Microsoft Azure Identity Library for Python
Project description
Azure Identity client library for Python
The Azure Identity library provides Azure Active Directory (Azure AD) token authentication support across the Azure SDK. It provides a set of TokenCredential
implementations, which can be used to construct Azure SDK clients that support Azure AD token authentication.
Source code | Package (PyPI) | Package (Conda) | API reference documentation | Azure AD documentation
Getting started
Install the package
Install Azure Identity with pip:
pip install azure-identity
Prerequisites
- An Azure subscription
- Python 3.7 or a recent version of Python 3 (this library doesn't support end-of-life versions)
Authenticate during local development
When debugging and executing code locally, it's typical for developers to use their own accounts for authenticating calls to Azure services. The Azure Identity library supports authenticating through developer tools to simplify local development.
Authenticate via Visual Studio Code
Developers using Visual Studio Code can use the Azure Account extension to authenticate via the editor. Apps using DefaultAzureCredential
or VisualStudioCodeCredential
can then use this account to authenticate calls in their app when running locally.
To authenticate in Visual Studio Code, ensure the Azure Account extension is installed. Once installed, open the Command Palette and run the Azure: Sign In command.
It's a known issue that VisualStudioCodeCredential
doesn't work with Azure Account extension versions newer than 0.9.11. A long-term fix to this problem is in progress. In the meantime, consider authenticating via the Azure CLI.
Authenticate via the Azure CLI
DefaultAzureCredential
and AzureCliCredential
can authenticate as the user signed in to the Azure CLI. To sign in to the Azure CLI, run az login
. On a system with a default web browser, the Azure CLI will launch the browser to authenticate a user.
When no default browser is available, az login
will use the device code authentication flow. This flow can also be selected manually by running az login --use-device-code
.
Authenticate via the Azure Developer CLI
Developers coding outside of an IDE can also use the Azure Developer CLI to authenticate. Applications using the DefaultAzureCredential
or the AzureDeveloperCliCredential
can then use this account to authenticate calls in their application when running locally.
To authenticate with the Azure Developer CLI, users can run the command azd auth login
. For users running on a system with a default web browser, the Azure Developer CLI will launch the browser to authenticate the user.
For systems without a default web browser, the azd auth login --use-device-code
command will use the device code authentication flow.
Key concepts
Credentials
A credential is a class that contains or can obtain the data needed for a service client to authenticate requests. Service clients across the Azure SDK accept a credential instance when they're constructed, and use that credential to authenticate requests.
The Azure Identity library focuses on OAuth authentication with Azure AD. It offers various credential classes capable of acquiring an Azure AD access token. See the Credential classes section below for a list of this library's credential classes.
DefaultAzureCredential
DefaultAzureCredential
is appropriate for most applications that will run in Azure because it combines common production credentials with development credentials. DefaultAzureCredential
attempts to authenticate via the following mechanisms, in this order, stopping when one succeeds:
Note:
DefaultAzureCredential
is intended to simplify getting started with the library by handling common scenarios with reasonable default behaviors. Developers who want more control or whose scenario isn't served by the default settings should use other credential types.
- Environment -
DefaultAzureCredential
will read account information specified via environment variables and use it to authenticate. - Workload Identity - If the application is deployed to Azure Kubernetes Service with Managed Identity enabled,
DefaultAzureCredential
will authenticate with it. - Managed Identity - If the application is deployed to an Azure host with Managed Identity enabled,
DefaultAzureCredential
will authenticate with it. - Azure CLI - If a user has signed in via the Azure CLI
az login
command,DefaultAzureCredential
will authenticate as that user. - Azure PowerShell - If a user has signed in via Azure PowerShell's
Connect-AzAccount
command,DefaultAzureCredential
will authenticate as that user. - Azure Developer CLI - If the developer has authenticated via the Azure Developer CLI
azd auth login
command, theDefaultAzureCredential
will authenticate with that account. - Interactive browser - If enabled,
DefaultAzureCredential
will interactively authenticate a user via the default browser. This credential type is disabled by default.
Note about VisualStudioCodeCredential
Due to a known issue, VisualStudioCodeCredential
has been removed from the DefaultAzureCredential
token chain. When the issue is resolved in a future release, this change will be reverted.
Examples
The following examples are provided below:
- Authenticate with DefaultAzureCredential
- Define a custom authentication flow with ChainedTokenCredential
- Async credentials
Authenticate with DefaultAzureCredential
More details on configuring your environment to use the DefaultAzureCredential
can be found in the class's reference documentation.
This example demonstrates authenticating the BlobServiceClient
from the azure-storage-blob library using DefaultAzureCredential
.
from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential
from azure.storage.blob import BlobServiceClient
default_credential = DefaultAzureCredential()
client = BlobServiceClient(account_url, credential=default_credential)
Enable interactive authentication with DefaultAzureCredential
Interactive authentication is disabled in the DefaultAzureCredential
by default and can be enabled with a keyword argument:
DefaultAzureCredential(exclude_interactive_browser_credential=False)
When enabled, DefaultAzureCredential
falls back to interactively authenticating via the system's default web browser when no other credential is available.
Specify a user-assigned managed identity for DefaultAzureCredential
Many Azure hosts allow the assignment of a user-assigned managed identity. To configure DefaultAzureCredential
to authenticate a user-assigned identity, use the managed_identity_client_id
keyword argument:
DefaultAzureCredential(managed_identity_client_id=client_id)
Alternatively, set the environment variable AZURE_CLIENT_ID
to the identity's client ID.
