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sample |
Create Microsoft Graph webhook subscriptions for an ASP.NET Core app, so that it can receive notifications of changes for any resource. This sample also supports receiving change notifications with data, validating and decrypting the payload. |
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Subscribe for Microsoft Graph change notifications to be notified when your user's data changes, so you don't have to poll for changes.
This sample ASP.NET Core web application shows how to subscribe for change notifications as well as how to validate and decrypt change notifications with resource data when supported by the resource.
This sample uses:
- The Microsoft Graph Client Library for .NET (SDK) to call Microsoft Graph.
- The Microsoft.Identity.Web library to abstract token acquisition.
This sample implements the following scenarios.
- Uses user-delegated authentication to subscribe to notifications in a user's Exchange Online inbox.
- Uses app-only authentication to subscribe to notifications for all new Teams channel messages. These notifications include encrypted resource data.
User-delegated authentication represents a user and the application being used when calling the Microsoft Graph. This type of authentication is best suited for scenarios when the user interacts with the application. Application only authentication represents only the application itself when calling the Microsoft Graph, without any notion of user. This type of authentication is best suited for background services, daemons or other kind of applications users are not directly interacting with.
See the list of permissions and authentication types permitted for each supported resource in Microsoft Graph.
To use the Microsoft Graph Webhook Sample for ASP.NET Core, you need the following:
- .NET 8.0 or later.
- A work, or school account. Note: The app-only Teams channel scenario in the sample requires a tenant administrator account to grant application permissions for the app-only portion.
- The application ID and secret from the application that you register on the Azure Portal.
- A public HTTPS endpoint to receive and send HTTP requests. You can host this on Microsoft Azure or another service, or you can use ngrok or a similar tool while testing.
- If you are also testing change notifications with resource data, you also need a Microsoft Azure subscription to create an Azure Key Vault. If you do not have a Microsoft Azure subscription, you can start a free trial.
- Sign in to the Azure portal using either a work or school account.
- If your account is present in more than one Azure AD tenant:
- Select your profile from the menu on the top right corner of the page, and then Switch directory.
- Change your session to the Azure AD tenant where you want to create your application.
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Select Microsoft Entra ID in the left-hand navigation, then select App registrations under Manage.
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Select New registration. On the Register an application page, set the values as follows.
- Set Name to
ASP.NET Graph Notification Webhook Sample
. - Set Supported account types to Accounts in any organizational directory (Any Azure AD directory - Multitenant) and personal Microsoft accounts.
- Under Redirect URI, set the first drop-down to
Web
and set the value tohttps://localhost:5001/
.
- Set Name to
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Select Register to create the app. On the app's Overview page, copy the value of the Application (client) ID and Directory (tenant) ID and save them for later.
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Select Authentication under Manage. Add an additional Redirect URI with the value
https://localhost:5001/signin-oidc
. -
Set the Front-channel logout URL to
https://localhost:5001/signout-oidc
. Select Save. -
Select Certificates & secrets under Manage. Select the New client secret button. Enter a value in Description and select one of the options for Expires and select Add.
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Copy the Value of the new secret before you leave this page. It will never be displayed again. Save the value for later.
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Select API permissions under Manage.
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In the list of pages for the app, select API permissions, then select Add a permission.
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Make sure that the Microsoft APIs tab is selected, then select Microsoft Graph.
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Select Application permissions, then find and enable the ChannelMessage.Read.All permission. Select Add permissions to add the enabled permission.
Note: To create subscriptions for other resources you need to select different permissions as documented here
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In the Configured permissions list, select the ellipses (
...
) in the User.Read row, and select Remove permission. The User.Read permission will be requested dynamically as part of the user sign-in process. -
Select Grant admin consent for
name of your organization
and Yes. This grants consent to the permissions of the application registration you just created to the current organization.
Note
The app-only scenario in this sample requires this step. It assumes that the public/private key pair for encrypting and decrypting resource data in the notification payloads are stored in Azure Key Vault. Refer to the documentation for a complete list of resources that support including resources data.
Follow the documented steps to configure your Azure KeyVault in order to add support for change notifications with resource data.
You must expose a public HTTPS endpoint to create a subscription and receive notifications from Microsoft Graph. While testing, you can use ngrok to temporarily allow messages from Microsoft Graph to tunnel to a localhost port on your computer.
You can use the ngrok web interface (http://127.0.0.1:4040
) to inspect the HTTP traffic that passes through the tunnel. To learn more about using ngrok, see the ngrok website.
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Run the following command in your command-line interface.
ngrok http https://localhost:5001
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Copy the HTTPS URL that's shown in the console. You'll use this to configure your notification URL in the sample.
Keep the console open while testing. If you close it, the tunnel also closes and you'll need to generate a new URL and update the sample.
See troubleshooting for more information about using tunnels.
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Expose a public HTTPS notification endpoint. It can run on a service such as Microsoft Azure, or you can create a proxy web server by using ngrok or a similar tool.
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Open appsettings.json in the root directory of the project.
Note: During development, it's recommended that you use the .NET Secret Manager to store secrets instead of putting them in appsettings.json.
- Settings under AzureAd:
- TenantId: Your tenant ID (obtained when registering the application)
- ClientId: Your application ID (obtained when registering the application)
- ClientSecret: Your client secret (obtained when registering the application) RECOMMENDED: set this in Secret Manager instead:
dotnet user-secrets set AzureAd:ClientSecret "YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET"
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- GraphScopes: The Graph permission scopes used in the user-delegated scenario. These are already set for the user's inbox scenario. You'll need to change these if you subscribe to a different resource.
- NotificationHost: Set to the host name of the server that hosts your application. During local development, set this to your ngrok URL.
- Settings under KeyVault:
- Url: The URL to your Azure Key Vault
- CertificateName The name of the certificate in your Azure Key Vault
- Settings under AzureAd:
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Make sure that the ngrok console is still running, then run the app with the following command.
dotnet run
Note: You can use Visual Studio Code to set breakpoints and run the sample in debug mode.
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Choose the Sign in and subscribe button and sign in with a work or school account.
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Review and consent to the requested permissions. The subscription is created and you are redirected to a page displaying any notification being received.
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Send an email to yourself. A notification appears showing the subject and message ID.
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If you previously subscribed to a user's inbox, choose the Delete subscription button to return to the home page.
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Choose the Subscribe button. The subscription is created and you are redirected to a page displaying any notification being received.
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Post a message to a channel in any team in Microsoft Teams. A notification appears showing the sender's name and the message.
See the dedicated troubleshooting page.
If you'd like to contribute to this sample, see CONTRIBUTING.MD.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.
We'd love to get your feedback about the Microsoft Graph Webhooks sample for ASP.NET Core. You can send your questions and suggestions to us in the Issues section of this repository.
Questions about Microsoft Graph in general should be posted to Microsoft Q&A. Make sure that your questions or comments are tagged with the relevant Microsoft Graph tag.