Azure AD
This page describes configuring Lenses with Azure AD via LDAP.
Last updated
This page describes configuring Lenses with Azure AD via LDAP.
Last updated
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Azure AD supports the LDAP protocol. You can use it as an authentication provider with users, passwords, and groups stored in Azure AD. When a user is authenticated successfully, Lenses queries Azure AD to get the user’s groups and authorizes the user with the selected permissions.
Here is a sample Lenses configuration:
In the Azure portal create a resource. Search for Domain service
and select Azure AD Domain Services from the options.
Set the DNS Domain Name as the same one you have with for your existing Azure AD tenant
In the Administration tab, you can manage the group membership for the AAD DC Administrator and control the members with access rights on Azure AD.
Azure AD Domain Services provides one-way synchronization from Azure Active Directory to the managed domain. Only certain attributes are synchronized to the managed domain, along with groups, group memberships and passwords.
The Synchronization tab provides two options. The first one is All, where everything will be synchronized to Azure AD DS managed domain. The second one is Scoped, which allows the selection of specific groups to be synced.
Once the managed domain is ready to be used, configure the DNS server settings for the Azure Virtual Network. Click the button configure:
For the DNS changes to be applied, all the VMs are required to be restarted.
Azure AD DS needs password hashes in a format that’s suitable for NT LAN Manager (NTLM) and Kerberos authentication. Azure AD does not generate or store password hashes in the format that’s required for NTLM or Kerberos authentication until you enable Azure AD DS for your tenant.
For security reasons, Azure AD doesn’t store any password credentials in clear-text form. Therefore, Azure AD can’t automatically generate these NTLM or Kerberos password hashes based on users’ existing credentials.
The Virtual Network to deploy Lenses, requires enabling Virtual Network Peering. This allows it to communicate with Azure AD DS. You should add the IPs that have been generated in the previous step as DNS Servers.
To enable the LDAP(S) protocol on Azure AD DS, use the following PowerShell to generate the self-signed certificate:
In case PowerShell is not available, you can use the openssl command. This following script generates a certificate for Azure AD DS.
Under Secure LDAP, upload the PFX certificate and make sure the options Allow secure LDAP and access over the Internet are enabled.
After the secure LDAP is enabled to allow secure LDAP access, use the Azure AD DS properties to review the external IP address that is used to expose the LDAP service.
Finally, you need to allow inbound traffic to the Azure AD DS network security group for the LDAPS port 636 and limit the access only to the the virtual machine or the range of the IPs to which they should have inbound access.
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