Define a custom authentication flow with ChainedTokenCredential
DefaultAzureCredential
is generally the quickest way to get started developing applications for Azure. For more advanced scenarios, ChainedTokenCredential links multiple credential instances to be tried sequentially when authenticating. It will try each chained credential in turn until one provides a token or fails to authenticate due to an error.
The following example demonstrates creating a credential that will first attempt to authenticate using managed identity. The credential will fall back to authenticating via the Azure CLI when a managed identity is unavailable. This example uses the EventHubProducerClient
from the azure-eventhub client library.
from azure.eventhub import EventHubProducerClient
from azure.identity import AzureCliCredential, ChainedTokenCredential, ManagedIdentityCredential
managed_identity = ManagedIdentityCredential()
azure_cli = AzureCliCredential()
credential_chain = ChainedTokenCredential(managed_identity, azure_cli)
client = EventHubProducerClient(namespace, eventhub_name, credential_chain)
Async credentials
This library includes a set of async APIs. To use the async credentials in azure.identity.aio, you must first install an async transport, such as aiohttp. For more information, see azure-core documentation.
Async credentials should be closed when they're no longer needed. Each async credential is an async context manager and defines an async close
method. For example:
from azure.identity.aio import DefaultAzureCredential
# call close when the credential is no longer needed
credential = DefaultAzureCredential()
...
await credential.close()
# alternatively, use the credential as an async context manager
credential = DefaultAzureCredential()
async with credential:
...
This example demonstrates authenticating the asynchronous SecretClient
from azure-keyvault-secrets with an asynchronous
credential.
from azure.identity.aio import DefaultAzureCredential
from azure.keyvault.secrets.aio import SecretClient
default_credential = DefaultAzureCredential()
client = SecretClient("https://my-vault.vault.azure.net", default_credential)
Managed identity support
Managed identity authentication is supported via either the DefaultAzureCredential
or the ManagedIdentityCredential
directly for the following Azure services:
- Azure App Service and Azure Functions
- Azure Arc
- Azure Cloud Shell
- Azure Kubernetes Service
- Azure Service Fabric
- Azure Virtual Machines
- Azure Virtual Machines Scale Sets
Examples
Authenticate with a user-assigned managed identity
from azure.identity import ManagedIdentityCredential
from azure.keyvault.secrets import SecretClient
credential = ManagedIdentityCredential(client_id=managed_identity_client_id)
client = SecretClient("https://my-vault.vault.azure.net", credential)
Authenticate with a system-assigned managed identity
from azure.identity import ManagedIdentityCredential
from azure.keyvault.secrets import SecretClient
credential = ManagedIdentityCredential()
client = SecretClient("https://my-vault.vault.azure.net", credential)
Cloud configuration
Credentials default to authenticating to the Azure AD endpoint for Azure Public Cloud. To access resources in other clouds, such as Azure Government or a private cloud, configure credentials with the authority
argument. AzureAuthorityHosts defines authorities for well-known clouds:
from azure.identity import AzureAuthorityHosts
DefaultAzureCredential(authority=AzureAuthorityHosts.AZURE_GOVERNMENT)
Not all credentials require this configuration. Credentials that authenticate through a development tool, such as AzureCliCredential
, use that tool's configuration. Similarly, VisualStudioCodeCredential
accepts an authority
argument but defaults to the authority matching VS Code's "Azure: Cloud" setting.
Credential classes
Authenticate Azure-hosted applications
Credential | Usage |
---|---|
DefaultAzureCredential |
Provides a simplified authentication experience to quickly start developing applications run in Azure. |
ChainedTokenCredential |
Allows users to define custom authentication flows composing multiple credentials. |
EnvironmentCredential |
Authenticates a service principal or user via credential information specified in environment variables. |
ManagedIdentityCredential |
Authenticates the managed identity of an Azure resource. |
WorkloadIdentityCredential |
Supports Azure AD workload identity on Kubernetes. |
Authenticate service principals
Credential | Usage | Reference |
---|---|---|
CertificateCredential |
Authenticates a service principal using a certificate. | Service principal authentication |
ClientAssertionCredential |
Authenticates a service principal using a signed client assertion. | |
ClientSecretCredential |
Authenticates a service principal using a secret. | Service principal authentication |
Authenticate users
Credential | Usage | Reference |
---|---|---|
AuthorizationCodeCredential |
Authenticates a user with a previously obtained authorization code. | OAuth2 authentication code |
DeviceCodeCredential |
Interactively authenticates a user on devices with limited UI. | Device code authentication |
InteractiveBrowserCredential |
Interactively authenticates a user with the default system browser. | OAuth2 authentication code |
OnBehalfOfCredential |
Propagates the delegated user identity and permissions through the request chain. | On-behalf-of authentication |
UsernamePasswordCredential |
Authenticates a user with a username and password (doesn't support multi-factor authentication). | Username + password authentication |
Authenticate via development tools
Credential | Usage | Reference |
---|---|---|
AzureCliCredential |
Authenticates in a development environment with the Azure CLI. | Azure CLI authentication |
AzureDeveloperCliCredential |
Authenticates in a development environment with the Azure Developer CLI. | Azure Developer CLI Reference |
AzurePowerShellCredential |
Authenticates in a development environment with the Azure PowerShell. | Azure PowerShell authentication |
VisualStudioCodeCredential |
Authenticates as the user signed in to the Visual Studio Code Azure Account extension. | VS Code Azure Account extension |
Environment variables
DefaultAzureCredential and EnvironmentCredential can be configured with environment variables. Each type of authentication requires values for specific variables:
Service principal with secret
Variable name | Value |
---|---|
AZURE_CLIENT_ID |
ID of an Azure AD application |
AZURE_TENANT_ID |
ID of the application's Azure AD tenant |
AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET |
one of the application's client secrets |
Service principal with certificate
Variable name | Value |
---|---|
AZURE_CLIENT_ID |
ID of an Azure AD application |
AZURE_TENANT_ID |
ID of the application's Azure AD tenant |
AZURE_CLIENT_CERTIFICATE_PATH |
path to a PEM or PKCS12 certificate file including private key |
AZURE_CLIENT_CERTIFICATE_PASSWORD |
password of the certificate file, if any |
Username and password
Variable name | Value |
---|---|
AZURE_CLIENT_ID |
ID of an Azure AD application |
AZURE_USERNAME |
a username (usually an email address) |
AZURE_PASSWORD |
that user's password |
Configuration is attempted in the above order. For example, if values for a client secret and certificate are both present, the client secret will be used.
