Tutorial: Microsoft Entra SSO integration with AWS IAM Identity Center

In this tutorial, you will learn how to integrate AWS IAM Identity Center (successor to AWS Single Sign-On) with Microsoft Entra ID. When you integrate AWS IAM Identity Center with Microsoft Entra ID, you can:

  • Control in Microsoft Entra ID who has access to AWS IAM Identity Center.
  • Enable your users to be automatically signed-in to AWS IAM Identity Center with their Microsoft Entra accounts.
  • Manage your accounts in one central location.

Note: When using AWS Organizations, it's important to delegate another account as the Identity Center Administration account, enable the IAM Identity Center on it, and set up the Entra ID SSO with that account, not the root management account. This ensures a more secure and manageable setup.

Prerequisites

To get started, you need the following items:

  • A Microsoft Entra subscription. If you don't have a subscription, you can get a free account.
  • An AWS Organizations setup with another account delegated as the Identity Center Administration account.
  • AWS IAM Identity Center enabled on the delegated Identity Center Administration account.

Scenario description

In this tutorial, you configure and test Microsoft Entra SSO in a test environment.

Note: Ensure you delegated another account as the Identity Center Administration account and enabled IAM Identity Center on it before proceeding with the following steps.

To configure the integration of AWS IAM Identity Center into Microsoft Entra ID, you need to add AWS IAM Identity Center from the gallery to your list of managed SaaS apps.

  1. Sign in to the Microsoft Entra admin center as at least a Cloud Application Administrator.
  2. Browse to Identity > Applications > Enterprise applications > New application.
  3. In the Add from the gallery section, type AWS IAM Identity Center in the search box.
  4. Select AWS IAM Identity Center from results panel and then add the app. Wait a few seconds while the app is added to your tenant.

Alternatively, you can also use the Enterprise App Configuration Wizard. In this wizard, you can add an application to your tenant, add users/groups to the app, assign roles and walk through the SSO configuration as well. Learn more about Microsoft 365 wizards.

Configure and test Microsoft Entra SSO for AWS IAM Identity Center

Configure and test Microsoft Entra SSO with AWS IAM Identity Center using a test user called B.Simon. For SSO to work, you need to establish a link relationship between a Microsoft Entra user and the related user in AWS IAM Identity Center.

To configure and test Microsoft Entra SSO with AWS IAM Identity Center, perform the following steps:

  1. Configure Microsoft Entra SSO - to enable your users to use this feature.
    1. Create a Microsoft Entra test user - to test Microsoft Entra single sign-on with B.Simon.
    2. Assign the Microsoft Entra test user - to enable B.Simon to use Microsoft Entra single sign-on.
  2. Configure AWS IAM Identity Center SSO - to configure the single sign-on settings on application side.
    1. Create AWS IAM Identity Center test user - to have a counterpart of B.Simon in AWS IAM Identity Center that is linked to the Microsoft Entra representation of user.
  3. Test SSO - to verify whether the configuration works.

Configure Microsoft Entra SSO

Follow these steps to enable Microsoft Entra SSO.

  1. Sign in to the Microsoft Entra admin center as at least a Cloud Application Administrator.

  2. Browse to Identity > Applications > Enterprise applications > AWS IAM Identity Center > Single sign-on.

  3. On the Select a single sign-on method page, select SAML.

  4. On the Set up single sign-on with SAML page, click the pencil icon for Basic SAML Configuration to edit the settings.

    Edit Basic SAML Configuration

  5. If you have Service Provider metadata file, on the Basic SAML Configuration section, perform the following steps:

    a. Click Upload metadata file.

    b. Click on folder logo to select the metadata file which is explained to download in Configure AWS IAM Identity Center SSO section and click Add.

    image2

    c. Once the metadata file is successfully uploaded, the Identifier and Reply URL values get auto populated in Basic SAML Configuration section.

    Note

    If the Identifier and Reply URL values are not getting auto populated, then fill in the values manually according to your requirement.

    Note

    When changing identity provider in AWS (that is, from AD to external provider such as Microsoft Entra ID) the AWS metadata will change and need to be reuploaded to Azure for SSO to function correctly.

  6. If you don't have Service Provider metadata file, perform the following steps on the Basic SAML Configuration section, if you wish to configure the application in IDP initiated mode, perform the following steps:

    a. In the Identifier text box, type a URL using the following pattern: https://<REGION>.signin.aws.amazon.com/platform/saml/<ID>

    b. In the Reply URL text box, type a URL using the following pattern: https://<REGION>.signin.aws.amazon.com/platform/saml/acs/<ID>

  7. Click Set additional URLs and perform the following step if you wish to configure the application in SP initiated mode:

    In the Sign-on URL text box, type a URL using the following pattern: https://portal.sso.<REGION>.amazonaws.com/saml/assertion/<ID>

    Note

    These values are not real. Update these values with the actual Identifier, Reply URL and Sign-on URL. Contact AWS IAM Identity Center Client support team to get these values. You can also refer to the patterns shown in the Basic SAML Configuration section.

  8. AWS IAM Identity Center application expects the SAML assertions in a specific format, which requires you to add custom attribute mappings to your SAML token attributes configuration. The following screenshot shows the list of default attributes.

    image

    Note

    If ABAC is enabled in AWS IAM Identity Center, the additional attributes may be passed as session tags directly into AWS accounts.

  9. On the Set-up single sign-on with SAML page, in the SAML Signing Certificate section, find Federation Metadata XML and select Download to download the certificate and save it on your computer.

    Screenshot shows the Certificate download link.

  10. On the Set up AWS IAM Identity Center section, copy the appropriate URL(s) based on your requirement.

    Screenshot shows to copy configuration appropriate URL.

Create a Microsoft Entra test user

In this section, you'll create a test user called B.Simon.

  1. Sign in to the Microsoft Entra admin center as at least a User Administrator.
  2. Browse to Identity > Users > All users.
  3. Select New user > Create new user, at the top of the screen.
  4. In the User properties, follow these steps:
    1. In the Display name field, enter B.Simon.
    2. In the User principal name field, enter the [email protected]. For example, [email protected].
    3. Select the Show password check box, and then write down the value that is displayed in the Password box.
    4. Select Review + create.
  5. Select Create.

Assign the Microsoft Entra test user

In this section, you will enable B.Simon to use single sign-on by granting access to AWS IAM Identity Center.

  1. Sign in to the Microsoft Entra admin center as at least a Cloud Application Administrator.
  2. Browse to Identity > Applications > Enterprise applications > AWS IAM Identity Center.
  3. In the app's overview page, select Users and groups.
  4. Select Add user/group, then select Users and groups in the Add Assignment dialog.
    1. In the Users and groups dialog, select B.Simon from the Users list, then click the Select button at the bottom of the screen.
    2. If you are expecting a role to be assigned to the users, you can select it from the Select a role dropdown. If no role was set up for this app, you see "Default Access" role selected.
    3. In the Add Assignment dialog, click the Assign button.

Configure AWS IAM Identity Center SSO

  1. In a different web browser window, sign in to your AWS IAM Identity Center company site as an administrator

  2. Go to the Services -> Security, Identity, & Compliance -> AWS IAM Identity Center.

  3. In the left navigation pane, choose Settings.

  4. On the Settings page, find Identity source, click on Actions pull-down menu, and select Change identity source.

    Screenshot for Identity source change service.

  5. On the Change identity source page, choose External identity provider.

    Screenshot for selecting external identity provider section.

  6. Perform the below steps in the Configure external identity provider section:

    Screenshot for download and upload metadata section.

    a. In the Service provider metadata section, find AWS SSO SAML metadata, select Download metadata file to download the metadata file and save it on your computer and use this metadata file to upload on Azure portal.

    b. Copy AWS access portal sign-in URL value, paste this value into the Sign on URL text box in the Basic SAML Configuration section.

    c. In the Identity provider metadata section, select Choose file to upload the metadata file that you downloaded.

    d. Choose Next: Review.

  7. In the text box, type ACCEPT to change the identity source.

    Screenshot for Confirming the configuration.

  8. Click Change identity source.

Create AWS IAM Identity Center test user

  1. Open the AWS IAM Identity Center console.

  2. In the left navigation pane, choose Users.

  3. On the Users page, choose Add user.

  4. On the Add user page, follow these steps:

    a. In the Username field, enter B.Simon.

    b. In the Email address field, enter the [email protected]. For example, [email protected].

    c. In the Confirmed email address field, reenter the email address from the previous step.

    d. In the First name field, enter Britta.

    e. In the Last name field, enter Simon.

    f. In the Display name field, enter B.Simon.

    g. Choose Next, and then Next again.

    Note

    Make sure the username and email address entered in AWS IAM Identity Center matches the user’s Microsoft Entra sign-in name. This will you help avoid any authentication problems.

  5. Choose Add user.

  6. Next, you'll assign the user to your AWS account. To do so, in the left navigation pane of the AWS IAM Identity Center console, choose AWS accounts.

  7. On the AWS Accounts page, select the AWS organization tab, check the box next to the AWS account you want to assign to the user. Then choose Assign users.

  8. On the Assign Users page, find, and check the box next to the user B.Simon. Then choose Next: Permission sets.

  9. Under the select permission sets section, check the box next to the permission set you want to assign to the user B.Simon. If you don’t have an existing permission set, choose Create new permission set.

    Note

    Permission sets define the level of access that users and groups have to an AWS account. To learn more about permission sets, see the AWS IAM Identity Center Multi Account Permissions page.

  10. Choose Finish.

Note

AWS IAM Identity Center also supports automatic user provisioning, you can find more details here on how to configure automatic user provisioning.

Test SSO

In this section, you test your Microsoft Entra single sign-on configuration with following options.

SP initiated:

  • Click on Test this application, this will redirect to AWS IAM Identity Center sign-in URL where you can initiate the login flow.

  • Go to AWS IAM Identity Center sign-in URL directly and initiate the login flow from there.

IDP initiated:

  • Click on Test this application, and you should be automatically signed in to the AWS IAM Identity Center for which you set up the SSO.

You can also use Microsoft My Apps to test the application in any mode. When you click the AWS IAM Identity Center tile in the My Apps, if configured in SP mode you would be redirected to the application sign on page for initiating the login flow and if configured in IDP mode, you should be automatically signed in to the AWS IAM Identity Center for which you set up the SSO. For more information about the My Apps, see Introduction to the My Apps.

Next steps

Once you configure AWS IAM Identity Center you can enforce session control, which protects exfiltration and infiltration of your organization’s sensitive data in real time. Session control extends from Conditional Access. Learn how to enforce session control with Microsoft Defender for Cloud Apps.