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CDF and identity providers (IdPs)

With Cognite Data Fusion (CDF), you can use identity providers that support OAuth 2.0 and OpenID Connect, the two standards used in establishing the trust between the CDF services, the front-end CDF application, and the identity provider. In this unit, we use Microsoft Entra ID (ME-ID) as the identity provider.

To configure an identity provider for CDF, you need to be the administrator both for the identity provider (ME-ID in this case) and CDF and complete these configuration tasks:

  1. Establish a two-way trust between the instance of ME-ID you want to use and CDF. This sets up the trust CDF needs to verify tokens presented against ME-ID and make the CDF service an approved ME-ID service. This is required to authenticate an identity and let users sign in to CDF.

  2. At minimum, approve the CDF application and allow it to act as a client. By default, you approve the application for all users in the ME-ID instance, but you can also constrain this.

  3. Give users in ME-ID access to CDF by configuring groups in CDF with granular access to different functionality and data. You can map users in ME-ID to these groups in various ways, but the default is to map a CDF group to an ME-ID group.

Step 1: Establish trust between CDF and ME-ID

In step 1, ME-ID is the hotel security system where you can find the guests' identities. As each Cognite customer uses its own ME-ID, this step is similar to introducing a new hotel security system, and you need to connect the new security system to the door locks. Luckily, you don't need to make the instance of ME-ID trust each lock (or project). It's sufficient to do it once per CDF cluster.

However, you need to configure each CDF project individually and point it to the ME-ID instance it should trust. If not, this would be similar to each door lock trusting multiple hotel security systems, which could quickly result in many guests in the same room on the same day!

The CDF project configuration needs to point to the service issuing tokens in the customer's ME-ID instance (to know where to contact the ME-ID instance). You must specify the exact CDF cluster's identity (audience) and the identity of the customer's instance of ME-ID (issuer). The two systems can establish their trust relationship through this and the ME-ID's initial trust of the CDF cluster above.

Step 2: Approve the CDF application in ME-ID

In step 2, you need to introduce the application (let's say the CDF application) to the ME-ID instance. Like hotels typically authorize janitors to access all rooms without the approval of individual guests, ME-ID has the concept of multi-tenant app registrations. Cognite has used this feature to create a CDF application registration that any organization using ME-ID can reuse. Once ME-ID recognizes the CDF cluster, the admin can sign in to CDF and approve the application for the entire organization at the approval prompt.

A neat thing about the multi-tenant app registration is that ME-ID automatically creates a new identity for CDF in the customer's ME-ID. The admin can configure this service principal identity to give only some people access to CDF. (By default, all users are allowed to log in).

Step 3: Authorize users' access to CDF using claims in the token

When ME-ID has authenticated an identity like a user, it issues a token. This token contains information about the user and many other things. But one thing is still missing! What should this token give access to in CDF? The final step is to provide CDF with the ability to identify which group(s) configured in CDF to use for a given token.

So far, we've talked about the token similar to the key card that opens the hotel room lock. If you remember the janitor's key card, it had to be updated with information to allow temporary access to the hotel room. The key card would probably have to allow access to many hotel rooms and isn't equivalent to a single token. It can carry one or more tokens.

Inside the token (a JWT, JSON Web Token), there is information about the identity provider (or who issues the token), who this token is about (the subject, i.e., a user or an extractor), and where this token is applicable (the audience, i.e., the CDF cluster).

Finally, the token contains claims, statements about what the token can give access to, how long it lasts, and many other things. It also lists the relevant groups in ME-ID that this user (or service principal in the case of an extractor or application) is a member of. If one or more of these groups exist in the CDF project, the CDF services can determine what functionality and data this token should allow access to.

Now that you have set up the core applications and groups and verified that users can sign in with their organizational IDs, let's look next at how you register and configure apps and components to set up your data integration pipelines, contextualization flows, and data dashboards and start developing solutions.

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