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Vanilla JavaScript single-page application using MSAL.js to authenticate users with Azure Active Directory

Overview

This sample demonstrates a Vanilla JavaScript single-page application (SPA) that lets users sign-in to Azure Active Directory (Azure AD) using the Microsoft Authentication Library for JavaScript (MSAL.js). In doing so, it also illustrates various authentication concepts, such as ID Tokens, OIDC scopes, single-sign on, account selection, silent requests and more.

Scenario

  1. The client application uses MSAL.js to sign-in a user and obtain an ID Token from Azure AD.
  2. The ID Token proves that the user has successfully signed-in with their organization's tenant.

Contents

File/folder Description
AppCreationScripts/ Contains Powershell scripts to automate app registration.
App/authPopup.js Main authentication logic resides here (using popup flow).
App/authRedirect.js Use this instead of authPopup.js for authentication with redirect flow.
App/authConfig.js Contains configuration parameters for the sample.
App/ui.js Contains UI logic.
server.js Simple Node server for index.html.

Prerequisites

  • VS Code Addons: ms-vscode-remote.remote-containers
  • Docker

Setup the sample

Step 1: Clone or download this repository

From your shell or command line:

git clone <repo-url>

Step 2: Install project dependencies

    cd SPA
    npm install

Choose the Azure AD tenant where you want to create your applications

To manually register the apps, as a first step you'll need to:

  1. Sign in to the Azure portal.
  2. If your account is present in more than one Azure AD tenant, select your profile at the top right corner in the menu on top of the page, and then switch directory to change your portal session to the desired Azure AD tenant.

Register the client app (ms-identity-javascript-c1s1)

  1. Navigate to the Azure portal and select the Azure Active Directory service.
  2. Select the App Registrations blade on the left, then select New registration.
  3. In the Register an application page that appears, enter your application's registration information:
    1. In the Name section, enter a meaningful application name that will be displayed to users of the app, for example ms-identity-javascript-c1s1.
    2. Under Supported account types, select Accounts in this organizational directory only
    3. Select Register to create the application.
  4. In the Overview blade, find and note the Application (client) ID. You use this value in your app's configuration file(s) later in your code.
  5. In the app's registration screen, select the Authentication blade to the left.
  6. If you don't have a platform added, select Add a platform and select the Single-page application option.
    1. In the Redirect URI section enter the following redirect URIs:
      1. http://localhost:3000
      2. http://localhost:3000/redirect
    2. Click Save to save your changes.
Configure Optional Claims
  1. Still on the same app registration, select the Token configuration blade to the left.
  2. Select Add optional claim:
    1. Select optional claim type, then choose ID.
    2. Select the optional claim acct.

    Provides user's account status in tenant. If the user is a member of the tenant, the value is 0. If they're a guest, the value is 1.

    1. Select Add to save your changes.
Configure the client app (ms-identity-javascript-c1s1) to use your app registration

Open the project in your IDE (like Visual Studio or Visual Studio Code) to configure the code.

In the steps below, "ClientID" is the same as "Application ID" or "AppId".

  1. Open the App\authConfig.js file.
  2. Find the key Enter_the_Application_Id_Here and replace the existing value with the application ID (clientId) of ms-identity-javascript-c1s1 app copied from the Azure portal.
  3. Find the key Enter_the_Tenant_Info_Here and replace the existing value with your Azure AD tenant/directory ID.

Step 4: Running the sample

    cd 1-Authorization\1-sign-in
    npm start

Explore the sample

  1. Open your browser and navigate to http://localhost:3000.
  2. Click the sign-in button on the top right corner.

Screenshot

About the code

Sign-in

MSAL.js provides 3 login APIs: loginPopup(), loginRedirect() and ssoSilent():

    myMSALObj.loginPopup(loginRequest)
        .then((response) => {
            // your logic
        })
        .catch(error => {
            console.error(error);
        });

To use the redirect flow, you must register a handler for redirect promise. MSAL.js provideshandleRedirectPromise() API:

    myMSALObj.handleRedirectPromise()
        .then((response) => {
            // your logic
        })
        .catch(err => {
            console.error(err);
        });

    myMSALObj.loginRedirect(loginRequest);

The recommended pattern is that you fallback to an interactive method should the silent SSO fails.

    const silentRequest = {
      scopes: ["openid", "profile"],
      loginHint: "example@domain.net"
    };

    myMSALObj.ssoSilent(silentRequest)
        .then((response) => {
            // your logic
        }).catch(error => {
            console.error("Silent Error: " + error);
            if (error instanceof msal.InteractionRequiredAuthError) {
                myMSALObj.loginRedirect(loginRequest);
            }
        });

You can get all the active accounts of a user with the get getAllAccounts() API. If you know the username or home ID of an account, you can select it by:

    myMSALObj.getAccountByUsername(username);
    // or
    myMSALObj.getAccountByHomeId(homeId);

Sign-out

The Application redirects the user to the Microsoft identity platform logout endpoint to sign out. This endpoint clears the user's session from the browser. If your app did not go to the logout endpoint, the user may re-authenticate to your app without entering their credentials again, because they would have a valid single sign-in session with the Microsoft identity platform endpoint. For more, see: Send a sign-out request

ID Token Validation

A single-page application does not benefit from validating ID tokens, since the application runs without a back-end and as such, attackers can intercept and edit the keys used for validation of the token.

Sign-in Audience and Account Types

This sample is meant to work with accounts in your organization (aka single-tenant). If you would like to allow sign-ins with other type accounts, you have to configure your authority string in authConfig.js accordingly. For example:

const msalConfig = {
    auth: {
      clientId: "<YOUR_CLIENT_ID>",
      authority: "https://login.microsoftonline.com/consumers", // allows sign-ins with personal Microsoft accounts.
      redirectUri: "<YOUR_REDIRECT_URI>",
    },

For more information about audiences and account types, please see: Validation differences by supported account types (signInAudience)