IoT Hub Device Provisioning Service terminology
IoT Hub Device Provisioning Service (DPS) is a helper service for IoT Hub that enables zero-touch device provisioning to IoT hubs. With the Device Provisioning Service, you can provision millions of devices in a secure and scalable manner.
Device provisioning is a two part process.
- The first part establishes the initial connection between the device and the IoT solution by registering the device.
- The second part applies the proper configuration to the device based on the specific requirements of the solution.
Once both steps have been completed, the device has been fully provisioned. Device Provisioning Service automates both steps to provide a seamless provisioning experience for the device.
This article gives an overview of the provisioning concepts applicable to managing the service. This article is most relevant to personas involved in the cloud setup step of getting a device ready for deployment.
Service operations endpoint
The service operations endpoint is the endpoint for managing the service settings and maintaining the enrollment list. This endpoint is only used by the service administrator; it isn't used by devices.
Device provisioning endpoint
The device provisioning endpoint is the single endpoint that all devices use for provisioning. The URL is the same for all provisioning service instances, which eliminates the need to reflash devices with new connection information in supply chain scenarios. The ID scope ensures tenant isolation.
Linked IoT hubs
The Device Provisioning Service can only provision devices to IoT hubs that have been linked to it. Linking an IoT hub to an instance of the Device Provisioning Service gives the service read/write permissions to the IoT hub's device registry. With the link, a Device Provisioning Service can register a device ID and set the initial configuration in the device twin. Linked IoT hubs may be in any Azure region. You can link hubs in other subscriptions to your provisioning service.
For more information, see How to link and manage IoT hubs
Allocation policy
The allocation policy is a service-level setting that determines how Device Provisioning Service assigns devices to an IoT hub. There are four supported allocation policies:
Evenly weighted distribution: linked IoT hubs are equally likely to have devices provisioned to them. The default setting. If you're provisioning devices to only one IoT hub, you can keep this setting.
Lowest latency: devices are provisioned to an IoT hub with the lowest latency to the device. If multiple linked IoT hubs would provide the same lowest latency, the provisioning service hashes devices across those hubs
Static configuration via the enrollment list: specification of the desired IoT hub in the enrollment list takes priority over the service-level allocation policy.
Custom (Use Azure Function): A custom allocation policy gives you more control over how devices are assigned to an IoT hub. Custom allocation policies use an Azure Function to assign devices to an IoT hub. The device provisioning service calls your Azure Function code providing all relevant information about the device and the enrollment to your code. Your function code is executed and returns the IoT hub information used to provisioning the device. For more information, see Understand custom allocation policies.
For more information, see How to use allocation policies.
Enrollment
An enrollment is the record of devices or groups of devices that may register through autoprovisioning. The enrollment record contains information about the device or group of devices, including:
- The attestation mechanism used by the device
- The optional initial desired configuration
- The desired IoT hub
- The desired device ID
There are two types of enrollments supported by Device Provisioning Service: enrollment groups and individual enrollments.
Enrollment group
An enrollment group is a group of devices that share a specific attestation mechanism. Enrollment groups support X.509 certificate or symmetric key attestation.
The name of the enrollment group and the registration IDs presented by devices must be case-insensitive strings of alphanumeric characters plus the special characters: - . _ :
. The last character must be alphanumeric or dash (-
). The enrollment group name can be up to 128 characters long. In symmetric key enrollment groups, the registration IDs presented by devices can be up to 128 characters long. However, in X.509 enrollment groups, because the maximum length of the subject common name in an X.509 certificate is 64 characters, the registration IDs are limited to 64 characters.
Devices in an X.509 enrollment group present X.509 certificates that are signed by the same root or intermediate Certificate Authority (CA). The subject common name (CN) of each device's end-entity (leaf) certificate becomes the registration ID for that device. Devices in a symmetric key enrollment group present SAS tokens derived from the group symmetric key.
For devices in an enrollment group, the registration ID is also used as the device ID that is registered to IoT Hub.
