Is there any way to change the billing subscription on a Azure B2C tenant. I see this article which states: "Azure AD B2C tenants can be moved to another subscription if the source and destination subscriptions exist within the same Azure Active Directory tenant." but I suppose this did not clarify for me.
I have two different subscriptions which are just independant Azure subscriptions and neither is part of a corporate enrollment, so I don't think they are apart of the same AD tenant, unless onmicrosoft is the AD tenant.
Has anybody done this before?
Tenant means .onmicrosoft.com directory. If both subscriptions appear when selecting the directory in the Azure Portal, then the B2C resource can be moved between them. If not, then you first need to move the destination subscription to the tenant in which the subscription that holds the B2C resource lives, move the resource, then move the subscription back to the original tenant if you need to. Moving subscriptions between tenants will lose all RBAC assignments, since they are tied to the users in the original tenant/directory.
Related
I have a structural question on the Azure portal. When I create a new Azure Active Directory B2C Tenant, it forces the creation of a new directory, with new org name, paired to the subscription ID from the directory where I created the tenant. This feels incredibly disjointed to me since my Active Directory is in my parent directory. So my questions are
Is this the standard model for using Azure Active Directory B2C?
Main Directory w/ subscription
-> B2C Tenant 1 (dev)
-> B2C Tenant 2 (staging)
-> B2C Tenant 3 (prod)
If so, does that mean that I should create all resources for the environment in the B2C Tenant directory?
Can I make multiple Azure Active Directory B2C tenants in my main account, and just separate them into different resource groups for dev, staging, and prod?
Reading the documentation, everything seems to show either creating a new Tenant which creates a new directory, or "Linking" and existing Tenant. The issue with that is when you create a tenant, you MUST specify a subscription, and to "Link" a Tenant, it can not have a subscription.. and since you can't remove a subscription from a Tenant, how is this option even possible?
Any help or guidance on these points would be greatly appreciated. I've spent days reading documentation and trying to get this set up along the lines of option 2 since that's the model that exists in a client account I need to replicate, but nothing has worked.
EDIT
I see that I can click on the B2C Tenant from my main Azure Active Directory account and see it's subscription status as
An Azure subscription is required to continue receiving SLA support for External Identities```
but when I click that it takes me to the Azure AD B2C directory and I'm confronted with this image
[![enter image description here][1]][1]
but when I look at the resource in the main Azure AD directory, I see I can move subscriptions but there is **already a subscription assigned** so what does it want me to do?
[![enter image description here][2]][2]
It seems like the answer is "An Azure AD B2C directory is ONLY meant to manage the B2C tenant, and nothing else" but the only person to reply to this so far is saying that you should create all your resources in the B2C tenant directory, not the Azure Active Directory Account which has the resource group referencing the created B2C tenant.
[1]: https://i.stack.imgur.com/g3dMY.png
[2]: https://i.stack.imgur.com/72sH7.png
• When you create an Azure B2C tenant in your existing subscription, a new Azure AD directory with the name of the given Azure AD B2C tenant is created and related to it, a separate Azure AD B2C tenant/directory is also created. That is, by the name of the Azure AD B2C tenant, a normal Azure AD B2C directory is available as well as an Azure AD B2C directory/tenant is also available.
• Thus, when you create an Azure AD B2C tenant, it will be shown under you resource group in which it is assigned. Also, if you want to create a new resource in this new Azure AD B2C tenant, then you will need to link it with an existing subscription or add a new subscription to it as it functions as full-fledged separate tenant with an existing Azure AD default directory to take care of the Identity and Access Management requirements.
If so, does that mean that I should create all resources for the environment in the B2C Tenant directory?
Yes, you can separate your ‘dev, staging and prod’ B2C tenants for your convenience and create resources in it for your management purposes but you will have to link every B2C tenant with an active subscription plan so that the billing costs of the resources deployed in it are taken care of.
Can I make multiple Azure Active Directory B2C tenants in my main account, and just separate them into different resource groups for dev, staging, and prod?
Yes, you can as per the above given explanation.
Thus, for creating a new B2C tenant, you need to have an existing subscription of Azure and an existing Azure AD tenant through which you can surely create an Azure AD B2C tenant and further if you want to deploy Azure resources in it, then you can add a subscription or link an existing one.
Please find the below snapshots for your reference: -
I know that we can migrate a subscription from one Azure AD to another AD, and move a resource from one subscription to another subscription. Wondering can we clone the Azure active directory (tenant) as well? like moving all/part of the AD roles, groups, settings, subscriptions and resources from one tenant to another?
Thanks,
There is no way to Migrate azure AD settings to other tenant.
you may submit your feedback here https://feedback.azure.com/forums/34192--general-feedback
Azure ARM handles identity requirements for the requests it receives through Azure AD. The requesting user should be a valid Azure AD user with a valid identity and authorization roles. The azure subscription for which the request is made should comply to deployment limits and biling policies.
There is a role of Azure Tenant that is associated with requesting user and Subscription. What role these tenants play and what is the workflow ?