Token caching
Token caching is a feature provided by the Azure Identity library that allows apps to:
- Cache tokens in memory (default) or on disk (opt-in).
- Improve resilience and performance.
- Reduce the number of requests made to Azure AD to obtain access tokens.
The Azure Identity library offers both in-memory and persistent disk caching. For more details, see the token caching documentation.
Troubleshooting
See the troubleshooting guide for details on how to diagnose various failure scenarios.
Error handling
Credentials raise CredentialUnavailableError
when they're unable to attempt authentication because they lack required data or state. For example,
EnvironmentCredential will raise this exception when its configuration is incomplete.
Credentials raise azure.core.exceptions.ClientAuthenticationError
when they fail to authenticate. ClientAuthenticationError
has a message
attribute, which describes why authentication failed. When raised by DefaultAzureCredential
or ChainedTokenCredential
, the message collects error messages from each credential in the chain.
For more information on handling specific Azure AD errors, see the Azure AD error code documentation.
Logging
This library uses the standard logging library for logging. Credentials log basic information, including HTTP sessions (URLs, headers, etc.) at INFO level. These log entries don't contain authentication secrets.
Detailed DEBUG level logging, including request/response bodies and header values, isn't enabled by default. It can be enabled with the logging_enable
argument. For example:
credential = DefaultAzureCredential(logging_enable=True)
CAUTION: DEBUG level logs from credentials contain sensitive information. These logs must be protected to avoid compromising account security.
Next steps
Client library support
Client and management libraries listed on the Azure SDK release page that support Azure AD authentication accept credentials from this library. You can learn more about using these libraries in their documentation, which is linked from the release page.
Known issues
This library doesn't support Azure AD B2C.
For other open issues, refer to the library's GitHub repository.
Provide feedback
If you encounter bugs or have suggestions, open an issue.
Contributing
This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit https://cla.microsoft.com.
When you submit a pull request, a CLA-bot will automatically determine whether you need to provide a CLA and decorate the PR appropriately (e.g., label, comment). Simply follow the instructions provided by the bot. You'll only need to do this once across all repos using our CLA.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information, see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.
Release History
1.13.0 (2023-05-11)
Breaking Changes
These changes do not impact the API of stable versions such as 1.12.0. Only code written against a beta version such as 1.13.0b4 may be affected.
- Windows Web Account Manager (WAM) Brokered Authentication is still in preview and not available in this release. It will be available in the next beta release.
- Additional Continuous Access Evaluation (CAE) support for service principal credentials is still in preview and not available in this release. It will be available in the next beta release.
- Renamed keyword argument
developer_credential_timeout
toprocess_timeout
inDefaultAzureCredential
to remain consistent with the other credentials that launch a subprocess to acquire tokens.
1.13.0b4 (2023-04-11)
Features Added
- Credentials that are implemented via launching a subprocess to acquire tokens now have configurable timeouts using the
process_timeout
keyword argument. This addresses scenarios where these proceses can take longer than the current default timeout values. The affected credentials areAzureCliCredential
,AzureDeveloperCliCredential
, andAzurePowerShellCredential
. (Note: ForDefaultAzureCredential
, thedeveloper_credential_timeout
keyword argument allows users to propagate this option toAzureCliCredential
,AzureDeveloperCliCredential
, andAzurePowerShellCredential
in the authentication chain.) (#28290)
1.13.0b3 (2023-03-07)
Features Added
- Changed parameter from
instance_discovery
todisable_instance_discovery
to make it more explicit. - Service principal credentials now enable support for Continuous Access Evaluation (CAE). This indicates to Azure Active Directory that your application can handle CAE claims challenges.
1.13.0b2 (2023-02-07)
Features Added
- Added
AzureDeveloperCredential
for Azure Developer CLI. (#27916) - Added
WorkloadIdentityCredential
for Workload Identity Federation on Kubernetes (#28536) - Added support to use "TryAutoDetect" as the value for
AZURE_REGIONAL_AUTHORITY_NAME
to enable auto detecting the appropriate authority (#526)
1.13.0b1 (2023-01-10)
Features Added
- Added Windows Web Account Manager (WAM) Brokered Authentication support. (#23687)
Breaking Changes
These changes do not impact the API of stable versions such as 1.12.0. Only code written against a beta version such as 1.12.0b1 may be affected.
- Replaced
validate_authority
withinstance_discovery
. Now instead of setting validate_authority=False to disable authority validation and instance discovery, you need to use instance_discovery=False.
Bugs Fixed
- Fixed an issue where
AzureCliCredential
would return the wrong error message when the Azure CLI was not installed on non-English consoles. (#27965)
1.12.0 (2022-11-08)
Bugs Fixed
AzureCliCredential
now works even whenaz
prints warnings to stderr. (#26857) (thanks to @micromaomao for the contribution)- Fixed issue where user-supplied
TokenCachePersistenceOptions
weren't propagated when usingSharedTokenCacheCredential
(#26982)
Breaking Changes
- Excluded
VisualStudioCodeCredential
fromDefaultAzureCredential
token chain by default as SDK authentication via Visual Studio Code is broken due to issue #23249. TheVisualStudioCodeCredential
will be re-enabled in theDefaultAzureCredential
flow once a fix is in place. Issue #25713 tracks this. In the meantime Visual Studio Code users can authenticate their development environment using the Azure CLI.
