TerevintoSoftware.AadAppRegistry.Tool 1.0.3

dotnet tool install --global TerevintoSoftware.AadAppRegistry.Tool --version 1.0.3
This package contains a .NET tool you can call from the shell/command line.
dotnet new tool-manifest # if you are setting up this repo
dotnet tool install --local TerevintoSoftware.AadAppRegistry.Tool --version 1.0.3
This package contains a .NET tool you can call from the shell/command line.
#tool dotnet:?package=TerevintoSoftware.AadAppRegistry.Tool&version=1.0.3
nuke :add-package TerevintoSoftware.AadAppRegistry.Tool --version 1.0.3

AppReg

Nuget version Coverage Status

Sample image of the help screen for the publish api command

1. Introduction

This project aims to provide an opinionated way to facilitate creationg Azure App Registrations compatible with both Azure Active Directory (AAD) and Azure B2C. While AAD and B2C use the same underlying App Registrations service, they have different ways of dealings with scope names and application uris by default.

Typically, OAuth 2 applications fall under one of these categories:

  • API (provides scopes for other applications to consume)
  • Web (for traditional server-side web applications)
  • SPA (for client-side web applications and some scenarios like newer desktop applications)
  • Native (for native desktop or mobile applications)
  • Confidential (for back-end systems that do not have a user present)

You can mix all of these together in the same App Registration and nothing bad should happen.

The opinionated side of this package is that it's meant to simplify the registrations of these applications as separate App Registrations. Why?

  1. Separation of concerns
    As each part of a system is separated into its unique components, changing the registration or the needs of one component maintains the rest of the system intact.

  2. Principle of Least Privilege.
    By splitting the components of the system, you can avoid giving more privileges than needed to particular components.
    For example, you can give the mobile application access to the API only, while giving the web application access to the API and other systems like Microsoft Graph.

2. Installing this tool

Assuming you already have .NET installed, the first thing to do is install this tool:

dotnet tool install -g TerevintoSoftware.AadAppRegistry.Tool

After that, the command appreg will become available.

3. Using this tool

Notice that all commands in the tool support the --help switch thanks to Spectre.Console.

3.1 First steps

There are two critical commands that you'll want to run first - configure credentials and configure mode:

  1. Run configure credentials -t {TenantId} -c {ClientId} -s {ClientSecret}, where:

    • TenantId: the ID of the tenant you want to register applications in.
    • ClientId: the Client ID of an App Registration with an API permission of Application.ReadWrite.All.
    • ClientSecret: a secret generated for the client used in the previous step.
  2. If you need to switch to B2C mode, run configure mode --use-b2c.

Note: both configure commands use a json file stored in the user's directory. This file is not encrypted.

3.2 Creating applications

Applications can be created using one of the following commands:

  • publish api
  • publish web
  • publish spa
  • publish confidential
  • publish native

3.3 Other commands

  • list - lists all applications in the tenant.
  • app view - shows the details of an application.
  • app delete - deletes an application.
  • app add-scope - adds an API scope to the application.

3.4 Sample commands

If you run the following:

appreg publish api some-test-api-client --set-default-uri --access-as-user

Assuming you are under the AAD mode, you would get an output like:

{
   "Success": true,
   "Status": "Success",
   "Data": {
       "Name": "some-test-api-client",
       "ClientId": "2a42e61a-c75b-4f65-93ac-30d12bde9b33",
       "ObjectId": "62ff0583-92bb-43ec-af9d-1c3ee88c8cd6",
       "Uri": "api://2a42e61a-c75b-4f65-93ac-30d12bde9b33",
       "Scope": "api://2a42e61a-c75b-4f65-93ac-30d12bde9b33/access_as_user"
    }
}

4. Building

To build this application locally, you only need the .NET 7 SDK. No other dependency is needed at this time.

5. Contributing

For feedback/questions/issues, please use the issue tracker and ensure your question/feedback was not previously reported.

For code contributions, I'm glad to accept Pull Requests.

6. License

This project is licensed under the MIT license.

Product Compatible and additional computed target framework versions.
.NET net7.0 is compatible.  net7.0-android was computed.  net7.0-ios was computed.  net7.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net7.0-macos was computed.  net7.0-tvos was computed.  net7.0-windows was computed.  net8.0 was computed.  net8.0-android was computed.  net8.0-browser was computed.  net8.0-ios was computed.  net8.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net8.0-macos was computed.  net8.0-tvos was computed.  net8.0-windows was computed. 
Compatible target framework(s)
Included target framework(s) (in package)
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.

This package has no dependencies.

Version Downloads Last updated
1.0.3 1,363 10/23/2023

[1.0.3]: Update packages for CVE-2023-36414
[1.0.2]: Fix a bug in the app view command when the application does not consume any scopes.
[1.0.1]: Improve output of the list command.
[1.0.0]: Initial GA release. Adds a number of new features and improves several commands.
[0.5.0]: Add support for pushing secrets to Azure Key Vault. Add support for deleting app registrations.
[0.4.0]: Add support for native client applications and for adding scopes to applications.
[0.3.0]: Add support for web, spa, and confidential client applications.
[0.2.0]: Change the default path to the configuration file to be the user's directory.
[0.1.0]: Initial beta release.