Do You Need An Account In Azure Active Directory if Using ADFS?
Today’s topic is a little spin on a question that seems to be coming up more frequently, specifically when folks are using a combination of Azure Active Directory and ADFS. That question is, if I’m using ADFS do I really need to have an account in an Azure Active Directory (AAD) tenant? Well, of course, the answer is it depends.
If all you are going to use AAD for is as some kind of application registry, but all of your applications are hosted elsewhere, you really don’t need an account in AAD. You can just add your domain to the list of domains in your Azure subscription, set up the domain as a federated domain, and configure the ADFS endpoint where folks should get redirected to in order to authenticate.
Where this scenario breaks is if you are securing your applications with AAD. For example, in your AAD tenant you go to the Applications tab, you give it some configuration information, and you add one or more permissions that your application is going to need. In this case, AAD is being used to secure access to the application, and so at a minimum you have to ask for at least the right to log in and read the profile information – this is needed for AAD to be able to send your set of claims off to your application after you authenticate. In that case, there is going to be a consent process that users go through. The first time they log into the application, Azure will present a page to them that describes all of the permissions the application is asking for and the user has to consent to allow the application to have access in order to continue. This is “the consent process” (as simply explained by Steve).