Início rápido: Usando políticas do Data API builder para dados de cada usuário

Neste início rápido, você usará o Quickstart 4 User Authentication with DAB Policies sample para filtrar dados por usuário conectado. O aplicativo web autentica os usuários com o Microsoft Entra ID, envia um token de acesso do tipo Bearer para o Data API builder (DAB), e o DAB aplica uma política de banco de dados antes de retornar linhas SQL.

O exemplo usa o Biblioteca do Microsoft Authenticator (MSAL) em um SPA (aplicativo de página única), a função authenticated do DAB e a expressão de política @item.Owner eq @claims.preferred_username. O exemplo não usa um segredo do cliente ou um código de API personalizado.

Pré-requisitos

  • .NET 8 ou posterior
  • Área de Trabalho do Docker
  • PowerShell
  • ferramentas .NET Aspire para orquestração local
  • CLI do Azure para instalação Microsoft Entra e implantação de Azure
  • sqlpackage se você fizer a implantação do projeto de banco de dados
  • Uma assinatura Azure com permissão para criar SQL do Azure, Aplicativos de Contêiner do Azure, Registro de Contêiner do Azure, Log Analytics e um grupo de recursos
  • Permissão para criar ou reutilizar registros de aplicativo Microsoft Entra

O que o exemplo mostra

  • Um aplicativo web estático que usa login com o navegador usando o MSAL e redirecionamento automático.
  • Um registro de aplicativo SPA para o aplicativo Web e um registro de aplicativo de API para DAB.
  • Um escopo de API delegado que o navegador solicita para chamadas de DAB.
  • Chamadas com token Bearer do aplicativo web para o DAB.
  • DAB configurado com o provedor de autenticação Microsoft Entra ID EntraId.
  • Permissões de entidade DAB que usam a authenticated função.
  • Uma política de banco de dados do DAB que filtra linhas com base na declaração de identidade do usuário autenticado.
  • Autenticação SQL do DAB para o contêiner local de desenvolvimento do SQL Server.
  • Acesso do DAB sem senha ao SQL do Azure usando uma identidade gerenciada atribuída pelo sistema.
  • Filtragem de dados por usuário no DAB sem código de API personalizado ou um segredo do cliente.

Fluxo de autenticação

Hop Autenticação local Autenticação do Azure
Do usuário para o aplicativo web Microsoft Entra ID com redirecionamento automático Microsoft Entra ID com redirecionamento automático
Aplicativo Web para API Token de portador Token de portador
Função de API authenticated authenticated
API para SQL Autenticação do SQL com a política do DAB Identidade gerenciada atribuída pelo sistema com a política do DAB

Comparar com a série

Step O que muda
Anterior Adicionar um provedor do Microsoft Entra valida os tokens, mas ainda permite o acesso anônimo à entidade.
Este início rápido Requer autenticação com o MSAL, envia tokens Bearer ao DAB e filtra registros usando uma política de banco de dados do DAB.
Próximo Usar a segurança em nível de linha do SQL transfere a filtragem por usuário do DAB para o SQL.

Policy

O DAB aplica essa política de banco de dados a ações de entidade protegidas.

@item.Owner eq @claims.preferred_username

A política permite que um usuário conectado acesse apenas linhas em que a Owner coluna corresponde à declaração do preferred_username usuário. Remova o papel anonymous das entidades protegidas para que as requisições anônimas às APIs REST e GraphQL retornem 401.

{
  "entities": {
    "Todos": {
      "permissions": [
        {
          "role": "authenticated",
          "actions": [
            {
              "action": "read",
              "policy": {
                "database": "@item.Owner eq @claims.preferred_username"
              }
            },
            {
              "action": "update",
              "policy": {
                "database": "@item.Owner eq @claims.preferred_username"
              }
            },
            {
              "action": "delete",
              "policy": {
                "database": "@item.Owner eq @claims.preferred_username"
              }
            }
          ]
        }
      ]
    }
  }
}

Utilize o exemplo

Clone o repositório de exemplo.

git clone https://github.com/Azure-Samples/dab-2.0-quickstart-web_entra-api_entra-db_entra-api_rls.git
cd dab-2.0-quickstart-web_entra-api_entra-db_entra-api_rls

Restaurar ferramentas locais.

dotnet tool restore

Inicie sessão no Azure.

az login

Execute o exemplo localmente.

dotnet run --project aspire-apphost

Na primeira execução, o Aspire verifica a configuração de Microsoft Entra. Se os valores de configuração estiverem faltando, o exemplo oferece a opção de executar azure-infra/entra-setup.ps1 interativamente. O script de instalação cria ou configura os registros do aplicativo, atualiza web-app/config.js e data-api/dab-config.jsoninicia os recursos locais.