Other Changes
- Added Python 3.11 support and stopped supporting Python 3.6.
1.12.0b2 (2022-10-11)
1.12.0 release candidate
1.12.0b1 (2022-09-22)
Features Added
- Added ability to specify
tenant_id
forAzureCliCredential
&AzurePowerShellCredential
(thanks @tikicoder) (#25207) - Removed
VisualStudioCodeCredential
fromDefaultAzureCredential
token chain. (#23249) EnvironmentCredential
addedAZURE_CLIENT_CERTIFICATE_PASSWORD
support for the cert password (#24652)- Added
validate_authority
support for msal client (#22625)
1.11.0 (2022-09-19)
Features Added
- Added
additionally_allowed_tenants
to the following credential options to force explicit opt-in behavior for multi-tenant authentication:AuthorizationCodeCredential
AzureCliCredential
AzurePowerShellCredential
CertificateCredential
ClientAssertionCredential
ClientSecretCredential
DefaultAzureCredential
OnBehalfOfCredential
UsernamePasswordCredential
VisualStudioCodeCredential
Breaking Changes
- Credential types supporting multi-tenant authentication will now throw
ClientAuthenticationError
if the requested tenant ID doesn't match the credential's tenant ID, and is not included inadditionally_allowed_tenants
. Applications must now explicitly add additional tenants to theadditionally_allowed_tenants
list, or add '*' to list, to enable acquiring tokens from tenants other than the originally specified tenant ID.
More information on this change and the consideration behind it can be found here.
- These beta features in 1.11.0b3 have been removed from this release and will be added back in 1.12.0b1
tenant_id
forAzureCliCredential
- removed
VisualStudioCodeCredential
fromDefaultAzureCredential
token chain AZURE_CLIENT_CERTIFICATE_PASSWORD
support forEnvironmentCredential
validate_authority
support
1.11.0b3 (2022-08-09)
Azure-identity is supported on Python 3.7 or later. For more details, please read our page on Azure SDK for Python version support policy.
Features Added
- Added ability to specify
tenant_id
forAzureCliCredential
(thanks @tikicoder) (#25207)
Breaking Changes
- Removed
VisualStudioCodeCredential
fromDefaultAzureCredential
token chain. (#23249)
1.11.0b2 (2022-07-05)
Features Added
EnvironmentCredential
addedAZURE_CLIENT_CERTIFICATE_PASSWORD
support for the cert password (#24652)
Bugs Fixed
- Fixed the issue that failed to parse PEM certificate if it does not start with "-----" (#24643)
1.11.0b1 (2022-05-10)
Features Added
- Added
validate_authority
support for msal client (#22625)
1.10.0 (2022-04-28)
Breaking Changes
These changes do not impact the API of stable versions such as 1.9.0. Only code written against a beta version such as 1.10.0b1 may be affected.
validate_authority
support is not available in 1.10.0.
Other Changes
- Supported msal-extensions version 1.0.0 (#23927)
1.10.0b1 (2022-04-07)
Features Added
- Added
validate_authority
support for msal client (#22625)
1.9.0 (2022-04-05)
Features Added
- Added PII logging if logging.DEBUG is enabled. (#23203)
Breaking Changes
These changes do not impact the API of stable versions such as 1.8.0. Only code written against a beta version such as 1.9.0b1 may be affected.
validate_authority
support is not available in 1.9.0.
Bugs Fixed
- Added check on
content
from msal response. (#23483) - Fixed the issue that async OBO credential does not refresh correctly. (#21981)
Other Changes
- Removed
resource_id
, please useidentity_config
instead. - Renamed argument name
get_assertion
tofunc
forClientAssertionCredential
.
1.9.0b1 (2022-03-08)
Features Added
- Added
validate_authority
support for msal client (#22625) - Added
resource_id
support for user-assigned managed identity (#22329) - Added
ClientAssertionCredential
support (#22328) - Updated App service API version to "2019-08-01" (#23034)
1.8.0 (2022-03-01)
Bugs Fixed
-
Handle injected "tenant_id" and "claims" (#23138)
"tenant_id" argument in get_token() method is only supported by:
AuthorizationCodeCredential
AzureCliCredential
AzurePowerShellCredential
InteractiveBrowserCredential
DeviceCodeCredential
EnvironmentCredential
UsernamePasswordCredential
it is ignored by other types of credentials.
Other Changes
- Python 2.7 is no longer supported. Please use Python version 3.6 or later.
1.7.1 (2021-11-09)
Bugs Fixed
- Fix multi-tenant auth using async AadClient (#21289)
1.7.0 (2021-10-14)
Breaking Changes
These changes do not impact the API of stable versions such as 1.6.0. Only code written against a beta version such as 1.7.0b1 may be affected.
- The
allow_multitenant_authentication
argument has been removed and the default behavior is now as if it were true. The multitenant authentication feature can be totally disabled by setting the environment variableAZURE_IDENTITY_DISABLE_MULTITENANTAUTH
toTrue
. azure.identity.RegionalAuthority
is removed.regional_authority
argument is removed forCertificateCredential
andClientSecretCredential
.AzureApplicationCredential
is removed.client_credential
in the ctor ofOnBehalfOfCredential
is removed. Please useclient_secret
orclient_certificate
instead.- Make
user_assertion
in the ctor ofOnBehalfOfCredential
a keyword only argument.
1.7.0b4 (2021-09-09)
Features Added
CertificateCredential
accepts certificates in PKCS12 format (#13540)OnBehalfOfCredential
supports the on-behalf-of authentication flow for accessing resources on behalf of users (#19308)DefaultAzureCredential
allows specifying the client ID of interactive browser via keyword argumentinteractive_browser_client_id
(#20487)
Other Changes
- Added context manager methods and
close()
to credentials in theazure.identity
namespace. At the end of awith
block, or whenclose()
is called, these credentials close their underlying transport sessions. (#18798)
1.6.1 (2021-08-19)
Other Changes
- Persistent cache implementations are now loaded on demand, enabling workarounds when importing transitive dependencies such as pywin32 fails (#19989)
1.7.0b3 (2021-08-10)
Breaking Changes
These changes do not impact the API of stable versions such as 1.6.0. Only code written against a beta version such as 1.7.0b1 may be affected.
- Renamed
AZURE_POD_IDENTITY_TOKEN_URL
toAZURE_POD_IDENTITY_AUTHORITY_HOST
. The value should now be a host, for example "http://169.254.169.254" (the default).
Bugs Fixed
- Fixed import of
azure.identity.aio.AzureApplicationCredential
(#19943)
Other Changes
- Added
CustomHookPolicy
to credential HTTP pipelines. This allows applications to initialize credentials withraw_request_hook
andraw_response_hook
keyword arguments. The value of these arguments should be a callback taking aPipelineRequest
andPipelineResponse
, respectively. For example:ManagedIdentityCredential(raw_request_hook=lambda request: print(request.http_request.url))
- Reduced redundant
ChainedTokenCredential
andDefaultAzureCredential
logging. On Python 3.7+, credentials invoked by these classes now log debug rather than info messages. (#18972) - Persistent cache implementations are now loaded on demand, enabling workarounds when importing transitive dependencies such as pywin32 fails (#19989)
1.7.0b2 (2021-07-08)
Features Added
InteractiveBrowserCredential
keyword argumentlogin_hint
enables pre-filling the username/email address field on the login page (#19225)AzureApplicationCredential
, a default credential chain for applications deployed to Azure (#19309)
Bugs Fixed
azure.identity.aio.ManagedIdentityCredential
is an async context manager that closes its underlying transport session at the end of awith
block
Other Changes
- Most credentials can use tenant ID values returned from authentication
challenges, enabling them to request tokens from the correct tenant. This
behavior is optional and controlled by a new keyword argument,
allow_multitenant_authentication
. (#19300)- When
allow_multitenant_authentication
is False, which is the default, a credential will raiseClientAuthenticationError
when its configured tenant doesn't match the tenant specified for a token request. This may be a different exception than was raised by prior versions of the credential. To maintain the prior behavior, set environment variable AZURE_IDENTITY_ENABLE_LEGACY_TENANT_SELECTION to "True".
- When
CertificateCredential
andClientSecretCredential
support regional STS on Azure VMs by either keyword argumentregional_authority
or environment variableAZURE_REGIONAL_AUTHORITY_NAME
. Seeazure.identity.RegionalAuthority
for possible values. (#19301)- Upgraded minimum
azure-core
version to 1.11.0 and minimummsal
version to 1.12.0 - After IMDS authentication fails,
ManagedIdentityCredential
raises consistent error messages and usesraise from
to propagate inner exceptions (#19423)
1.7.0b1 (2021-06-08)
Beginning with this release, this library requires Python 2.7 or 3.6+.
Added
VisualStudioCodeCredential
gets its default tenant and authority configuration from VS Code user settings (#14808)
1.6.0 (2021-05-13)
This is the last version to support Python 3.5. The next version will require Python 2.7 or 3.6+.
Added
AzurePowerShellCredential
authenticates as the identity logged in to Azure PowerShell. This credential is part ofDefaultAzureCredential
by default but can be disabled by a keyword argument:DefaultAzureCredential(exclude_powershell_credential=True)
(#17341)
Fixed
AzureCliCredential
raisesCredentialUnavailableError
when the CLI times out, and kills timed out subprocesses- Reduced retry delay for
ManagedIdentityCredential
on Azure VMs
1.6.0b3 (2021-04-06)
Breaking Changes
These changes do not impact the API of stable versions such as 1.5.0. Only code written against a beta version such as 1.6.0b1 may be affected.
- Removed property
AuthenticationRequiredError.error_details
Fixed
- Credentials consistently retry token requests after connection failures, or when instructed to by a Retry-After header
- ManagedIdentityCredential caches tokens correctly
Added
InteractiveBrowserCredential
functions in more WSL environments (#17615)
1.6.0b2 (2021-03-09)
Breaking Changes
These changes do not impact the API of stable versions such as 1.5.0. Only code written against a beta version such as 1.6.0b1 may be affected.
-
Renamed
CertificateCredential
keyword argumentcertificate_bytes
tocertificate_data
-
Credentials accepting keyword arguments
allow_unencrypted_cache
andenable_persistent_cache
to configure persistent caching accept acache_persistence_options
argument instead whose value should be an instance ofTokenCachePersistenceOptions
. For example:# before (e.g. in 1.6.0b1): DeviceCodeCredential(enable_persistent_cache=True, allow_unencrypted_cache=True) # after: cache_options = TokenCachePersistenceOptions(allow_unencrypted_storage=True) DeviceCodeCredential(cache_persistence_options=cache_options)
See the documentation and samples for more details.
