Book Image

Cloud Identity Patterns and Strategies

By : Giuseppe Di Federico, Fabrizio Barcaroli
5 (1)
Book Image

Cloud Identity Patterns and Strategies

5 (1)
By: Giuseppe Di Federico, Fabrizio Barcaroli

Overview of this book

Identity is paramount for every architecture design, making it crucial for enterprise and solutions architects to understand the benefits and pitfalls of implementing identity patterns. However, information on cloud identity patterns is generally scattered across different sources and rarely approached from an architect’s perspective, and this is what Cloud Identity Patterns and Strategies aims to solve, empowering solutions architects to take an active part in implementing identity solutions. Throughout this book, you’ll cover various theoretical topics along with practical examples that follow the implementation of a standard de facto identity provider (IdP) in an enterprise, such as Azure Active Directory. As you progress through the chapters, you’ll explore the different factors that contribute to an enterprise's current status quo around identities and harness modern authentication approaches to meet specific requirements of an enterprise. You’ll also be able to make sense of how modern application designs are impacted by the company’s choices and move on to recognize how a healthy organization tackles identity and critical tasks that the development teams pivot on. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to breeze through creating portable, robust, and reliable applications that can interact with each other.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
1
Part 1: Impact of Digital Transformation
4
Part 2: OAuth Implementation and Patterns
8
Part 3: Real-World Scenarios

Azure Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS)

Even if AD DS is not an IDP that provides modern authentication capabilities, it is worth mentioning it because of its integration with AAD. AD DS is a managed service that relies on AAD identities to provide a managed AD DS installation (that is, managed Domain Controllers servers) in the cloud. It offers all the basic capabilities that AD DS offers by deploying a pair of Domain Controllers within a private network (an Azure Virtual Network) created through the Microsoft public cloud, Azure. As the non-managed counterpart service that can be deployed through Windows Server, AD DS provides Kerberos, LDAP, and NTLM authentication and simplifies all the lift-and-shift migration scenarios that involve tasks such as moving on-premises workloads (file servers) to Azure. AD DS does not provide the level of customization that a full installation of AD DS offers (the AD schema cannot be extended), but it has been designed for specific use cases...