O aplicativo web redireciona usuários para a página de entrada da Microsoft. Após o login, as chamadas à API incluem tokens Bearer, e cada usuário vê apenas as linhas que correspondem à sua declaração preferred_username.

Implante o exemplo para Azure.

pwsh ./azure-infra/azure-up.ps1

O script de implantação provisiona os recursos do SQL do Azure e do Aplicativos de Contêiner do Azure para o DAB, o aplicativo web, o Model Context Protocol (MCP) Inspector e o SQL Commander. Também configura o aplicativo de contêiner DAB com uma identidade gerenciada atribuída pelo sistema e executa a configuração do Microsoft Entra durante a implantação.

Limpe os recursos do Azure e os registros de aplicativos quando terminar.

pwsh ./azure-infra/azure-down.ps1

O fluxo de limpeza executa o script de desmontagem do Microsoft Entra. Se você precisar remover os registros do aplicativo separadamente, execute azure-infra/entra-teardown.ps1 a partir do exemplo.

Arquivos de chave

Caminho Purpose
data-api/dab-config.json Define o provedor, a EntraIdauthenticated função e a política de banco de dados.
web-app/auth.js Configura MSAL, redirecionamento automático, aquisição de token e a ação de saída.
web-app/index.html Carrega o suporte ao navegador MSAL e mostra elementos de interface do usuário autenticados.
web-app/app.js Inicializa o aplicativo após a autenticação e atualiza o estado de login.
web-app/dab.js Envia Authorization: Bearer <token> cabeçalhos em chamadas DAB.
web-app/config.js Armazena a ID do locatário, a ID do cliente SPA e o escopo da API para MSAL.

Use GitHub Copilot para recriar este exemplo

Abra o workspace no qual você deseja criar o exemplo em Visual Studio Code, alterne GitHub Copilot para o modo de agente e cole esse prompt.

You are GitHub Copilot running in agent mode. Recreate the Data API builder Quickstart 4 User Authentication with DAB Policies sample as a complete, runnable project in the current VS Code workspace under `quickstart-04-dab-policies`. Build a static SPA with MSAL browser sign-in, DAB with Microsoft Entra bearer-token validation, a DAB database policy for per-user rows, local SQL Server with SQL authentication, Azure SQL with managed identity, REST, GraphQL, MCP, .NET Aspire, SQL Commander, MCP Inspector, and Azure Container Apps deployment scripts. DAB is the only API, GraphQL, and MCP layer over SQL. Do not create custom API code. Do not create or use a client secret for this quickstart.

Source repository: https://github.com/Azure-Samples/dab-2.0-quickstart-web_entra-api_entra-db_entra-api_rls. If internet access is available, inspect or clone this repository before you create files. Reuse and adapt its files as closely as possible, especially `web-app/`, `data-api/`, `database/`, `aspire-apphost/`, `mcp-inspector/`, `azure-infra/`, scripts, and README patterns. The goal is to implement the published quickstart, not to invent a different sample. If the repository differs from this prompt or the current Data API builder docs, prefer the current docs for product behavior.

Minimize user interaction. Use the defaults in this prompt and make reasonable best guesses for noncritical choices. Do not ask for a root folder or project folder name; use the current VS Code workspace and the default subfolder. Ask only when you need approval for resource changes, secrets, permissions, materially higher cost, external account choices, or an ambiguous requirement that affects the architecture.

Start with a short plan and proceed with safe defaults before you create files or run commands. Use the default `Owner nvarchar(256)` schema, `@claims.preferred_username` policy, and `api://<api-app-id>/access` scope unless the user explicitly asks for different values. Ask only these questions if the values aren't already available from the environment or prior context:

- Which Azure subscription, primary region, fallback region, resource group, and tenant should the sample use? Default fallback region: `westus2` if the primary region can't provision Azure SQL or Container Apps.
- Should I create new app registrations for the SPA and API or reuse existing registrations?
- Do you approve creating billable Azure resources and Microsoft Entra app registrations if deployment starts?

