-05-28 13h25 47.png

Make a copy of your AD name (the authority name).

Then App Registrations, New Application registration:

2018-05-28 13h27 18.png

Enter a name for your application (just an easy read identifier)

Also enter the sign on url to your Turnkey – in my case: https://hkscratch.azurewebsites.net/Account/Login

2018-05-28 13h28 39.png

You will get this screen with important information:

2018-05-28 13h30 41.png

Copy the application ID

You now have the Application ID Guid and the Authority name. We will now assign these to your application via the Turnkey-portal:

2018-05-28 13h31 45.png

Paste your values in – then Send Settings And Restart:

2018-05-28 13h33 02.png

Remember to save.

Your application now has a OpenId button and when you click it you are taken to the OpenId-authority for verification:

2018-05-28 13h34 06.png
2018-05-28 13h34 52.png

If this was the first login a new SysUser object was created - you are done with Single Sign On (SSO) via OpenId.

This page was edited 81 days ago on 02/10/2024. What links here