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Quickstart: Register and configure a SPA application for Dataverse using msal.js

This topic describes the process of registering and configuring the simplest Single-Page Application (SPA) to access data in Microsoft Dataverse using msal.js and Cross-origin Resource Sharing (CORS). More information: Use OAuth with Cross-Origin Resource Sharing to connect a Single-Page Application to Dataverse .

Prerequisites

Goal of this quick start

When you complete this quick start you will be able to run a simple SPA application that will provide the ability for a user to authenticate and retrieve data from Dataverse.

When you debug the application initially there will only be a Login button.

  • Click Login and a pop-up will open to enter your credentials.

  • After you enter your credentials you will find the Login button is hidden and a Logout button and a Get Accounts button are visible. You will also see a greeting using information from your user account.

  • Click the Get Accounts button to retrieve 10 account records from your Dataverse organization. The result is shown in the following screenshot:

    The SimpleSPA page.

  • Finally, you can click on Logout button to logout.

Note

This SPA application is not intended to represent a pattern for developing robust SPA applications. It is simplified to focus on the process of registering and configuring the application.

Get your Dataverse Web API endpoint

Use the instructions in View developer resources to identify a Web API endpoint for an environment you can access. It should look something like this: https://yourorg.api.crm.dynamics.com/api/data/v9.2.

Register your application

  1. From Power Platform admin center in the left navigation expand Admin centers and select Microsoft Entra ID.

    Microsoft Entra ID from Power Platform Admin Center

    This will open the Microsoft Entra admin center

  2. Expand Applications and select App registrations.

    Azure App registrations from Microsoft Entra admin center

  3. Click New registration. This will open the Register an application form.

    Register and application form

  4. In the Register an application form, type a Name. For the purpose of this quickstart, use the name Simple SPA.

  5. For Supported account types, the default selection should be:
    Accounts in this organizational directory only (<tenant name> only – Single tenant). Don't change this.

  6. For Redirect URI (optional), use these options:

    • Select a platform: Single-page application (SPA)
    • e.g. https://example.com/auth: http://localhost:5500/index.html
  7. Click Register.

  8. In the Overview area, copy the following values because you will need them in the final step of Create a web application project.

    • Application (client) ID
    • Directory (tenant) ID
  9. Select API permissions.

  10. Click Add a permission.

  11. In the Request API permissions fly-out, select Dynamics CRM.

    • If you don't see Dynamics CRM, look for Dataverse. Or select the APIs my organization uses tab and search for Dataverse.
  12. Select the user_impersonation delegated permission.

  13. Click Add permissions.

The configured permissions should look like this when you are done:

Configured permissions for Simple SPA app

Install Live Server Visual Studio Code extension

Live Server is a Visual Studio Code extension that allows you to easily launch a local development server for web pages.

  1. Use these instructions to find and install the Live Server extension for VS Code in the VS Code marketplace:

  2. After you have installed the Live Server extension, make these changes to the default settings.

  3. Click the gear icon in VS Code and select Settings , or use the Ctrl+, keyboard shortcut.

  4. In the search window type liveServer.settings.host and change the default value from 127.0.0.1 to localhost.

Create a web application project

  1. Create a folder on your computer. The name is not important but for the purpose of these instructions name it simplespa.

  2. Open VS Code and select File > Open Folder in the menu. Select the simplespa folder.

  3. Create a new HTML file in the folder named index.html. (Not index.htm)

  4. Copy the contents below into the index.html file:

    <html>
     <head>
       <meta charset="UTF-8">
       <meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge">
       <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
       <script>
          const baseUrl = "https://org.api.crm.dynamics.com";      //<= Change this
          const clientId = "11111111-1111-1111-1111-111111111111"; //<= Change this
          const tenantId = "22222222-2222-2222-2222-222222222222"; //<= Change this
          const redirectUrl = "http://localhost:5500/index.html";
          const webAPIEndpoint = baseUrl +"/api/data/v9.2";
    
    
          // Configuration object to be passed to MSAL instance on creation. 
    
          const msalConfig = {
             auth: {       
                clientId: clientId,
                // Full directory URL, in the form of https://login.microsoftonline.com/<tenant-id>
                authority: "https://login.microsoftonline.com/"+tenantId,       
                redirectUri: redirectUrl,
             },
             cache: {
                cacheLocation: "sessionStorage" // This configures where your cache will be stored
             },
             system: {   
                loggerOptions: {   
                   loggerCallback: (level, message, containsPii) => {   
                         if (containsPii) {      
                            return;      
                         }      
                         switch (level) {      
                            case msal.LogLevel.Error:      
                               console.error(message);      
                               return;      
                            case msal.LogLevel.Info:      
                               console.info(message);      
                               return;      
                            case msal.LogLevel.Verbose:      
                               console.debug(message);      
                               return;      
                            case msal.LogLevel.Warning:      
                               console.warn(message);      
                               return;      
                         }   
                   }   
                }   
             }
          };
    
