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Set up sign-up and sign-in with an Apple ID using Azure Active Directory B2C

Before you begin, use the Choose a policy type selector at the top of this page to choose the type of policy you’re setting up. Azure Active Directory B2C offers two methods to define how users interact with your applications: through predefined user flows or through fully configurable custom policies. The steps required in this article are different for each method.

Note

In Azure Active Directory B2C, custom policies are designed primarily to address complex scenarios. For most scenarios, we recommend that you use built-in user flows. If you've not done so, learn about custom policy starter pack in Get started with custom policies in Active Directory B2C.

Prerequisites

Create an Apple ID application

To enable sign-in for users with an Apple ID in Azure Active Directory B2C (Azure AD B2C), you need to create an application in https://developer.apple.com. For more information, see Sign in with Apple. If you don't already have an Apple developer account, you can sign up at Apple Developer Program.

  1. Sign in to the Apple Developer Portal with your account credentials.
  2. From the menu, select Certificates, IDs, & Profiles, and then select (+).
  3. For Register a New Identifier, select App IDs, and then select Continue.
  4. For Select a type, select App, and then select Continue.
  5. For Register an App ID:
    1. Enter a Description
    2. Enter the Bundle ID, such as com.contoso.azure-ad-b2c.
    3. For Capabilities, select Sign in with Apple from the capabilities list.
    4. Take note of your Team ID (App ID Prefix) from this step. You'll need it later.
    5. Select Continue and then Register.
  6. From the menu, select Certificates, IDs, & Profiles, and then select (+).
  7. For Register a New Identifier, select Services IDs, and then select Continue.
  8. For Register a Services ID:
    1. Enter a Description. The description is shown to the user on the consent screen.
    2. Enter the Identifier, such as com.consoto.azure-ad-b2c-service. Take note of your Service ID identifier. The identifier is your Client ID for the OpenID Connect flow.
    3. Select Continue, and then select Register.
  9. From Identifiers, select the identifier you created.
  10. Select Sign In with Apple, and then select Configure.
    1. Select the Primary App ID you want to configure Sign in with Apple with.
    2. In Domains and Subdomains, enter your-tenant-name.b2clogin.com. Replace your-tenant-name with the name of your tenant. If you use a custom domain, enter https://your-domain-name.
    3. In Return URLs, enter https://your-tenant-name.b2clogin.com/your-tenant-name.onmicrosoft.com/oauth2/authresp. If you use a custom domain, enter https://your-domain-name/your-tenant-name.onmicrosoft.com/oauth2/authresp. Replace your-tenant-name with the name of your tenant, and your-domain-name with your custom domain. The Return URL needs to be in all lower-case.
    4. Select Next, and then select Done.
    5. When the pop-up window is closed, select Continue, and then select Save.

Creating an Apple client secret

  1. From the Apple Developer portal menu, select Keys, and then select (+).
  2. For Register a New Key:
    1. Type a Key Name.
    2. Select Sign in with Apple, and then select Configure.
    3. For the Primary App ID, select the app you created previously, and the select Save.
    4. Select Configure, and then select Register to finish the key registration process. Take note of the Key ID. This key is required when you configure user flows.
  3. For Download Your Key, select Download to download a .p8 file that contains your key.

Configure Apple as an identity provider

  1. Sign in to the Azure portal as a global administrator of your Azure AD B2C tenant.
  2. If you have access to multiple tenants, select the Settings icon in the top menu to switch to your Azure AD B2C tenant from the Directories + subscriptions menu.
  3. Under Azure services, select Azure AD B2C. Or use the search box to find and select Azure AD B2C.
  4. Select Identity providers, then select Apple.
  5. For the Name, enter Sign in with Apple.
  6. Enter the Apple developer ID (Team ID).
  7. Enter the Apple service ID (Client ID).
  8. Enter the Apple key ID from step Creating an Apple client secret.
  9. Select and upload the Apple certificate data.
  10. Select Save.