After the answers, show a checklist and ask for approval before implementation. Include phases for local scaffold, Entra setup, local validation, Azure infrastructure, Azure validation, and cleanup. Do not run `az`, `az ad`, or Azure deployment commands that create or change resources until the user explicitly approves the exact command set.

After approval, continue working without asking status-check questions. If a command, build, container, endpoint, or validation step fails, inspect the error, adjust the project, rerun the step, and continue. Keep iterating until the sample runs end-to-end or you hit a blocker that requires user action.

Use cost-first Azure defaults. Choose the cheapest option that satisfies the quickstart requirements: use a free Azure SQL database offer when the subscription and region support it; otherwise choose the lowest-cost SQL option that supports managed identity and Microsoft Entra validation. Use Azure Container Apps consumption, minimal CPU and memory, Basic Azure Container Registry, minimal Log Analytics retention, and no always-on or dedicated plans unless required. Prioritize finishing the project. Treat regional provisioning limits as expected adjustment points, not failures: if the primary region can't provision a required service or free SQL option, use the approved fallback region such as `westus2`, and continue the deployment. Ask the user only when both the primary and fallback regions can't satisfy the requirements, when a change would materially increase cost, when a new permission is required, or when you need approval for Azure commands that create or change resources beyond the already-approved plan. Keep every resource minimal, but make the web interface neat and approachable: small code footprint, responsive layout, clear status messages, accessible labels, and simple styling that is polished rather than austere.

Verify prerequisites and report only missing items: .NET SDK, Docker Desktop running, PowerShell, Azure CLI signed in, permission to use `az ad`, `sqlpackage`, .NET Aspire tooling, and the DAB CLI. Use these docs while building:

- DAB CLI reference: https://learn.microsoft.com/azure/data-api-builder/command-line/
- `dab add` policies: https://learn.microsoft.com/azure/data-api-builder/command-line/dab-add
- `dab validate`: https://learn.microsoft.com/azure/data-api-builder/command-line/dab-validate
- DAB MCP overview: https://learn.microsoft.com/azure/data-api-builder/mcp/overview
- Microsoft Entra authentication in DAB: https://learn.microsoft.com/azure/data-api-builder/concept/security/authenticate-entra

Create this structure under the sample folder:

- `azure-infra/` for Bicep, `azure-up.ps1`, `azure-down.ps1`, `entra-setup.ps1`, `entra-teardown.ps1`, and post-provision scripts.
- `data-api/` for `dab-config.json` and a DAB Dockerfile that bakes the config into the image for Azure.
- `database/` for a SQL Database Project or idempotent SQL scripts with seed rows for at least two owners.
- `web-app/` for static HTML, CSS, and JavaScript with MSAL browser support.
- `aspire-apphost/` for the .NET Aspire AppHost.
- `mcp-inspector/` for MCP Inspector notes or container assets.

Handle generated values first. Add `.env`, `**/bin`, and `**/obj` to `.gitignore` before writing secrets or local configuration. Use `MSSQL_CONNECTION_STRING`, `ENTRA_TENANT_ID`, `ENTRA_AUDIENCE`, `ENTRA_ISSUER`, `SPA_CLIENT_ID`, and `API_SCOPE`. Never print tokens or secret values. Use `@env(...)` placeholders in `dab-config.json` where practical.

Configure DAB CORS before you start or deploy the web app. Do not leave `runtime.host.cors.origins` as `[]`. Set it to include the exact web app origins, including scheme and port: the local Aspire web origin, such as `http://localhost:5173`, and the deployed Azure Container Apps web FQDN if Azure deployment is approved. Keep `allow-credentials` set to `false` because this SPA sends bearer tokens, not browser credentials or cookies. Direct REST, GraphQL, or Swagger requests can succeed even when the browser blocks JavaScript fetch calls, so browser-origin CORS must be configured and validated separately.