       </script>
          <!-- Latest version of msal-browser.js from CDN as of 2022/09 -->
       <script
             type="text/javascript" 
             src="https://alcdn.msauth.net/browser/2.28.1/js/msal-browser.min.js">
       </script>
       <style>
          body {  
             font-family: 'Segoe UI';  
          }  
    
          table {  
             border-collapse: collapse;  
          }  
    
          td, th {  
             border: 1px solid black;  
          }
    
          #message {  
             color: green;  
          }
    </style>
    </head>
    <body>
    <div>
       <button id="loginButton" onclick="signIn()">Login</button>
       <button id="logoutButton" onclick="signOut()" style="display:none;">Logout</button>
       <button id="getAccountsButton" onclick="getAccounts(writeTable)" style="display:none;">Get Accounts</button>  
       <div id="message"></div>
       <table id="accountsTable" style="display:none;">  
        <thead><tr><th>Name</th><th>City</th></tr></thead>  
        <tbody id="accountsTableBody"></tbody>  
       </table>
    </div>
    <script>
       const loginButton = document.getElementById("loginButton");
       const logoutButton = document.getElementById("logoutButton");
       const getAccountsButton = document.getElementById("getAccountsButton");
       const accountsTable = document.getElementById("accountsTable");
       const accountsTableBody = document.getElementById("accountsTableBody");
       const message = document.getElementById("message");
       // Create the main myMSALObj instance
       const myMSALObj = new msal.PublicClientApplication(msalConfig);
    
       let username = "";
    
       // Sets the username. Called at the end of this script.
       function selectAccount() {
    
          const currentAccounts = myMSALObj.getAllAccounts();
          if (currentAccounts.length === 0) {
             return;
          } else if (currentAccounts.length > 1) {
             // Add choose account code here
             console.warn("Multiple accounts detected.");
          } else if (currentAccounts.length === 1) {
             username = currentAccounts[0].username;
             showWelcomeMessage(username);
          }
       }
    
       // Called by the loginButton
       function signIn() {
          myMSALObj.loginPopup({
             scopes: ["User.Read",baseUrl+"/user_impersonation"] //<= Includes Dataverse scope
             })
             .then(response =>{
                if (response !== null) {
                username = response.account.username;
                showWelcomeMessage(username);
                   } else {
                      selectAccount();
                   }
             })
             .catch(error => {
                   console.error(error);
             });
       }
    
       // Shows greeting and enables logoutButton and getAccountsButton
       // Called from signIn or selectAccount functions
       function showWelcomeMessage(username) {
        message.innerHTML = `Welcome ${username}`;
        loginButton.style.display = "none";
        logoutButton.style.display = "block";
        getAccountsButton.style.display = "block";
       }
    
       // Called by the logoutButton
       function signOut() {
    
          const logoutRequest = {
             account: myMSALObj.getAccountByUsername(username),
             postLogoutRedirectUri: msalConfig.auth.redirectUri,
             mainWindowRedirectUri: msalConfig.auth.redirectUri
          };
    
          myMSALObj.logoutPopup(logoutRequest);
       }
    
       // Provides the access token for a request, opening pop-up if necessary.
       // Used by GetAccounts function
       function getTokenPopup(request) {
    
          request.account = myMSALObj.getAccountByUsername(username);
    
          return myMSALObj.acquireTokenSilent(request)
             .catch(error => {
                   console.warn("Silent token acquisition fails. Acquiring token using popup");
                   if (error instanceof msal.InteractionRequiredAuthError) {
                      // fallback to interaction when silent call fails
                      return myMSALObj.acquireTokenPopup(request)
                         .then(tokenResponse => {
                               console.log(tokenResponse);
                               return tokenResponse;
                         }).catch(error => {
                               console.error(error);
                         });
                   } else {
                      console.warn(error);   
                   }
          });
       }
    
       // Retrieves top 10 account records from Dataverse
       function getAccounts(callback) {
          // Gets the access token
          getTokenPopup({
                scopes: [baseUrl+"/.default"]
             })
             .then(response => {
                getDataverse("accounts?$select=name,address1_city&$top=10", response.accessToken, callback);
             }).catch(error => {
                console.error(error);
             });
       }
    