Important

  • Sign in with Apple requires the Admin to renew their client secret every 6 months.
  • The Apple client secret will be automatically renewed when it expires. If you need to manually renew the secret, open Azure AD B2C in the Azure portal, go to Identity providers > Apple, and select Renew secret.
  • Follow the guidelines how to offer Sign in with Apple button.

Add the Apple identity provider to a user flow

To enable users to sign in using an Apple ID, you need to add the Apple identity provider to a user flow. Sign in with Apple can be configured only for the recommended version of user flows. To add the Apple identity provider to a user flow:

  1. In your Azure AD B2C tenant, select User flows.
  2. Select a user flow for which you want to add the Apple identity provider.
  3. Under Social identity providers, select Apple.
  4. Select Save.
  5. To test your policy, select Run user flow.
  6. For Application, select the web application named testapp1 that you previously registered. The Reply URL should show https://jwt.ms.
  7. Select the Run user flow button.
  8. From the sign-up or sign-in page, select Apple to sign in with Apple ID.

If the sign-in process is successful, your browser is redirected to https://jwt.ms, which displays the contents of the token returned by Azure AD B2C.

Signing the client secret

Use the .p8 file you downloaded previously to sign the client secret into a JWT token. There are many libraries that can create and sign the JWT for you. Use the Azure Function that creates a token for you.

  1. Create an Azure Function.

  2. Under Developer, select Code + Test.

  3. Copy the content of the run.csx file, and paste it in the editor.

  4. Select Save.

  5. Make an HTTP POST request, and provide the following information:

    • appleTeamId: Your Apple Developer Team ID
    • appleServiceId: The Apple Service ID (client ID)
    • appleKeyId: The 10 digit Key ID stored in the JWT Header (required by Apple)
    • p8key: The PEM format key. You can obtain this by opening the .p8 file in a text editor and copying everything between -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY----- and -----END PRIVATE KEY----- without line breaks.

The following json is an example of a call to the Azure function:

{
    "appleTeamId": "ABC123DEFG",
    "appleServiceId": "com.yourcompany.app1",
    "appleKeyId": "URKEYID001",
    "p8key": "MIGTAgEAMBMGByqGSM49AgEGCCqGSM49AwEHBHkwdwIBAQQg+s07NiAcuGEu8rxsJBG7ttupF6FRe3bXdHxEipuyK82gCgYIKoZIzj0DAQehRANCAAQnR1W/KbbaihTQayXH3tuAXA8Aei7u7Ij5OdRy6clOgBeRBPy1miObKYVx3ki1msjjG2uGqRbrc1LvjLHINWRD"
}

The Azure function responds with a properly formatted and signed client secret JWT in a response, for example:

{
    "token": "eyJhbGciOiJFUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJzdWIiOiJjb20ueW91cmNvbXBhbnkuYXBwMSIsIm5iZiI6MTU2MDI2OTY3NSwiZXhwIjoxNTYwMzU2MDc1LCJpc3MiOiJBQkMxMjNERUZHIiwiYXVkIjoiaHR0cHM6Ly9hcHBsZWlkLmFwcGxlLmNvbSJ9.Dt9qA9NmJ_mk6tOqbsuTmfBrQLFqc9BnSVKR6A-bf9TcTft2XmhWaVODr7Q9w1PP3QOYShFXAnNql5OdNebB4g"
}

Create a policy key

You need to store the client secret that you previously recorded in your Azure AD B2C tenant.

  1. Sign in to the Azure portal.
  2. If you have access to multiple tenants, select the Settings icon in the top menu to switch to your Azure AD B2C tenant from the Directories + subscriptions menu.
  3. Under Azure services, select Azure AD B2C. Or use the search box to find and select Azure AD B2C.
  4. On the Overview page, select Identity Experience Framework.
  5. Select Policy Keys, and then select Add.
  6. For Options, choose Manual.
  7. Enter a Name for the policy key. For example, "AppleSecret". The prefix "B2C_1A_" is added automatically to the name of your key.
  8. In Secret, enter the value of a token returned by the Azure Function (a JWT token).
  9. For Key usage, select Signature.
  10. Select Create.

