skills/building-identity-federation-with-saml-azure-ad/SKILL.md
Establish SAML 2.0 identity federation between on-premises Active Directory and Azure AD (Microsoft Entra ID) for seamless cross-domain authentication and SSO to cloud applications.
npx skillsauth add mukul975/anthropic-cybersecurity-skills building-identity-federation-with-saml-azure-adInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Identity federation enables users authenticated by one identity provider to access resources managed by another without maintaining separate credentials. This skill covers establishing SAML 2.0 federation between an organization's on-premises Active Directory (via AD FS or third-party IdP) and Microsoft Entra ID (formerly Azure AD), as well as configuring federated SSO for third-party SaaS applications. Federation eliminates password synchronization concerns and keeps authentication authority on-premises while extending SSO to cloud resources.
| Model | Authentication Authority | Use Case | |-------|------------------------|----------| | Federated (AD FS) | On-premises AD FS | Regulatory requirement to keep auth on-prem | | Managed (PHS) | Azure AD with password hash sync | Simplest cloud auth, AD FS not needed | | Managed (PTA) | On-premises via pass-through agent | Cloud auth validated against on-prem AD | | Third-Party Federation | External IdP (Okta, Ping) | Multi-IdP environment |
User → Cloud App (SP)
│
└── Redirect to Azure AD
│
├── Azure AD checks federated domain
│
└── Redirect to on-premises AD FS
│
├── AD FS authenticates against Active Directory
│
├── AD FS issues SAML token
│
└── Token posted back to Azure AD
│
├── Azure AD validates federation trust
│
├── Azure AD issues its own token
│
└── User receives access token for cloud app
| Component | Description | |-----------|-------------| | Token-Signing Certificate | X.509 certificate used by IdP to sign SAML assertions | | Federation Metadata | XML document describing IdP endpoints and capabilities | | Relying Party Trust | Configuration in AD FS for each SP (Azure AD) | | Claims Rules | Transform AD attributes into SAML claims | | Issuer URI | Unique identifier for the IdP (entity ID) |
# Install AD FS role
Install-WindowsFeature ADFS-Federation -IncludeManagementTools
# Configure AD FS farm
Install-AdfsFarm `
-CertificateThumbprint $certThumbprint `
-FederationServiceDisplayName "Corp Federation Service" `
-FederationServiceName "fs.corp.example.com" `
-ServiceAccountCredential $gmsaCredential
# Verify AD FS is operational
Get-AdfsProperties | Select-Object HostName, Identifier, FederationPassiveAddress
# Install Microsoft Graph PowerShell module
Install-Module Microsoft.Graph -Scope CurrentUser
# Connect to Microsoft Graph
Connect-MgGraph -Scopes "Domain.ReadWrite.All"
# Convert managed domain to federated
# Using AD FS federation metadata URL
$domainId = "corp.example.com"
$federationConfig = @{
issuerUri = "http://fs.corp.example.com/adfs/services/trust"
metadataExchangeUri = "https://fs.corp.example.com/adfs/services/trust/mex"
passiveSignInUri = "https://fs.corp.example.com/adfs/ls/"
signOutUri = "https://fs.corp.example.com/adfs/ls/?wa=wsignout1.0"
signingCertificate = $base64Cert
preferredAuthenticationProtocol = "saml"
}
# Apply federation settings to domain
New-MgDomainFederationConfiguration -DomainId $domainId -BodyParameter $federationConfig
# Add Relying Party Trust for Azure AD
Add-AdfsRelyingPartyTrust `
-Name "Microsoft Office 365 Identity Platform" `
-MetadataUrl "https://nexus.microsoftonline-p.com/federationmetadata/2007-06/federationmetadata.xml"
# Configure claim rules
$rules = @"
@RuleTemplate = "LdapClaims"
@RuleName = "Extract AD Attributes"
c:[Type == "http://schemas.microsoft.com/ws/2008/06/identity/claims/windowsaccountname",
Issuer == "AD AUTHORITY"]
=> issue(store = "Active Directory",
types = ("http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/claims/UPN",
"http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/ws/2005/05/identity/claims/emailaddress",
"http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/ws/2005/05/identity/claims/givenname",
"http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/ws/2005/05/identity/claims/surname"),
query = ";userPrincipalName,mail,givenName,sn;{0}",
param = c.Value);
@RuleTemplate = "PassThroughClaims"
@RuleName = "Pass Through UPN as NameID"
c:[Type == "http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/claims/UPN"]
=> issue(Type = "http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/ws/2005/05/identity/claims/nameidentifier",
Issuer = c.Issuer, OriginalIssuer = c.OriginalIssuer,
Value = c.Value,
ValueType = c.ValueType,
Properties["http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/ws/2005/05/identity/claimproperties/format"]
= "urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:nameid-format:persistent");
"@
Set-AdfsRelyingPartyTrust `
-TargetName "Microsoft Office 365 Identity Platform" `
-IssuanceTransformRules $rules
For each SaaS application that supports SAML SSO via Azure AD:
AD FS token-signing certificates expire and must be renewed:
# Check current certificate expiration
Get-AdfsCertificate -CertificateType Token-Signing | Select-Object Thumbprint, NotAfter
# AD FS supports auto-rollover (enabled by default)
Get-AdfsProperties | Select-Object AutoCertificateRollover
# If manual rotation is needed:
# 1. Add new certificate as secondary
Set-AdfsCertificate -CertificateType Token-Signing -Thumbprint $newThumbprint -IsPrimary $false
# 2. Update Azure AD with new certificate
# 3. Promote to primary
Set-AdfsCertificate -CertificateType Token-Signing -Thumbprint $newThumbprint -IsPrimary $true
# 4. Remove old certificate
Remove-AdfsCertificate -CertificateType Token-Signing -Thumbprint $oldThumbprint
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