- Create Azure AD application and service principal
- Create Azure AD federated identity credentials
- Grant permissions for the service principal
- Retrieve a temporary credential
- Troubleshooting
Configure OpenID Connect in Azure to retrieve temporary credentials
This tutorial demonstrates how to use a JSON web token (JWT) in a GitLab CI/CD job to retrieve temporary credentials from Azure without needing to store secrets.
To get started, configure OpenID Connect (OIDC) for identity federation between GitLab and Azure. For more information on using OIDC with GitLab, read Connect to cloud services.
Prerequisites:
- Access to an existing Azure Subscription with
Owneraccess level. - Access to the corresponding Azure Active Directory Tenant with at least the
Application Developeraccess level. - A local installation of the Azure CLI. Alternatively, you can follow all the steps below with the Azure Cloud Shell.
- A GitLab project.
To complete this tutorial:
- Create Azure AD application and service principal.
- Create Azure AD federated identity credentials.
- Grant permissions for the service principal.
- Retrieve a temporary credential.
For more information, review Azure’s documentation on Workload identity federation.
Create Azure AD application and service principal
To create an Azure AD application and service principal:
-
In the Azure CLI, create the AD application:
appId=$(az ad app create --display-name gitlab-oidc --query appId -otsv)Save the
appId(Application client ID) output, as you need it later to configure your GitLab CI/CD pipeline. -
Create a corresponding Service Principal:
az ad sp create --id $appId --query appId -otsv
Instead of the Azure CLI, you can use the Azure Portal to create these resources.
Create Azure AD federated identity credentials
To create the federated identity credentials for the above Azure AD application:
objectId=$(az ad app show --id $appId --query id -otsv)
cat <<EOF > body.json
{
"name": "gitlab-federated-identity",
"issuer": "https://gitlab.example.com",
"subject": "project_path:<mygroup>/<myproject>:ref_type:branch:ref:<branch>",
"description": "GitLab service account federated identity",
"audiences": [
"https://gitlab.example.com"
]
}
EOF
az rest --method POST --uri "https://graph.microsoft.com/beta/applications/$objectId/federatedIdentityCredentials" --body @body.json
For issues related to the values of issuer, subject or audiences, see the
troubleshooting details.
Optionally, you can now verify the Azure AD application and the Azure AD federated identity credentials from the Azure Portal:
- Open the Azure Active Directory App Registration
view and select the appropriate app registration by searching for the display name
gitlab-oidc. - On the overview page you can verify details like the
Application (client) ID,Object ID, andTenant ID. - Under
Certificates & secrets, go toFederated credentialsto review your Azure AD federated identity credentials.
Grant permissions for the service principal
After you create the credentials, use role assignment
to grant permissions to the above service principal to access to Azure resources:
az role assignment create --assignee $appId --role Reader --scope /subscriptions/<subscription-id>
You can find your subscription ID in:
- The Azure Portal.
- The Azure CLI.
Retrieve a temporary credential
After you configure the Azure AD application and federated identity credentials, the CI/CD job can retrieve a temporary credential by using the Azure CLI:
default:
image: mcr.microsoft.com/azure-cli:latest
variables:
AZURE_CLIENT_ID: "<client-id>"
AZURE_TENANT_ID: "<tenant-id>"
auth:
script:
- az login --service-principal -u $AZURE_CLIENT_ID -t $AZURE_TENANT_ID --federated-token $CI_JOB_JWT_V2
- az account show
The CI/CD variables are:
-
AZURE_CLIENT_ID: The application client ID you saved earlier. -
AZURE_TENANT_ID: Your Azure Active Directory. You can find it by using the Azure CLI or Azure Portal. -
CI_JOB_JWT_V2: The JSON web token is a predefined CI/CD variable.
Troubleshooting
“No matching federated identity record found”
If you receive the error ERROR: AADSTS70021: No matching federated identity record found for presented assertion.
you should verify:
- The
Issuerdefined in the Azure AD federated identity credentials, for examplehttps://gitlab.comor your own GitLab URL. - The
Subject identifierdefined in the Azure AD federated identity credentials, for exampleproject_path:<mygroup>/<myproject>:ref_type:branch:ref:<branch>.- For the
gitlab-group/gitlab-projectproject andmainbranch it would be:project_path:gitlab-group/gitlab-project:ref_type:branch:ref:main. - The correct values of
mygroupandmyprojectcan be retrieved by checking the URL when accessing your GitLab project or by selecting the Clone option in the project.
- For the
- The
Audiencedefined in the Azure AD federated identity credentials, for examplehttps://gitlab.comor your own GitLab URL.
You can review these settings, as well as your AZURE_CLIENT_ID and AZURE_TENANT_ID
CI/CD variables, from the Azure Portal:
- Open the Azure Active Directory App Registration
view and select the appropriate app registration by searching for the display name
gitlab-oidc. - On the overview page you can verify details like the
Application (client) ID,Object ID, andTenant ID. - Under
Certificates & secrets, go toFederated credentialsto review your Azure AD federated identity credentials.
Review Connect to cloud services for further details.