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Azure for Architects

Azure for Architects

By : Modi, Jack Lee, Rithin Skaria
3.5 (4)
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Azure for Architects

Azure for Architects

3.5 (4)
By: Modi, Jack Lee, Rithin Skaria

Overview of this book

Thanks to its support for high availability, scalability, security, performance, and disaster recovery, Azure has been widely adopted to create and deploy different types of application with ease. Updated for the latest developments, this third edition of Azure for Architects helps you get to grips with the core concepts of designing serverless architecture, including containers, Kubernetes deployments, and big data solutions. You'll learn how to architect solutions such as serverless functions, you'll discover deployment patterns for containers and Kubernetes, and you'll explore large-scale big data processing using Spark and Databricks. As you advance, you'll implement DevOps using Azure DevOps, work with intelligent solutions using Azure Cognitive Services, and integrate security, high availability, and scalability into each solution. Finally, you'll delve into Azure security concepts such as OAuth, OpenConnect, and managed identities. By the end of this book, you'll have gained the confidence to design intelligent Azure solutions based on containers and serverless functions.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
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20
Index

Authentication and authorization using OAuth

Azure AD is an identity provider that can authenticate users based on already available users and service principals available within the tenant. Azure AD implements the OAuth protocol and supports authorization on the internet. It implements an authorization server and services to enable the OAuth authorization flow, implicit as well as client credential flows. These are different well-documented OAuth interaction flows between client applications, authorization endpoints, users, and protected resources.

Azure AD also supports single sign-on (SSO), which adds security and ease when signing in to applications that are registered with Azure AD. You can use OpenID Connect, OAuth, SAML, password-based, or the linked or disabled SSO method when developing new applications. If you are unsure of which to use, refer to the flowchart from Microsoft here: https://docs.microsoft.com/azure/active-directory/manage-apps/what-is-single-sign-on#choosing...

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