Tip
We recommend using an enrollment group for a large number of devices that share a desired initial configuration, or for devices all going to the same tenant.
Individual enrollment
An individual enrollment is an entry for a single device that may register. Individual enrollments can use either X.509 leaf certificates or SAS tokens (from a physical or virtual TPM) as the attestation mechanisms.
The registration ID in an individual enrollment is a case-insensitive string of alphanumeric characters plus the special characters: - . _ :
. The last character must be alphanumeric or dash (-
). DPS supports registration IDs up to 128 characters long.
For X.509 individual enrollments, the subject common name (CN) of the certificate must match the registration ID, so the common name must adhere to the registration ID string format. The subject common name has a maximum length of 64 characters, so the registration ID is limited to 64 characters for X.509 enrollments.
Individual enrollments may have the desired IoT hub device ID specified in the enrollment entry. If it's not specified, the registration ID becomes the device ID that's registered to IoT Hub.
Tip
We recommend using individual enrollments for devices that require unique initial configurations, or for devices that can only authenticate using SAS tokens via TPM attestation.
Attestation mechanism
An attestation mechanism is the method used for confirming a device's identity. The attestation mechanism is configured on an enrollment entry and tells the provisioning service which method to use when verifying the identity of a device during registration.
Note
IoT Hub uses "authentication scheme" for a similar concept in that service.
The Device Provisioning Service supports the following forms of attestation:
- X.509 certificates based on the standard X.509 certificate authentication flow. For more information, see X.509 attestation.
- Trusted Platform Module (TPM) based on a nonce challenge, using the TPM standard for keys to present a signed Shared Access Signature (SAS) token. This doesn't require a physical TPM on the device, but the service expects to attest using the endorsement key per the TPM spec. For more information, see TPM attestation.
- Symmetric Key based on shared access signature (SAS) SAS tokens, which include a hashed signature and an embedded expiration. For more information, see Symmetric key attestation.
Hardware security module
A hardware security module, or HSM, is used for secure, hardware-based storage of device secrets, and is the most secure form of secret storage. Both X.509 certificates and SAS tokens can be stored in an HSM.
Tip
We strongly recommend using an HSM with devices to securely store secrets on your devices.
Device secrets can also be stored in software (memory), but it's a less secure form of storage than an HSM.
ID scope
The ID scope is assigned to a Device Provisioning Service when it's created and is used to uniquely identify the specific provisioning service. The ID scope is generated by the service and is immutable, which guarantees uniqueness. ID scope uniqueness is important for long-running deployment operations and merger and acquisition scenarios.
Registration Record
A registration record is the record of a device successfully registering/provisioning to an IoT Hub via the Device Provisioning Service. Registration records are created automatically; they can be deleted, but they can't be updated.
Registration ID
The registration ID is used to uniquely identify a device registration with the Device Provisioning Service. The registration ID must be unique in the provisioning service ID scope. Each device must have a registration ID. The registration ID is a case-insensitive string of alphanumeric characters plus the special characters: - . _ :
. The last character must be alphanumeric or dash (-
). DPS supports registration IDs up to 128 characters long.
- With TPM attestation, the registration ID is provided by the TPM itself.
- With X.509-based attestation, the registration ID is set to the subject common name (CN) of the device certificate. For this reason, the common name must adhere to the registration ID string format. However, the registration ID is limited to 64 characters because that's the maximum length of the subject common name in an X.509 certificate.
Device ID
The device ID is the ID as it appears in IoT Hub. The desired device ID may be set in the enrollment entry, but it isn't required to be set. Setting the desired device ID is only supported in individual enrollments. If no desired device ID is specified in the enrollment list, the registration ID is used as the device ID when registering the device. Learn more about device IDs in IoT Hub.
Operations
Operations are the billing unit of the Device Provisioning Service. One operation is the successful completion of one instruction to the service. Operations can include device registrations and re-registrations as well as service-side changes like adding and updating enrollment list entries.