Important

  • Sign in with Apple requires the Admin to renew their client secret every 6 months.
  • You'll need to manually renew the Apple client secret if it expires and store the new value in the policy key.
  • We recommend you set your own reminder within 6 months to generate a new client secret.
  • Follow the guidelines how to offer Sign in with Apple button.

Configure Apple as an identity provider

To enable users to sign in using an Apple ID, you need to define the account as a claims provider that Azure AD B2C can communicate with through an endpoint. The endpoint provides a set of claims that are used by Azure AD B2C to verify that a specific user is authenticated.

You can define an Apple ID as a claims provider by adding it to the ClaimsProviders element in the extension file of your policy.

  1. Open the TrustFrameworkExtensions.xml.

  2. Find the ClaimsProviders element. If it does not exist, add it under the root element.

  3. Add a new ClaimsProvider as follows:

    <ClaimsProvider>
      <Domain>apple.com</Domain>
      <DisplayName>Apple</DisplayName>
      <TechnicalProfiles>
        <TechnicalProfile Id="Apple-OIDC">
          <DisplayName>Sign in with Apple</DisplayName>
          <Protocol Name="OpenIdConnect" />
          <Metadata>
            <Item Key="ProviderName">apple</Item>
            <Item Key="authorization_endpoint">https://appleid.apple.com/auth/authorize</Item>
            <Item Key="AccessTokenEndpoint">https://appleid.apple.com/auth/token</Item>
            <Item Key="JWKS">https://appleid.apple.com/auth/keys</Item>
            <Item Key="issuer">https://appleid.apple.com</Item>
            <Item Key="scope">name email openid</Item>
            <Item Key="HttpBinding">POST</Item>
            <Item Key="response_types">code</Item>
            <Item Key="external_user_identity_claim_id">sub</Item>
            <Item Key="response_mode">form_post</Item>
            <Item Key="ReadBodyClaimsOnIdpRedirect">user.name.firstName user.name.lastName user.email</Item>
            <Item Key="client_id">You Apple ID</Item>
            <Item Key="UsePolicyInRedirectUri">false</Item>
          </Metadata>
          <CryptographicKeys>
            <Key Id="client_secret" StorageReferenceId="B2C_1A_AppleSecret"/>
          </CryptographicKeys>
          <OutputClaims>
            <OutputClaim ClaimTypeReferenceId="issuerUserId" PartnerClaimType="sub" />
            <OutputClaim ClaimTypeReferenceId="identityProvider" DefaultValue="https://appleid.apple.com" AlwaysUseDefaultValue="true" />
            <OutputClaim ClaimTypeReferenceId="authenticationSource" DefaultValue="socialIdpAuthentication" AlwaysUseDefaultValue="true" />
            <OutputClaim ClaimTypeReferenceId="givenName" PartnerClaimType="user.name.firstName"/>
            <OutputClaim ClaimTypeReferenceId="surname" PartnerClaimType="user.name.lastName"/>
            <OutputClaim ClaimTypeReferenceId="email" />
          </OutputClaims>
          <OutputClaimsTransformations>
            <OutputClaimsTransformation ReferenceId="CreateRandomUPNUserName"/>
            <OutputClaimsTransformation ReferenceId="CreateUserPrincipalName"/>
            <OutputClaimsTransformation ReferenceId="CreateAlternativeSecurityId"/>
            <OutputClaimsTransformation ReferenceId="CreateSubjectClaimFromAlternativeSecurityId"/>
          </OutputClaimsTransformations>
          <UseTechnicalProfileForSessionManagement ReferenceId="SM-SocialLogin" />
        </TechnicalProfile>
      </TechnicalProfiles>
    </ClaimsProvider>
    
  4. Set client_id to the service identifier. For example, com.consoto.azure-ad-b2c-service.

  5. Save the file.

Add a user journey

At this point, the identity provider has been set up, but it's not yet available in any of the sign-in pages. If you don't have your own custom user journey, create a duplicate of an existing template user journey, otherwise continue to the next step.

