A long-lived project that still receives updates
omniauth provider for new Microsoft Graph API
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 Dependencies

Development

~> 0
~> 12.3.3, >= 12.3.3
~> 3.6
~> 2.2

Runtime

~> 2.0
~> 2.0
 Project Readme

Omniauth::MicrosoftGraph ruby workflow

Microsoft Graph OAuth2 Strategy for OmniAuth. Can be used to authenticate with Office365 or other MS services, and get a token for the Microsoft Graph Api, formerly the Office365 Unified Api.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'omniauth-microsoft_graph'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install omniauth-microsoft_graph

Usage

Register a new app in the Azure Portal / App registrations to get the AZURE_APPLICATION_CLIENT_ID and AZURE_APPLICATION_CLIENT_SECRET below.

Configuration

Rails.application.config.middleware.use OmniAuth::Builder do
  provider :microsoft_graph, ENV['AZURE_APPLICATION_CLIENT_ID'], ENV['AZURE_APPLICATION_CLIENT_SECRET']
end

Login Hint

Just add {login_hint: "email@example.com"} to your url generation to form:

/auth/microsoft_graph?login_hint=email@example.com

Domain Verification

Because Microsoft allows users to set vanity emails on their accounts, the value of the user's "email" doesn't establish membership in that domain. Put another way, user malicious@hacker.biz can edit their email in Active Directory to ceo@yourcompany.com, and (depending on your auth implementation) may be able to log in automatically as that user.

To establish membership in the claimed email domain, we use two strategies:

  • email domain matches userPrincipalName domain (which by definition is a verified domain)
  • The user's id_token includes the xms_edov ("Email Domain Ownership Verified") claim, with a truthy value

The xms_edov claim is optional, and must be configured in the Azure console before it's available in the token. Refer to Clerk's guide for instructions on configuring the claim.

If you're not able or don't need to support domain verification, you can bypass for an individual domain:

Rails.application.config.middleware.use OmniAuth::Builder do
  provider :microsoft_graph,
           ENV['AZURE_APPLICATION_CLIENT_ID'],
           ENV['AZURE_APPLICATION_CLIENT_SECRET'],
           skip_domain_verification: %w[contoso.com]
end

Or, you can disable domain verification entirely. We strongly recommend that you do not disable domain verification if at all possible.

Rails.application.config.middleware.use OmniAuth::Builder do
  provider :microsoft_graph,
           ENV['AZURE_APPLICATION_CLIENT_ID'],
           ENV['AZURE_APPLICATION_CLIENT_SECRET'],
           skip_domain_verification: true
end

nOAuth: How Microsoft OAuth Misconfiguration Can Lead to Full Account Takeover from Descope

Upgrading to 1.0.0

This version requires OmniAuth v2. If you are using Rails, you will need to include or upgrade omniauth-rails_csrf_protection. If you upgrade and get an error in your logs complaining about "authenticity error" or similiar, make sure to do bundle update omniauth-rails_csrf_protection

Contributing

  1. Fork it ( https://github.com/synth/omniauth-microsoft_graph/fork )
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create a new Pull Request