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Active Directory Authentication Library (ADAL) for .NET, Windows Store, Windows Phone 8.1 and Windows Phone 8.1 Silverlight

Active Directory Authentication Library (ADAL) provides easy to use authentication functionality for your .NET client and Windows Store apps by taking advantage of Windows Server Active Directory and Windows Azure Active Directory. Here you can find the source code for the library. You can find the corresponding releases (both stable and prerelease) on the NuGet gallery at http://www.nuget.org/packages/Microsoft.IdentityModel.Clients.ActiveDirectory/.

  • The latest stable release is 2.18.206251556.
  • The next version of the library in prerelease form is also avialable on the NuGet gallery.

Samples and Documentation

We provide a full suite of sample applications and documentation on GitHub to help you get started with learning the Azure Identity system. This includes tutorials for native clients such as Windows, Windows Phone, iOS, OSX, Android, and Linux. We also provide full walkthroughs for authentication flows such as OAuth2, OpenID Connect, Graph API, and other awesome features.

Diagnostics

The following are the primary sources of information for diagnosing issues:

  • Exceptions
  • Logs
  • Network traces

Also, note that correlation IDs are central to the diagnostics in the library. You can set your correlation IDs on a per request basis (by setting CorrelationId property on AuthenticationContext before calling an acquire token method) if you want to correlate an ADAL request with other operations in your code. If you don't set a correlations id, then ADAL will generate a random one which changes on each request. All log messages and network calls will be stamped with the correlation id.

Exceptions

This is obviously the first diagnostic. We try to provide helpful error messages. If you find one that is not helpful please file an issue and let us know. Please also provide the target platform of your application (e.g. Desktop, Windows Store, Windows Phone).

Logs

You can configure the library to generate log messages that you can use to help diagnose issues. You configure logging by setting properties of the static class AdalTrace; however, depending on the platform, logging methods and the properties of this class differ. Here is how logging works on each platform:

Desktop Applications

ADAL.NET for desktop applications by default logs via System.Diagnostics.Trace class. You can add a trace listener to receive those logs. You can also control tracing using this method (e.g. change trace level or turn it off) using AdalTrace.LegacyTraceSwitch.

The following example shows how to add a Console based listener and set trace level to Information (the default trace level is Verbose):

Trace.Listeners.Add(new ConsoleTraceListener());
AdalTrace.LegacyTraceSwitch.Level = TraceLevel.Info;

You can achieve the same result by adding the following lines to your application's config file:

  <system.diagnostics>
    <sharedListeners>
      <add name="console" 
        type="System.Diagnostics.ConsoleTraceListener" 
        initializeData="false"/>
    </sharedListeners>
    <trace autoflush="true">
      <listeners>
        <add name="console" />
      </listeners>
    </trace>    
    <switches>
      <add name="ADALLegacySwitch" value="Info"/>
    </switches>
  </system.diagnostics>

If you would like to have more control over how tracing is done in ADAL, you can add a TraceListener to ADAL's dedicated TraceSource with name "Microsoft.IdentityModel.Clients.ActiveDirectory".

The following example shows how to write ADAL's traces to a text file using this method:

Stream logFile = File.Create("logFile.txt");
AdalTrace.TraceSource.Listeners.Add(new TextWriterTraceListener(logFile));
AdalTrace.TraceSource.Switch.Level = SourceLevels.Information;

You can achieve the same result by adding the following lines to your application's config file:

  <system.diagnostics>
    <trace autoflush="true"/>
    <sources>
      <source name="Microsoft.IdentityModel.Clients.ActiveDirectory" 
        switchName="sourceSwitch" 
        switchType="System.Diagnostics.SourceSwitch">
        <listeners>
          <add name="textListener" 
            type="System.Diagnostics.TextWriterTraceListener" 
            initializeData="logFile.txt"/>
          <remove name="Default" />
        </listeners>
      </source>
    </sources>    
    <switches>
      <add name="sourceSwitch" value="Information"/>
    </switches>
  </system.diagnostics>

Windows Store and Windows Phone Applications

Tracing in ADAL for Windows Store and Windows Phone is done via an instance of class System.Diagnostics.Tracing.EventSource with name "Microsoft.IdentityModel.Clients.ActiveDirectory". You can define your own EventListener, connect it to the event source and set your desired trace level. Here is an example:

var eventListener = new SampleEventListener();

class SampleEventListener : EventListener
{
    protected override void OnEventSourceCreated(EventSource eventSource)
    {
        if (eventSource.Name == "Microsoft.IdentityModel.Clients.ActiveDirectory")
        {
            this.EnableEvents(eventSource, EventLevel.Verbose);
        }
    }

    protected override void OnEventWritten(EventWrittenEventArgs eventData)
    {
	    ...
    }
}

There is also a default event listener which writes logs to a local file named "AdalTraces.log". You can control the level of tracing to that event listener using the property AdalTrace.Level. By default, trace level for this event listener is set to "None" and to enable tracing to this particular listener, you need to set the above property. This is an example:

AdalTrace.Level = AdalTraceLevel.Informational;

Windows Phone Silverlight Applications

Since Silverlight does not support EventSource/EventListener, we use LoggingChannel/LoginSession for logging. There is a LoggingChannel in AdalTrace which you can connect your own LoggingSession/FileLoggingSession to it and also control trace level using it. Here is an example:

LoggingSession loggingSession = new LoggingSession("ADAL Logging Session");
loggingSession.AddLoggingChannel(AdalTrace.AdalLoggingChannel, LoggingLevel.Verbose);

and then use loggingSession.SaveToFileAsync(...) to copy the logs to a file. If you use emulator, you can then use ISETool.exe and tracerpt.exe tools to copy log file and convert it to text format.

Network Traces

You can use various tools to capture the HTTP traffic that ADAL generates. This is most useful if you are familiar with the OAuth protocol or if you need to provide diagnostic information to Microsoft or other support channels.

Fiddler is the easiest HTTP tracing tool. In order to be useful it is necessary to configure fiddler to record unencrypted SSL traffic.

NOTE: Traces generated in this way may contain highly privileged information such as access tokens, usernames and passwords. If you are using production accounts, do not share these traces with 3rd parties. If you need to supply a trace to someone in order to get support, reproduce the issue with a temporary account with usernames and passwords that you don't mind sharing.

Community Help and Support

We leverage Stack Overflow to work with the community on supporting Azure Active Directory and its SDKs, including this one! We highly recommend you ask your questions on Stack Overflow (we're all on there!) Also browser existing issues to see if someone has had your question before.

We recommend you use the "adal" tag so we can see it! Here is the latest Q&A on Stack Overflow for ADAL: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/adal

Contributing

All code is licensed under the Apache 2.0 license and we triage actively on GitHub. We enthusiastically welcome contributions and feedback. You can clone the repo and start contributing now, but check this document first.

Projects in this repo

ADAL.NET

  • This project contains the source of ADAL .NET.

ADAL.NET.WindowsForms

  • This project contains the source of the internal component used by ADAL .NET to drive user interaction on the Windows desktop.

ADAL.WinRT

  • This project contains the source of ADAL for Windows Store. ADAL for Windows Store is packaged as a Windows Runtime Component (.winmd).

ADAL.WinPhone

  • This project contains the source of ADAL for Windows Phone. ADAL for Windows Phone is packaged as a Windows Runtime Component (.winmd).

ADAL.WinPhoneSL

  • This project contains the source of ADAL for Windows Phone Silverlight.

Test.ADAL.NET

  • End to end tests for ADAL .NET.

Test.ADAL.NET.Friend

  • The friend project to access internal classes in ADAL.NET project to be used by tests.

Test.ADAL.NET.Unit

  • Unit tests for various components in ADAL .NET.

Test.ADAL.NET.WindowsForms

  • End to end tests for ADAL .NET inside a Windows Forms application. The tests in this project are identical to those in Test.ADAL.NET.

Test.ADAL.WinRT

  • End to end tests for ADAL for Windows Store. These tests require Test.ADAL.WinRT.Dashboard application running to be able to test interactive scenarios with UI automation.

Test.ADAL.WinRT.Dashboard

  • The Windows Store application used for running ADAL for Windows Store tests.

Test.ADAL.WinPhone.Dashboard

  • The Windows Phone application used for running ADAL for Windows Phone tests.

Test.ADAL.WinPhoneSL.Dashboard

  • The Windows Phone Silverlight application used for running ADAL for Windows Phone Silverlight tests.

Test.ADAL.WinRT.Unit

  • Unit tests for various components in ADAL for Windows Store as well as mock based tests for ADAL for Windows Store.

Test.ADAL.WinPhone.Unit

  • Unit tests for various components in ADAL for Windows Phone as well as mock based tests for ADAL for Windows Phone.

How to Run Tests

The majority of tests in this repo are mstests which run either as unit tests (with TestCategory 'AdalDotNetUnit' or 'AdalWinRTUnit') or as end to end test running against a mock service (with TestCategory 'AdalDotNetMock' or 'AdalWinRTMock'). These tests are self contained and can run either using Test Explorer in Visual Studio or command line tool mstest.exe.

To run the rest of the tests, you need to create an account on Azure Active Directory (AAD) and/or setup your own ADFS server and then configure them with configurations in file STS.cs.

License

Copyright (c) Microsoft Open Technologies, Inc. All rights reserved. Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");

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