I'm not sure what you mean exactly by the role of the Azure tenant in this context, but you can assign roles at the tenant scope and that's what the ARM template documentation describes. For example, you can assign an Owner role to a user at the tenant scope so that the user is an Owner of the tenant. As for the relationship between tenants and subscriptions, multiple subscriptions can trust the same Azure AD tenant, but each subscription can only trust a single tenant. You can associate a subscription with a tenant by logging in and selecting the Subscription, and then changing the directory. With a Global Admin or User Admin role, you can add or remove users from your tenant.
As I'm sure you already know, an Azure tenant is a dedicated and trusted instance of Azure AD. Typically, each tenant represents a single organization. The words "tenant" and "directory" are used interchangeably. The tenant is an account in Azure that comes with a subdomain and an associated Azure Active Directory. In order to use an Azure Active Directory you need to become a tenant within the system. So a tenant is basically securing a .onmicrosoft.com subdomain. At that point you would have one account registered in your Azure AD.
So in the context of the ARM template, you need an Azure tenant to house your users and link to your subscriptions.
A tenant represents an organization in Azure Active Directory. It's a dedicated Azure AD service instance that an organization receives and owns when it signs up for a Microsoft cloud service such as Azure, Microsoft Intune, or Microsoft 365. Each Azure AD tenant is distinct and separate from other Azure AD tenants. Once you have an Azure AD tenant, you can define an application and assign it permissions so it can call REST APIs. Your organization may already have an Azure AD tenant that you can use for your application.
In Azure AD, users are segmented into tenants. A tenant is a logical construct that represents a secure, dedicated instance of Azure AD typically associated with an organization. Each subscription is associated with an Azure AD tenant. Next, the ARM checks whether the user has sufficient permission to access a resource using Azure RBAC (Role based Access Control) which manages the permissions. An Azure role specifies a set of permissions a user may take on a specific resource. Next, the resource request is checked against an Azure Resource Policy which are defined to allow specific operations for a specific resource. Next, ARM checks the Azure subscription limit for the specific resources in that subscription for resource groups. And finally, the financial commitment associated with the subscription is checked as a final control before deploying the resource for management through the ARM.
ARM flow and working
Please find the below Microsoft documentation for your reference: -
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/cloud-adoption-framework/govern/resource-consistency/resource-access-management
Thanking you,
I am trying out ad-b2c and boy even the first step is turning out to be extremely frustrating. Anyway here's my problem:
I have an existing subscription with a default directory which has its own mydefaultdirectory.onmicrosoft.com domain
According to instructions here: I should be able to create an ad-b2c tenant, and then go into the portal B2C features blade.
I created the tenant, which included me creating a custom ad-b2c directory. I had to choose another domain such as myadb2ctest.onmicrosoft.com.
I go to the portal under b2c blade, but now I have no subscription. This is because now I am logged in to the myadb2ctest directory rather than mydefaultdirectory which has my subscription.
I DO NOT want to create a new subscription. I just want this directory associated with my already existing subscription so I can try this thing out.
An Azure AD (and B2C) is a higher level object than a subscription in the portal user interface. That's why you lose your subscription view when selecting B2C.
Internally this will be linked to your subscription, otherwise Microsoft couldn't send you a bill. if you go to the B2C dashboard, there is text containing the linked subscription:
Subscription status
If there is no subscription linked, there is a warning in the B2C Dashboard:
No Subscription linked to this B2C tenant or the Subscription needs your attention.
And then you will need to take these actions:
This B2C tenant must be linked to an active Azure subscription for communication, support and billing.
If your Subscription status is No Subscription, please link this B2C tenant to an Azure subscription,
Switch Directories to the location of your target Azure subscription
Under Marketplace, search for and select 'B2C'
Select Create to link this B2C Tenant to a subscription
Unfortunately today B2C features cannot be turned on in an existing tenant.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/active-directory-b2c/active-directory-b2c-faqs
Please make your B2C directory a default directory for an Azure Subscription. You could think of a B2C directory as a normal AAD during this process.
This process of switching the default directory can only be done through Azure Classic Portal using Service Admin (live account ONLY) for the subscription.
You could refer this article for further steps:
https://ballance.in/default-directory-of-an-azure-subscription/
Following article describe how to move resources between Azure subscriptions.
https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/documentation/articles/resource-group-move-resources/
However it says that both subscriptions must exist within the same tenant. Apparently that is not the case with my 2 Azure accounts and I didn't know until now that behind the scenes I have a Tenant ID linked to these accounts.
I'm now wondering how to get some of my accounts that I'm using for my company to be linked to a common Tenant ID.
Any ideas?
Updated answer for the new portal (early 2018).
Follow this link: How to associate or add an Azure subscription to Azure Active Directory to associate your subscription with the new tenant (directory).
Once you've done it, you can transfer between subscriptions.
Tenant here refers to Azure Active Directory (AAD) associated with your azure subscription.
The steps to change the associated AAD for an Azure subscription are described here.
The service admin of the Azure subscription, who is already a member of the current associated AAD, should also be member in AAD you want to associate.
Typically, existing AAD belongs to a Microsoft account. This accounts needs to be added to the target AAD.