  1. Open the TrustFrameworkBase.xml file from the starter pack.
  2. Find and copy the entire contents of the UserJourney element that includes Id="SignUpOrSignIn".
  3. Open the TrustFrameworkExtensions.xml and find the UserJourneys element. If the element doesn't exist, add one.
  4. Paste the entire content of the UserJourney element that you copied as a child of the UserJourneys element.
  5. Rename the Id of the user journey. For example, Id="CustomSignUpSignIn".

Add the identity provider to a user journey

Now that you have a user journey, add the new identity provider to the user journey. You first add a sign-in button, then link the button to an action. The action is the technical profile you created earlier.

  1. Find the orchestration step element that includes Type="CombinedSignInAndSignUp", or Type="ClaimsProviderSelection" in the user journey. It's usually the first orchestration step. The ClaimsProviderSelections element contains a list of identity providers that a user can sign in with. The order of the elements controls the order of the sign-in buttons presented to the user. Add a ClaimsProviderSelection XML element. Set the value of TargetClaimsExchangeId to a friendly name.

  2. In the next orchestration step, add a ClaimsExchange element. Set the Id to the value of the target claims exchange Id. Update the value of TechnicalProfileReferenceId to the Id of the technical profile you created earlier.

The following XML demonstrates the first two orchestration steps of a user journey with the identity provider:

<OrchestrationStep Order="1" Type="CombinedSignInAndSignUp" ContentDefinitionReferenceId="api.signuporsignin">
  <ClaimsProviderSelections>
    ...
    <ClaimsProviderSelection TargetClaimsExchangeId="AppleExchange" />
  </ClaimsProviderSelections>
  ...
</OrchestrationStep>

<OrchestrationStep Order="2" Type="ClaimsExchange">
  ...
  <ClaimsExchanges>
    <ClaimsExchange Id="AppleExchange" TechnicalProfileReferenceId="Apple-OIDC" />
  </ClaimsExchanges>
</OrchestrationStep>

Configure the relying party policy

The relying party policy, for example SignUpSignIn.xml, specifies the user journey which Azure AD B2C will execute. Find the DefaultUserJourney element within relying party. Update the ReferenceId to match the user journey ID, in which you added the identity provider.

In the following example, for the CustomSignUpSignIn user journey, the ReferenceId is set to CustomSignUpSignIn:

<RelyingParty>
  <DefaultUserJourney ReferenceId="CustomSignUpSignIn" />
  ...
</RelyingParty>

Upload the custom policy

  1. Sign in to the Azure portal.
  2. Select the Directory + Subscription icon in the portal toolbar, and then select the directory that contains your Azure AD B2C tenant.
  3. In the Azure portal, search for and select Azure AD B2C.
  4. Under Policies, select Identity Experience Framework.
  5. Select Upload Custom Policy, and then upload the two policy files that you changed, in the following order: the extension policy, for example TrustFrameworkExtensions.xml, then the relying party policy, such as SignUpSignIn.xml.

Test your custom policy

  1. Select your relying party policy, for example B2C_1A_signup_signin.
  2. For Application, select a web application that you previously registered. The Reply URL should show https://jwt.ms.
  3. Select the Run now button.
  4. From the sign-up or sign-in page, select Apple to sign in with Apple ID.

If the sign-in process is successful, your browser is redirected to https://jwt.ms, which displays the contents of the token returned by Azure AD B2C.

Customize your user interface

Follow the guidelines how to offer Sign in with Apple. Apple provides several Sign in with Apple buttons you can use to let people set up an account and sign in. If necessary, create a custom button to offer Sign in with Apple. Learn how to display a Sign in with Apple button.

To align with the Apple user interface guidelines: