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Use client certificate for authentication in your Node.js web app

Applies to: White circle with a gray X symbol. Workforce tenants Green circle with a white check mark symbol. External tenants (learn more)

Microsoft Entra External ID supports two types of authentication for confidential client applications; password-based authentication (such as client secret) and certificate-based authentication. For a higher level of security, we recommend using a certificate (instead of a client secret) as a credential in your confidential client applications.

In production, you should purchase a certificate signed by a well-known certificate authority, then use Azure Key Vault to manage certificate access and lifetime. However, for testing purposes, you can create a self-signed certificate and configure your apps to authenticate with it.

In this article, you learn to generate a self-signed certificate by using Azure Key Vault on the Azure portal, OpenSSL, or PowerShell. If you have a client secret already, you'll learn how to safely delete it.

When needed, you can also create a self-signed certificate programmatically by using .NET, Node.js, Go, Python or Java client libraries.

Prerequisites

Create a self-signed certificate

If you have an existing self-signed certificate in your local computer, you can skip this step, then proceed to Upload certificate to your app registration.

You can use Azure Key Vault to generate a self-signed certificate for your app. By using Azure Key Vault, you enjoy benefits, such as, assigning a partner Certificate Authority (CA) and automating certificate rotation.

If you have an existing self-signed certificate in Azure Key Vault, and you want to use it without downloading it, skip this step, then proceed to Use a self-signed certificate directly from Azure Key Vault. Otherwise, use the following steps to generate your certificate

  1. Follow the steps in Set and retrieve a certificate from Azure Key Vault using the Azure portal to create and download your certificate.

  2. After you create your certificate, download both the .cer file and the .pfx file such as ciam-client-app-cert.cer and ciam-client-app-cert.pfx. The .cer file contains the public key and is what you upload to your Microsoft Entra admin center.

  3. In your terminal, run the following command to extract the private key from the .pfx file. When prompted to type a pass phrase, just press Enter key you if you don't want to set one. Otherwise type a pass phrase of your choice:

    openssl pkcs12 -in ciam-client-app-cert.pfx -nocerts -out ciam-client-app-cert.key
    

    The ciam-client-app-cert.key file is what you use in your app.

Upload certificate to your app registration

To use your client app certificate, you need to associate the app you registered in the Microsoft Entra admin center with the certificate:

  1. Sign in to the Microsoft Entra admin center as at least an Application Administrator.

  2. If you have access to multiple tenants, use the Settings icon in the top menu to switch to your external tenant from the Directories + subscriptions menu.

  3. Browse to Identity > Applications > App registrations.

  4. From the app registration list, select the app that you want to associate with the certificate, such as ciam-client-app.

  5. Under Manage, select Certificates & secrets.

  6. Select Certificates, then select Upload certificate.

  7. Select the Select a file file icon, then select the certificate you want to upload, such as ciam-client-app-cert.pem or ciam-client-app-cert.cer or ciam-client-app-cert.crt.

  8. For Description, type in a description, such as, CIAM client app certificate, then select Add to upload your certificate. Once the certificate is uploaded, the Thumbprint, Start date, and Expires values are displayed.

  9. Record the Thumbprint value for use later when you configure your client app.

If you've a client secret already in place for your application, you need to delete it to avoid a malicious application for impersonating your application:

  1. Go to the Client secrets tab, and select the Delete icon.
  2. In the pop-up window that appears, select Yes.

Configure your Node.js app to use certificate

Once you associate your app registration with the certificate, you need to update your app code to start using the certificate:

  1. Locate the file that contains your MSAL configuration object, such as msalConfig in authConfig.js, then update it to look similar to the following code. If you have a client secret present, make sure you remove it:

    require('dotenv').config();
    const fs = require('fs'); //// import the fs module for reading the key file
    const crypto = require('crypto');
    const TENANT_SUBDOMAIN = process.env.TENANT_SUBDOMAIN || 'Enter_the_Tenant_Subdomain_Here';
    const REDIRECT_URI = process.env.REDIRECT_URI || 'http://localhost:3000/auth/redirect';
    const POST_LOGOUT_REDIRECT_URI = process.env.POST_LOGOUT_REDIRECT_URI || 'http://localhost:3000';
    
    const privateKeySource = fs.readFileSync('PATH_TO_YOUR_PRIVATE_KEY_FILE')
    
    const privateKeyObject = crypto.createPrivateKey({
        key: privateKeySource,
        passphrase: 'Add_Passphrase_Here',
        format: 'pem'
    });
    
    const privateKey = privateKeyObject.export({
        format: 'pem',
        type: 'pkcs8'
    });
    
    /**
     * Configuration object to be passed to MSAL instance on creation.
     * For a full list of MSAL Node configuration parameters, visit:
     * https://github.com/AzureAD/microsoft-authentication-library-for-js/blob/dev/lib/msal-node/docs/configuration.md
     */
        const msalConfig = {
            auth: {
                clientId: process.env.CLIENT_ID || 'Enter_the_Application_Id_Here', // 'Application (client) ID' of app registration in Azure portal - this value is a GUID
                authority: process.env.AUTHORITY || `https://${TENANT_SUBDOMAIN}.ciamlogin.com/`, 
                clientCertificate: {
                    thumbprint: "YOUR_CERT_THUMBPRINT", // replace with thumbprint obtained during step 2 above
                    privateKey: privateKey
                }
            },
            //... Rest of code in the msalConfig object
        };
    
    module.exports = {
        msalConfig,
        REDIRECT_URI,
        POST_LOGOUT_REDIRECT_URI,
        TENANT_SUBDOMAIN
    };
    

    In your code, replace the placeholders:

    • Add_Passphrase_Here with the pass phrase you used to encrypt your private key.

