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sample |
This application demonstrates how to implement Microsoft Entra SSO authentication in Microsoft Teams personal tabs, providing secure access to user profiles and APIs. |
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officedev-microsoft-teams-samples-tab-channel-group-sso-quickstart-js |
Explore this sample application that showcases Microsoft Entra SSO authentication within personal tabs in Microsoft Teams, allowing users to securely access their profiles and application APIs. With detailed setup guidance, including app registration, permissions configuration, and deployment using Teams Toolkit for Visual Studio, this sample is ideal for developers aiming to enhance their Teams applications with robust authentication features.
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dev tunnel or Ngrok (For local environment testing) latest version (any other tunneling software can also be used)
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M365 developer account or access to a Teams account with the appropriate permissions to install an app.
The simplest way to run this sample in Teams is to use Teams Toolkit for Visual Studio Code.
- Ensure you have downloaded and installed Visual Studio Code
- Install the Teams Toolkit extension
- Select File > Open Folder in VS Code and choose this samples directory from the repo
- Using the extension, sign in with your Microsoft 365 account where you have permissions to upload custom apps
- Select Debug > Start Debugging or F5 to run the app in a Teams web client.
- In the browser that launches, select the Add button to install the app to Teams.
If you do not have permission to upload custom apps (sideloading), Teams Toolkit will recommend creating and using a Microsoft 365 Developer Program account - a free program to get your own dev environment sandbox that includes Teams.
- Register a new application in the Microsoft Entra ID – App Registrations portal.
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On the overview page, copy and save the Application (client) ID, Directory (tenant) ID. You’ll need those later when updating your Teams application manifest and in the .env file at both client and server.
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Navigate to the Certificates & secrets. In the Client secrets section, click on "+ New client secret". Add a description (Name of the secret) for the secret and select “Never” for Expires. Click "Add". Once the client secret is created, copy its value, it need to be placed in the appsettings.json file.
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Navigate to Authentication If an app hasn't been granted IT admin consent, users will have to provide consent the first time they use an app.
Set a redirect URI:
- Select Add a platform.
- Select web.
- Enter the redirect URI for your app. This will be the page where a successful implicit grant flow will redirect the user.
Set it as
https://Base_Url/auth-end
, ex:https://f631****.ngrok-free.app/auth-end
Next, enable implicit grant by checking the following boxes:
✔ ID Token
✔ Access Token -
Under Manage, select Expose an API.
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Select the Set link to generate the Application ID URI in the form of
api://{AppID}
. Insert your fully qualified domain name (with a forward slash "/" appended to the end) between the double forward slashes and the GUID. The entire ID should have the form of:api://fully-qualified-domain-name.com/{AppID}
- ex:
api://subdomain.example.com/00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000
.
The fully qualified domain name is the human readable domain name from which your app is served. If you are using a tunneling service such as ngrok, you will need to update this value whenever your ngrok subdomain changes.
- ex:
api://f631****.ngrok-free.app/9051a142-901a-4384-a83c-556c2888b071
.
- ex:
-
Select the Add a scope button. In the panel that opens, enter
access_as_user
as the Scope name. -
Set Who can consent? to
Admins and users
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Fill in the fields for configuring the admin and user consent prompts with values that are appropriate for the
access_as_user
scope:- Admin consent display name: Teams can access the user’s profile.
- Admin consent description: Allows Teams to call the app’s web APIs as the current user.
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Ensure that State is set to Enabled
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Select the Add scope button to save
- The domain part of the Scope name displayed just below the text field should automatically match the Application ID URI set in the previous step, with
/access_as_user
appended to the end:api://subdomain.example.com/00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000/access_as_user
- The domain part of the Scope name displayed just below the text field should automatically match the Application ID URI set in the previous step, with
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In the Authorized client applications section, identify the applications that you want to authorize for your app’s web application. Select Add a client application. Enter each of the following client IDs and select the authorized scope you created in the previous step:
1fec8e78-bce4-4aaf-ab1b-5451cc387264
(Teams mobile/desktop application)5e3ce6c0-2b1f-4285-8d4b-75ee78787346
(Teams web application)
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- Setup for Bot
In Azure portal, create a Azure Bot resource. - For bot handle, make up a name. - Select "Use existing app registration" (Create the app registration in Microsoft Entra ID beforehand.) - If you don't have an Azure account create an Azure free account here
In the new Azure Bot resource in the Portal,
- Ensure that you've enabled the Teams Channel
- In Settings/Configuration/Messaging endpoint, enter the current https
URL you were given by running the tunnelling application. Append with the path /api/messages
- Setup NGROK
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Run ngrok - point to port 3978
ngrok http 3978 --host-header="localhost:3978"
Alternatively, you can also use the
dev tunnels
. Please follow Create and host a dev tunnel and host the tunnel with anonymous user access command as shown below:devtunnel host -p 3978 --allow-anonymous
- Setup for code
-
Clone the repository
bash git clone https://github.com/OfficeDev/Microsoft-Teams-Samples.git
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Update the
.env
configuration for the bot to use theREACT_APP_AZURE_APP_REGISTRATION_ID
andREACT_APP_BASE_URL
,BaseUrl
with application base url. For e.g., your ngrok or dev tunnels url. (Note the MicrosoftAppId is the REACT_APP_AZURE_APP_REGISTRATION_ID created in step 1. -
In a terminal, navigate to
tab-channel-group-sso-quickstart/js
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Install modules
npm install
-
Run Client
- Run
npm start
command in terminal - The client will start running on 3000 port
- Run
-
Run Server
- Open new terminal
- Change directory to
api-server
folder with command i.e.cd api-server
- Install pacakge with npm install
- npm start
- The server will start running on 5000 port
- Setup Manifest for Teams
- This step is specific to Teams.
-
Edit the
manifest.json
contained in theappManifest/
folder to replace with your MicrosoftAppId (that was created in step1.1 and is the same value of MicrosoftAppId in.env
file) everywhere you see the place holder string{MicrosoftAppId}
(depending on the scenario the Microsoft App Id may occur multiple times in themanifest.json
) -
- Edit the
manifest.json
for validDomains and REACT_APP_BASE_URL replace{{domain-name}}
with base Url of your domain. E.g. if you are using ngrok it would behttps://1234.ngrok-free.app
then your domain-name will be1234.ngrok-free.app
and if you are using dev tunnels then your domain will be like:12345.devtunnels.ms
.
- Edit the
-
Edit the
manifest.json
forwebApplicationInfo
resource""api://<<REACT_APP_BASE_URL>>/<<REACT_APP_AZURE_APP_REGISTRATION_ID>>""
with MicrosoftAppId. E.g. `""api://<<ngrok-free.app>><> -
Zip up the contents of the
appManifest/
folder to create amanifest.zip
-
Upload the
manifest.zip
to Teams (in the left-bottom Apps view, click "Upload a custom app")
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