Disclaimer - I'm not overly familiar with MSIs, but as they are modeled as service principals, this should work. Also I'm not able to validate these steps.
These steps require that you use Azure AD PowerShell (v2) to assign application permissions to your MSI (to access Microsoft Graph), and that you are an administrator or app admin in your tenant. For Microsoft Graph, the documented permissions can be found here. The same instructions could be used for other resources secured by Azure AD too. I'll assume that you've already installed the PowerShell module.
Connect-AzureAD
to connect PS to Azure Ad. Enter your admin creds.
$graph = Get-AzureADServicePrincipal -Filter "AppId eq '00000003-0000-0000-c000-000000000000'"
to find the service principal representing Microsoft Graph and assign it to a variable. The service principal for Microsoft Graph is currently created just in time on first access, so there is a possibility it doesn't exist. It can be created by calling New-AzureADServicePrincipal -AppId "00000003-0000-0000-c000-000000000000"
.
$graph.AppRoles
- this will show you all the available application permissions that you can choose from that are exposed by Microsoft Graph. For example if your MSI needs to read group information, find the "Group.Read.All" permission from the list, and make a note of its permission Id (it's a GUID). For example here's one of the records from the AppRoles list:
AllowedMemberTypes : {Application}
Description : Allows the app to read events of all calendars without a signed-in user.
DisplayName : Read calendars in all mailboxes
Id : 798ee544-9d2d-430c-a058-570e29e34338
IsEnabled : True
Value : Calendars.Read
- Find your MSI's objectId (assuming you don't know it, but that you do know its clientId/appId):
$msi = Get-AzureADServicePrincipal -Filter "AppId eq '{Your_MSI_appId}'"
- For each of the permissions your MSI needs, run the following PS cmdlet to assign the permission to your MSI:
New-AzureADServiceAppRoleAssignment -Id {permissionId} -PrincipalId $msi.ObjectId -ResourceId $graph.ObjectId
And that should do it. You should now be able to acquire an access token for your MSI to call Microsoft Graph, and the access token should contain a roles
claim that matches the permissions (ids) that you've assigned above. You can then use that access token to call Microsoft Graph. This is similar to steps 6 and 7 in https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/active-directory/msi-overview.
Hope this helps,
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…