    • YOUR_CERT_THUMBPRINT with the Thumbprint value you recorded earlier.

    • PATH_TO_YOUR_PRIVATE_KEY_FILE with the file path to your private key file.

    • Enter_the_Application_Id_Here with the Application (client) ID of the app you registered earlier.

    • Enter_the_Tenant_Subdomain_Here and replace it with the Directory (tenant) subdomain. For example, if your tenant primary domain is contoso.onmicrosoft.com, use contoso. If you don't have your tenant name, learn how to read your tenant details.

    We encrypted the key (we recommend that you do so), so we have to decrypt it before we pass it to MSAL configuration object.

    //...
    const privateKeyObject = crypto.createPrivateKey({
        key: privateKeySource,
        passphrase: 'Add_Passphrase_Here',
        format: 'pem'
    });
    
    const privateKey = privateKeyObject.export({
        format: 'pem',
        type: 'pkcs8'
    });
    //...
    
  2. Use the steps in Run and test the web app to test your app.

Use a self-signed certificate directly from Azure Key Vault

You can use your existing certificate directly from Azure Key Vault:

  1. Locate the file that contains your MSAL configuration object, such as msalConfig in authConfig.js, then remove the clientSecret property:

    const msalConfig = {
        auth: {
            clientId: process.env.CLIENT_ID || 'Enter_the_Application_Id_Here', // 'Application (client) ID' of app registration in Azure portal - this value is a GUID
            authority: process.env.AUTHORITY || `https://${TENANT_SUBDOMAIN}.ciamlogin.com/`, 
        },
        //...
    };
    
  2. Install Azure CLI, then on your console, type the following command to sign-in:

    az login --tenant YOUR_TENANT_ID
    

    Replace the placeholder YOUR_TENANT_ID with the Directory (tenant) ID you copied earlier.

  3. On your console, type the following command to install the required packages:

    npm install --save @azure/identity @azure/keyvault-certificates @azure/keyvault-secrets
    
  4. In your client app, use the following code to generate thumbprint and privateKey;

    const identity = require("@azure/identity");
    const keyvaultCert = require("@azure/keyvault-certificates");
    const keyvaultSecret = require('@azure/keyvault-secrets');
    
    const KV_URL = process.env["KEY_VAULT_URL"] || "ENTER_YOUR_KEY_VAULT_URL"
    const CERTIFICATE_NAME = process.env["CERTIFICATE_NAME"] || "ENTER_THE_NAME_OF_YOUR_CERTIFICATE_ON_KEY_VAULT";
    
    // Initialize Azure SDKs
    const credential = new identity.DefaultAzureCredential();
    const certClient = new keyvaultCert.CertificateClient(KV_URL, credential);
    const secretClient = new keyvaultSecret.SecretClient(KV_URL, credential);
    
    async function getKeyAndThumbprint() {
    
        // Grab the certificate thumbprint
        const certResponse = await certClient.getCertificate(CERTIFICATE_NAME).catch(err => console.log(err));
        const thumbprint = certResponse.properties.x509Thumbprint.toString('hex')
    
        // When you upload a certificate to Key Vault, a secret containing your private key is automatically created
        const secretResponse = await secretClient.getSecret(CERTIFICATE_NAME).catch(err => console.log(err));;
    
        // secretResponse contains both public and private key, but we only need the private key
        const privateKey = secretResponse.value.split('-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----\n')[0]
    }
    
    getKeyAndThumbprint();        
    

    In your code, replace the placeholders:

    • ENTER_YOUR_KEY_VAULT_URL with your Azure Key Vault URL.

    • ENTER_THE_NAME_OF_YOUR_CERTIFICATE_ON_KEY_VAULT with the name of your certificate in Azure Key Vault.

  5. Use the thumbprint and privateKey values to update your configuration:

    let clientCert = {
        thumbprint: thumbprint, 
        privateKey: privateKey,
    };
    
    msalConfig.auth.clientCertificate = clientCert; //For this to work, you can't declares your msalConfig using const modifier 
    
  6. Then proceed to instantiate your confidential client as shown in the getMsalInstance method:

    class AuthProvider {
        //...
        getMsalInstance(msalConfig) {
            return new msal.ConfidentialClientApplication(msalConfig);
        }
        //...
    }
    
  7. Use the steps in Run and test the web app to test your app.

Next steps

Learn how to: