From 56515512dc11b2921f68609b5d44d3e606a024f1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: illfated Date: Wed, 20 May 2020 01:33:42 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] VPN/SSO NDES: SCEP link URL update Description: As reported in issue ticket #6766 (Dead link), the current link to "Configure certificate infrastructure for SCEP" returns a 404 error because the page has been moved to a new directory structure in commit 4ae71ed25d10 on February 28, 2020. 1702 files and folders have been moved and/or renamed in this process, making it a game of chance to correct more than one 404 link discovery at a time. (I hope some links were corrected back then, but I have not researched the details.) Thanks to rossmpersonal for reporting this 404 issue. Changes proposed: - Update the link URL to its current location (docs.microsoft.com/mem/intune/protect/certificates-scep-configure) - Remove redundant end-of-line whitespace (blanks) throughout the page Ticket closure or reference: Closes #6766 --- ...n-on-sso-over-vpn-and-wi-fi-connections.md | 58 +++++++++---------- 1 file changed, 29 insertions(+), 29 deletions(-) diff --git a/windows/security/identity-protection/vpn/how-to-use-single-sign-on-sso-over-vpn-and-wi-fi-connections.md b/windows/security/identity-protection/vpn/how-to-use-single-sign-on-sso-over-vpn-and-wi-fi-connections.md index a162e20e45..0b6ff85b21 100644 --- a/windows/security/identity-protection/vpn/how-to-use-single-sign-on-sso-over-vpn-and-wi-fi-connections.md +++ b/windows/security/identity-protection/vpn/how-to-use-single-sign-on-sso-over-vpn-and-wi-fi-connections.md @@ -16,38 +16,38 @@ ms.author: dansimp This topic explains requirements to enable Single Sign-On (SSO) to on-premises domain resources over WiFi or VPN connections. The scenario is: -- You connect to a network using Wi-Fi or VPN. -- You want to use the credentials that you use for the WiFi or VPN authentication to also authenticate requests to access a domain resource you are connecting to, without being prompted for your domain credentials separately. +- You connect to a network using Wi-Fi or VPN. +- You want to use the credentials that you use for the WiFi or VPN authentication to also authenticate requests to access a domain resource you are connecting to, without being prompted for your domain credentials separately. For example, you want to connect to a corporate network and access an internal website that requires Windows integrated authentication. -At a high level, the way this works is that the credentials that are used for the connection authentication are put in Credential Manager as the default credentials for the logon session. -Credential Manager is a place where credentials in the OS are can be stored for specific domain resources based on the targetname of the resource. -For VPN, the VPN stack saves its credential as the session default. -For WiFi, EAP does it. +At a high level, the way this works is that the credentials that are used for the connection authentication are put in Credential Manager as the default credentials for the logon session. +Credential Manager is a place where credentials in the OS are can be stored for specific domain resources based on the targetname of the resource. +For VPN, the VPN stack saves its credential as the session default. +For WiFi, EAP does it. -The credentials are put in Credential Manager as a "\*Session" credential. -A "\*Session" credential implies that it is valid for the current user session. -The credentials are also cleaned up when the WiFi or VPN connection is disconnected. +The credentials are put in Credential Manager as a "\*Session" credential. +A "\*Session" credential implies that it is valid for the current user session. +The credentials are also cleaned up when the WiFi or VPN connection is disconnected. -When the user tries to access a domain resource, using Edge for example, Edge has the right Enterprise Authentication capability so [WinInet](https://msdn.microsoft.com/library/windows/desktop/aa385483.aspx) can release the credentials that it gets from the Credential Manager to the SSP that is requesting it. -For more information about the Enterprise Authentication capability, see [App capability declarations](https://msdn.microsoft.com/windows/uwp/packaging/app-capability-declarations). +When the user tries to access a domain resource, using Edge for example, Edge has the right Enterprise Authentication capability so [WinInet](https://msdn.microsoft.com/library/windows/desktop/aa385483.aspx) can release the credentials that it gets from the Credential Manager to the SSP that is requesting it. +For more information about the Enterprise Authentication capability, see [App capability declarations](https://msdn.microsoft.com/windows/uwp/packaging/app-capability-declarations). -The local security authority will look at the device application, such as a Universal Windows Platform (UWP) application, to see if it has the right capability. -If the app is not UWP, it does not matter. -But if it is a UWP app, it will look at the device capability for Enterprise