       /** 
        * Helper function to get data from Dataverse
       * using the authorization bearer token scheme
       * callback is the writeTable function below
       */
       function getDataverse(url, token, callback) {
           const headers = new Headers();
           const bearer = `Bearer ${token}`;
           headers.append("Authorization", bearer);
           // Other Dataverse headers
           headers.append("Accept", "application/json"); 
           headers.append("OData-MaxVersion", "4.0");  
           headers.append("OData-Version", "4.0");  
    
           const options = {
              method: "GET",
              headers: headers
           };
    
         console.log('GET Request made to Dataverse at: ' + new Date().toString());
    
         fetch(webAPIEndpoint+"/"+url, options)
              .then(response => response.json())
              .then(response => callback(response))
              .catch(error => console.log(error));
        }
    
        // Renders the table with data from GetAccounts
        function writeTable(data) {
    
           data.value.forEach(function (account) {
    
               var name = account.name;
               var city = account.address1_city;
    
               var nameCell = document.createElement("td");
               nameCell.textContent = name;
    
               var cityCell = document.createElement("td");
               cityCell.textContent = city;
    
               var row = document.createElement("tr");
    
               row.appendChild(nameCell);
               row.appendChild(cityCell);
    
               accountsTableBody.appendChild(row); 
    
           });
    
           accountsTable.style.display = "block";
           getAccountsButton.style.display = "none";
        }
    
        selectAccount();
      </script>
     </body>
    </html>
    

    Note

    The JavaScript code in the HTML page was adapted from the sample code published here: https://github.com/Azure-Samples/ms-identity-javascript-v2 which connects to Microsoft Graph.

    The key difference is the scopes used when getting the access token.

    Use these scopes for the login button:

      // Called by the loginButton
      function signIn() {
         myMSALObj.loginPopup({
            scopes: ["User.Read",baseUrl+"/user_impersonation"]  //<= Includes Dataverse scope
            })
    

    These scopes include both the Microsoft Graph User.Read scope, but also the Dataverse user_impersonation scope. By including both of these scopes when signing in, the inital consent dialog will include all the necessary scopes used in the applicaiton.

    Then, when specifying the scope used for the call to Dataverse you can use either /.default or /user_impersonation.

          // Retrieves top 10 account records from Dataverse
          function getAccounts(callback) {
             // Gets the access token
             getTokenPopup({
                   scopes: [baseUrl+"/.default"]
                })
    

    /user_impersonation scope only works for delegated permissions, which is the case here, so it could be used. /.default works for both delegated and application permissions.

    If you don't include the baseUrl+"/user_impersonation" scope when logging in, the user will have to consent a second time when they click the Get Accounts button for the first time.

    You can find other SPA examples and tutorials here: Single-page application (SPA) documentation.

  5. Within the index.html page, locate the following configuration variables and set them using the information you gathered in earlier steps: Get your Dataverse Web API endpoint and Register your application.

    const baseUrl = "https://org.api.crm.dynamics.com";      //<= Change this
    const clientId = "11111111-1111-1111-1111-111111111111"; //<= Change this
    const tenantId = "22222222-2222-2222-2222-222222222222"; //<= Change this
    

Debug the app

Because you installed the Live Server extension in Install Live Server Visual Studio Code extension, in the VS Code tool bar you should find this button: .

  1. Click the Go Live button and a new browser window will open to http://localhost:5500/index.html rendering the index.html page.

    The first time you run the app and click the Login button, you will get a consent dialog like this:

    Permissions requested dialog

    If you are an administrator, you can select the Consent on behalf of your organization checkbox which will enable others to also run the app without having to use the Permissions requested dialog.

  2. Click Accept to continue testing to verify that the app works as described in Goal of this quick start.

Troubleshooting

The experience in this quick start depends on the Live Server port setting to be the default value: 5500. If you already have Live Server installed and have modified the port setting, you will need to change the default setting or the URL set in the app registration.

Please note that the liveServer.settings.port may also be set for the Workspace and will override the User setting.

If you open multiple Live Server instances, the port setting may increment to 5501 or higher. This will break the callback used for authentication because the port is 'hard-coded' into the application registration as http://localhost:5500/index.html.

See also

Single-page application (SPA) documentation
Use OAuth with Cross-Origin Resource Sharing to connect a Single-Page Application to Dataverse
Create client applications