Added
- New class
TokenCachePersistenceOptions
configures persistent caching - The
AuthenticationRequiredError.claims
property provides any additional claims required by a user credential'sauthenticate()
method
1.6.0b1 (2021-02-09)
Changed
- Raised minimum msal version to 1.7.0
- Raised minimum six version to 1.12.0
Added
InteractiveBrowserCredential
uses PKCE internally to protect authorization codesCertificateCredential
can load a certificate from bytes instead of a file path. To provide a certificate as bytes, use the keyword argumentcertificate_bytes
instead ofcertificate_path
, for example:CertificateCredential(tenant_id, client_id, certificate_bytes=cert_bytes)
(#14055)- User credentials support Continuous Access Evaluation (CAE)
- Application authentication APIs from 1.5.0b2
Fixed
ManagedIdentityCredential
correctly parses responses from the current (preview) version of Azure ML managed identity (#15361)
1.5.0 (2020-11-11)
Breaking Changes
- Renamed optional
CertificateCredential
keyword argumentsend_certificate
(added in 1.5.0b1) tosend_certificate_chain
- Removed user authentication APIs added in prior betas. These will be
reintroduced in 1.6.0b1. Passing the keyword arguments below
generally won't cause a runtime error, but the arguments have no effect.
(#14601)
- Removed
authenticate
method fromDeviceCodeCredential
,InteractiveBrowserCredential
, andUsernamePasswordCredential
- Removed
allow_unencrypted_cache
andenable_persistent_cache
keyword arguments fromCertificateCredential
,ClientSecretCredential
,DeviceCodeCredential
,InteractiveBrowserCredential
, andUsernamePasswordCredential
- Removed
disable_automatic_authentication
keyword argument fromDeviceCodeCredential
andInteractiveBrowserCredential
- Removed
allow_unencrypted_cache
keyword argument fromSharedTokenCacheCredential
- Removed classes
AuthenticationRecord
andAuthenticationRequiredError
- Removed
- Removed
identity_config
keyword argument fromManagedIdentityCredential
(was added in 1.5.0b1)
Changed
DeviceCodeCredential
parameterclient_id
is now optional. When not provided, the credential will authenticate users to an Azure development application. (#14354)- Credentials raise
ValueError
when constructed with tenant IDs containing invalid characters (#14821) - Raised minimum msal version to 1.6.0
Added
Fixed
- Prevent
VisualStudioCodeCredential
using invalid authentication data when no user is signed in to Visual Studio Code (#14438) ManagedIdentityCredential
uses the API version supported by Azure Functions on Linux consumption hosting plans (#14670)InteractiveBrowserCredential.get_token()
raises a clearer error message when it times out waiting for a user to authenticate on Python 2.7 (#14773)
1.5.0b2 (2020-10-07)
Fixed
AzureCliCredential.get_token
correctly sets token expiration time, preventing clients from using expired tokens (#14345)
Changed
- Adopted msal-extensions 0.3.0 (#13107)
1.4.1 (2020-10-07)
Fixed
AzureCliCredential.get_token
correctly sets token expiration time, preventing clients from using expired tokens (#14345)
1.5.0b1 (2020-09-08)
Added
- Application authentication APIs from 1.4.0b7
ManagedIdentityCredential
supports the latest version of App Service (#11346)DefaultAzureCredential
allows specifying the client ID of a user-assigned managed identity via keyword argumentmanaged_identity_client_id
(#12991)CertificateCredential
supports Subject Name/Issuer authentication when created withsend_certificate=True
. The asyncCertificateCredential
(azure.identity.aio.CertificateCredential
) will support this in a future version. (#10816)- Credentials in
azure.identity
support ADFS authorities, exceptingVisualStudioCodeCredential
. To configure a credential for this, configure the credential withauthority
andtenant_id="adfs"
keyword arguments, for exampleClientSecretCredential(authority="<your ADFS URI>", tenant_id="adfs")
. Async credentials (those inazure.identity.aio
) will support ADFS in a future release. (#12696) InteractiveBrowserCredential
keyword argumentredirect_uri
enables authentication with a user-specified application having a custom redirect URI (#13344)
Breaking changes
- Removed
authentication_record
keyword argument from the asyncSharedTokenCacheCredential
, i.e.azure.identity.aio.SharedTokenCacheCredential
1.4.0 (2020-08-10)
Added
DefaultAzureCredential
uses the value of environment variableAZURE_CLIENT_ID
to configure a user-assigned managed identity. (#10931)
Breaking Changes
- Renamed
VSCodeCredential
toVisualStudioCodeCredential
- Removed application authentication APIs added in 1.4.0 beta versions. These
will be reintroduced in 1.5.0b1. Passing the keyword arguments below
generally won't cause a runtime error, but the arguments have no effect.
- Removed
authenticate
method fromDeviceCodeCredential
,InteractiveBrowserCredential
, andUsernamePasswordCredential
- Removed
allow_unencrypted_cache
andenable_persistent_cache
keyword arguments fromCertificateCredential
,ClientSecretCredential
,DeviceCodeCredential
,InteractiveBrowserCredential
, andUsernamePasswordCredential
- Removed
disable_automatic_authentication
keyword argument fromDeviceCodeCredential
andInteractiveBrowserCredential
- Removed
allow_unencrypted_cache
keyword argument fromSharedTokenCacheCredential
- Removed classes
AuthenticationRecord
andAuthenticationRequiredError
- Removed
identity_config
keyword argument fromManagedIdentityCredential
- Removed
1.4.0b7 (2020-07-22)
DefaultAzureCredential
has a new optional keyword argument,visual_studio_code_tenant_id
, which sets the tenant the credential should authenticate in when authenticating as the Azure user signed in to Visual Studio Code.- Renamed
AuthenticationRecord.deserialize
positional parameterjson_string
todata
.
1.4.0b6 (2020-07-07)
AzureCliCredential
no longer raises an exception due to unexpected output from the CLI when run by PyCharm (thanks @NVolcz) (#11362)- Upgraded minimum
msal
version to 1.3.0 - The async
AzureCliCredential
correctly invokes/bin/sh
(#12048)
1.4.0b5 (2020-06-12)
- Prevent an error on importing
AzureCliCredential
on Windows caused by a bug in old versions of Python 3.6 (this bug was fixed in Python 3.6.5). (#12014) SharedTokenCacheCredential.get_token
raisesValueError
instead ofClientAuthenticationError
when called with no scopes. (#11553)
1.4.0b4 (2020-06-09)
ManagedIdentityCredential
can configure a user-assigned identity using any identifier supported by the current hosting environment. To specify an identity by its client ID, continue using theclient_id
argument. To specify an identity by any other ID, use theidentity_config
argument, for example:ManagedIdentityCredential(identity_config={"object_id": ".."})
(#10989)CertificateCredential
andClientSecretCredential
can optionally store access tokens they acquire in a persistent cache. To enable this, construct the credential withenable_persistent_cache=True
. On Linux, the persistent cache requires libsecret andpygobject
. If these are unavailable or unusable (e.g. in an SSH session), loading the persistent cache will raise an error. You may optionally configure the credential to fall back to an unencrypted cache by constructing it with keyword argumentallow_unencrypted_cache=True
. (#11347)AzureCliCredential
raisesCredentialUnavailableError
when no user is logged in to the Azure CLI. (#11819)AzureCliCredential
andVSCodeCredential
, which enable authenticating as the identity signed in to the Azure CLI and Visual Studio Code, respectively, can be imported fromazure.identity
andazure.identity.aio
.azure.identity.aio.AuthorizationCodeCredential.get_token()
no longer accepts optional keyword argumentsexecutor
orloop
. Prior versions of the method didn't use these correctly, provoking exceptions, and internal changes in this version have made them obsolete.InteractiveBrowserCredential
raisesCredentialUnavailableError
when it can't start an HTTP server onlocalhost
. (#11665)- When constructing
DefaultAzureCredential
, you can now configure a tenant ID forInteractiveBrowserCredential
. When none is specified, the credential authenticates users in their home tenants. To specify a different tenant, use the keyword argumentinteractive_browser_tenant_id
, or set the environment variableAZURE_TENANT_ID
. (#11548) SharedTokenCacheCredential
can be initialized with anAuthenticationRecord
provided by a user credential. (#11448)- The user authentication API added to
DeviceCodeCredential
andInteractiveBrowserCredential
in 1.4.0b3 is available onUsernamePasswordCredential
as well. (#11449) - The optional persistent cache for
DeviceCodeCredential
andInteractiveBrowserCredential
added in 1.4.0b3 is now available on Linux and macOS as well as Windows. (#11134)- On Linux, the persistent cache requires libsecret and
pygobject
. If these are unavailable, or libsecret is unusable (e.g. in an SSH session), loading the persistent cache will raise an error. You may optionally configure the credential to fall back to an unencrypted cache by constructing it with keyword argumentallow_unencrypted_cache=True
.
- On Linux, the persistent cache requires libsecret and
1.4.0b3 (2020-05-04)
EnvironmentCredential
correctly initializesUsernamePasswordCredential
with the value ofAZURE_TENANT_ID
(#11127)- Values for the constructor keyword argument
authority
andAZURE_AUTHORITY_HOST
may optionally specify an "https" scheme. For example, "https://login.microsoftonline.us" and "login.microsoftonline.us" are both valid. (#10819) - First preview of new API for authenticating users with
DeviceCodeCredential
andInteractiveBrowserCredential
(#10612)- new method
authenticate
interactively authenticates a user, returns a serializableAuthenticationRecord
- new constructor keyword arguments
authentication_record
enables initializing a credential with anAuthenticationRecord
from a prior authenticationdisable_automatic_authentication=True
configures the credential to raiseAuthenticationRequiredError
when interactive authentication is necessary to acquire a token rather than immediately begin that authenticationenable_persistent_cache=True
configures these credentials to use a persistent cache on supported platforms (in this release, Windows only). By default they cache in memory only.
- new method
- Now
DefaultAzureCredential
can authenticate with the identity signed in to Visual Studio Code's Azure extension. (#10472)
1.4.0b2 (2020-04-06)
- After an instance of
DefaultAzureCredential
successfully authenticates, it uses the same authentication method for every subsequent token request. This makes subsequent requests more efficient, and prevents unexpected changes of authentication method. (#10349) - All
get_token
methods consistently require at least one scope argument, raising an error when none is passed. Althoughget_token()
may sometimes have succeeded in prior versions, it couldn't do so consistently because its behavior was undefined, and dependened on the credential's type and internal state. (#10243) SharedTokenCacheCredential
raisesCredentialUnavailableError
when the cache is available but contains ambiguous or insufficient information. This causesChainedTokenCredential
to correctly try the next credential in the chain. (#10631)- The host of the Active Directory endpoint credentials should use can be set
in the environment variable
AZURE_AUTHORITY_HOST
. Seeazure.identity.KnownAuthorities
for a list of common values. (#8094)
1.3.1 (2020-03-30)
ManagedIdentityCredential
raisesCredentialUnavailableError
when no identity is configured for an IMDS endpoint. This causesChainedTokenCredential
to correctly try the next credential in the chain. (#10488)
1.4.0b1 (2020-03-10)
DefaultAzureCredential
can now authenticate using the identity logged in to the Azure CLI, unless explicitly disabled with a keyword argument:DefaultAzureCredential(exclude_cli_credential=True)
(#10092)
1.3.0 (2020-02-11)
- Correctly parse token expiration time on Windows App Service (#9393)
- Credentials raise
CredentialUnavailableError
when they can't attempt to authenticate due to missing data or state (#9372) CertificateCredential
supports password-protected private keys (#9434)
1.2.0 (2020-01-14)
- All credential pipelines include
ProxyPolicy
(#8945) - Async credentials are async context managers and have an async
close
method (#9090)
1.1.0 (2019-11-27)
- Constructing
DefaultAzureCredential
no longer raisesImportError
on Python 3.8 on Windows (8294) InteractiveBrowserCredential
raises when unable to open a web browser (8465)InteractiveBrowserCredential
prompts for account selection (8470)- The credentials composing
DefaultAzureCredential
are configurable by keyword arguments (8514) SharedTokenCacheCredential
accepts an optionaltenant_id
keyword argument (8689)
1.0.1 (2019-11-05)
ClientCertificateCredential
uses application and tenant IDs correctly (8315)InteractiveBrowserCredential
properly caches tokens (8352)- Adopted msal 1.0.0 and msal-extensions 0.1.3 (8359)
1.0.0 (2019-10-29)
Breaking changes:
- Async credentials now default to
aiohttp
for transport but the library does not require it as a dependency because the async API is optional. To use async credentials, please installaiohttp
or see azure-core documentation for information about customizing the transport. - Renamed
ClientSecretCredential
parameter "secret
" to "client_secret
" - All credentials with
tenant_id
andclient_id
positional parameters now accept them in that order - Changes to
InteractiveBrowserCredential
parameters- positional parameter
client_id
is now an optional keyword argument. If no value is provided, the Azure CLI's client ID will be used. - Optional keyword argument
tenant
renamedtenant_id
- positional parameter
- Changes to
DeviceCodeCredential
- optional positional parameter
prompt_callback
is now a keyword argument prompt_callback
's third argument is now adatetime
representing the expiration time of the device code- optional keyword argument
tenant
renamedtenant_id
- optional positional parameter
- Changes to
ManagedIdentityCredential
- now accepts no positional arguments, and only one keyword argument:
client_id
- transport configuration is now done through keyword arguments as
described in
azure-core
documentation
- now accepts no positional arguments, and only one keyword argument:
Fixes and improvements:
- Authenticating with a single sign-on shared with other Microsoft applications only requires a username when multiple users have signed in (#8095)
DefaultAzureCredential
accepts anauthority
keyword argument, enabling its use in national clouds (#8154)
Dependency changes
- Adopted
msal_extensions
0.1.2 - Constrained
msal
requirement to >=0.4.1, <1.0.0
1.0.0b4 (2019-10-07)
New features:
AuthorizationCodeCredential
authenticates with a previously obtained authorization code. See Azure Active Directory's authorization code documentation for more information about this authentication flow.- Multi-cloud support: client credentials accept the authority of an Azure Active
Directory authentication endpoint as an
authority
keyword argument. Known authorities are defined inazure.identity.KnownAuthorities
. The default authority is for Azure Public Cloud,login.microsoftonline.com
(KnownAuthorities.AZURE_PUBLIC_CLOUD
). An application running in Azure Government would useKnownAuthorities.AZURE_GOVERNMENT
instead:
from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential, KnownAuthorities credential = DefaultAzureCredential(authority=KnownAuthorities.AZURE_GOVERNMENT)
Breaking changes:
- Removed
client_secret
parameter fromInteractiveBrowserCredential
Fixes and improvements:
UsernamePasswordCredential
correctly handles environment configuration with no tenant information (#7260)- user realm discovery requests are sent through credential pipelines (#7260)
1.0.0b3 (2019-09-10)
New features:
SharedTokenCacheCredential
authenticates with tokens stored in a local cache shared by Microsoft applications. This enables Azure SDK clients to authenticate silently after you've signed in to Visual Studio 2019, for example.DefaultAzureCredential
includesSharedTokenCacheCredential
when the shared cache is available, and environment variableAZURE_USERNAME
is set. See the README for more information.
Dependency changes:
- New dependency:
msal-extensions
0.1.1
1.0.0b2 (2019-08-05)
Breaking changes:
- Removed
azure.core.Configuration
from the public API in preparation for a revamped configuration API. Staticcreate_config
methods have been renamed_create_config
, and will be removed in a future release.
Dependency changes:
- Adopted azure-core 1.0.0b2
- If you later want to revert to a version requiring azure-core 1.0.0b1,
of this or another Azure SDK library, you must explicitly install azure-core
1.0.0b1 as well. For example:
pip install azure-core==1.0.0b1 azure-identity==1.0.0b1
- If you later want to revert to a version requiring azure-core 1.0.0b1,
of this or another Azure SDK library, you must explicitly install azure-core
1.0.0b1 as well. For example:
- Adopted MSAL 0.4.1
- New dependency for Python 2.7: mock
New features:
- Added credentials for authenticating users:
DeviceCodeCredential
InteractiveBrowserCredential
UsernamePasswordCredential
- async versions of these credentials will be added in a future release
1.0.0b1 (2019-06-28)
Version 1.0.0b1 is the first preview of our efforts to create a user-friendly and Pythonic authentication API for Azure SDK client libraries. For more information about preview releases of other Azure SDK libraries, please visit https://aka.ms/azure-sdk-preview1-python.
This release supports service principal and managed identity authentication. See the documentation for more details. User authentication will be added in an upcoming preview release.
This release supports only global Azure Active Directory tenants, i.e. those using the https://login.microsoftonline.com authentication endpoint.
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