Use this DAB CLI workflow and validate after each config change:

```dotnetcli
dab init --database-type mssql --connection-string "@env('MSSQL_CONNECTION_STRING')" --auth.provider EntraID --auth.audience "@env('ENTRA_AUDIENCE')" --auth.issuer "@env('ENTRA_ISSUER')" --host-mode Development --rest.enabled true --graphql.enabled true --mcp.enabled true
dab add Todos --source dbo.Todos --source.type table --permissions "authenticated:read,update,delete" --policy-database "@item.Owner eq @claims.preferred_username" --mcp.dml-tools true
dab validate --config data-api/dab-config.json
```

Use this DAB policy shape if you write the config directly. Remove the `anonymous` role from protected entities so anonymous REST, GraphQL, and MCP calls to those entities are denied.

```json
{
  "role": "authenticated",
  "actions": [
    { "action": "read", "policy": { "database": "@item.Owner eq @claims.preferred_username" } },
    { "action": "update", "policy": { "database": "@item.Owner eq @claims.preferred_username" } },
    { "action": "delete", "policy": { "database": "@item.Owner eq @claims.preferred_username" } }
  ]
}
```

Implement the SPA with MSAL browser. `web-app/dab.js` must send bearer tokens to DAB on every protected request.

```javascript
export async function getAuthHeaders() {
  const token = await acquireAccessToken();
  return { Authorization: `Bearer ${token}` };
}
```

Use these Aspire patterns from the quickstart skills. Use `.WaitForCompletion(sqlDatabaseProject)` for DAB and SQL Commander when a SQL project deploys schema.

```csharp
var dabServer = builder.AddContainer("data-api", "azure-databases/data-api-builder", "latest")
    .WithImageRegistry("mcr.microsoft.com")
    .WithBindMount(new FileInfo("data-api/dab-config.json").FullName, "/App/dab-config.json", isReadOnly: true)
    .WithEnvironment("MSSQL_CONNECTION_STRING", sqlDatabase)
    .WithEnvironment("ENTRA_AUDIENCE", entraAudience)
    .WithEnvironment("ENTRA_ISSUER", entraIssuer)
    .WithHttpEndpoint(targetPort: 5000, name: "http")
    .WithHttpHealthCheck("/health")
    .WaitForCompletion(sqlDatabaseProject);
```

Add SQL Commander with image `jerrynixon/sql-commander:latest`, env var `ConnectionStrings__db`, and a connection string that includes `TrustServerCertificate=true`.

```csharp
var sqlCommander = builder.AddContainer("sql-cmdr", "jerrynixon/sql-commander", "latest")
    .WithImageRegistry("docker.io")
    .WithHttpEndpoint(targetPort: 8080, name: "http")
    .WithEnvironment("ConnectionStrings__db", sqlDatabase)
    .WithHttpHealthCheck("/health")
    .WaitForCompletion(sqlDatabaseProject);
```

Add MCP Inspector with Streamable HTTP transport and omit auth only for local development.

```csharp
var mcpInspector = builder.AddMcpInspector("mcp-inspector")
    .WithMcpServer(dabServer, transportType: McpTransportType.StreamableHttp)
    .WithEnvironment("DANGEROUSLY_OMIT_AUTH", "true")
    .WaitFor(dabServer);
```

For Azure, configure the DAB Container App with a system-assigned managed identity and bake `dab-config.json` into the DAB image. Replace web URL and CORS placeholders before image build. Do not rely on volume mounts in Azure Container Apps.

Validate before reporting success:

- `dab validate --config data-api/dab-config.json` exits with code 0.
- `dotnet run --project aspire-apphost` starts the complete local environment.
- A direct database query confirms the seeded table exists and contains rows for at least two owners.
- DAB `/health` returns a 2xx response.
- The web site returns a successful HTTP response.
- A browser-origin request from each web app origin receives an `Access-Control-Allow-Origin` response header that matches that origin.
- Anonymous REST and GraphQL requests to protected entities return `401`.
- Signed-in REST and GraphQL calls include bearer headers and return only rows where `Owner` equals the selected claim.
- Two different users see disjoint row sets.
- The DAB configuration uses the `authenticated` role with DAB database policies and no client secret.
- MCP Inspector can connect to DAB MCP and respects authenticated access for protected entities.
- SQL Commander opens and shows seeded tables for at least two owners.
- In Azure, the DAB Container App has a system-assigned managed identity and Container Apps are healthy.

Do not report final URLs, asset locations, or a success summary until you directly verify database connectivity and query results, a 2xx DAB health response, and a successful web site response. This validation ensures the sample works without requiring the developer to check.