Authentication. +The local security authority will look at the device application, such as a Universal Windows Platform (UWP) application, to see if it has the right capability. +If the app is not UWP, it does not matter. +But if it is a UWP app, it will look at the device capability for Enterprise Authentication. If it does have that capability and if the resource that you are trying to access is in the Intranet zone in the Internet Options (ZoneMap), then the credential will be released. -This behavior helps prevent credentials from being misused by untrusted third parties. +This behavior helps prevent credentials from being misused by untrusted third parties. ## Intranet zone -For the Intranet zone, by default it only allows single-label names, such as Http://finance. -If the resource that needs to be accessed has multiple domain labels, then the workaround is to use the [Registry CSP](https://msdn.microsoft.com/library/windows/hardware/dn904964.aspx). +For the Intranet zone, by default it only allows single-label names, such as Http://finance. +If the resource that needs to be accessed has multiple domain labels, then the workaround is to use the [Registry CSP](https://msdn.microsoft.com/library/windows/hardware/dn904964.aspx). ### Setting the ZoneMap -The ZoneMap is controlled using a registry that can be set through MDM. -By default, single-label names such as http://finance are already in the intranet zone. +The ZoneMap is controlled using a registry that can be set through MDM. +By default, single-label names such as http://finance are already in the intranet zone. For multi-label names, such as http://finance.net, the ZoneMap needs to be updated. ## MDM Policy @@ -56,9 +56,9 @@ OMA URI example: ./Vendor/MSFT/Registry/HKU/S-1-5-21-2702878673-795188819-444038987-2781/Software/Microsoft/Windows/CurrentVersion/Internet%20Settings/ZoneMap/Domains/``/* as an Integer Value of 1 for each of the domains that you want to SSO into from your device. This adds the specified domains to the Intranet Zone of the Edge browser. -## Credential requirements +## Credential requirements -For VPN, the following types of credentials will be added to credential manager after authentication: +For VPN, the following types of credentials will be added to credential manager after authentication: - Username and password - Certificate-based authentication: @@ -67,7 +67,7 @@ For VPN, the following types of credentials will be added to credential manager - Smart Card Certificate - Windows Hello for Business Certificate -The username should also include a domain that can be reached over the connection (VPN or WiFi). +The username should also include a domain that can be reached over the connection (VPN or WiFi). ## User certificate templates @@ -82,17 +82,17 @@ If the credentials are certificate-based, then the elements in the following tab ## NDES server configuration -The NDES server is required to be configured so that incoming SCEP requests can be mapped to the correct template to be used. -For more information, see [Configure certificate infrastructure for SCEP](https://docs.microsoft.com/intune/deploy-use/Configure-certificate-infrastructure-for-scep). +The NDES server is required to be configured so that incoming SCEP requests can be mapped to the correct template to be used. +For more information, see [Configure certificate infrastructure for SCEP](https://docs.microsoft.com/mem/intune/protect/certificates-scep-configure). ## Active Directory requirements -You need IP connectivity to a DNS server and domain controller over the network interface so that authentication can succeed as well. +You need IP connectivity to a DNS server and domain controller over the network interface so that authentication can succeed as well. The domain controllers will need to have appropriate KDC certificates for the client to trust them as domain controllers, and since phones are not domain-joined, the root CA of the KDC’s certificate must be in the Third-Party Root CA or Smart Card Trusted Roots store. -The domain controllers must be using certificates based on the updated KDC certificate template Kerberos Authentication. -This is because Windows 10 Mobile requires strict KDC validation to be enabled. -This requires that all authenticating domain controllers run Windows Server 2016, or you'll need to enable strict KDC validation on domain controllers that run previous versions of Windows Server. -For more information, see [Enabling Strict KDC Validation in Windows Kerberos](https://www.microsoft.com/download/details.aspx?id=6382). +The domain controllers must be using certificates based on the updated KDC certificate template Kerberos Authentication. +This is because Windows 10 Mobile requires strict KDC validation to be enabled. +This requires that all authenticating domain controllers run Windows Server 2016, or you'll need to enable strict KDC validation on domain controllers that run previous versions of Windows Server. +For more information, see [Enabling Strict KDC Validation in Windows Kerberos](https://www.microsoft.com/download/details.aspx?id=6382).