|
| 1 | +--- |
| 2 | +title: Azure Active Directory SSO integration with Tanium SSO |
| 3 | +description: Learn how to configure single sign-on between Azure Active Directory and Tanium SSO. |
| 4 | +services: active-directory |
| 5 | +author: jeevansd |
| 6 | +manager: CelesteDG |
| 7 | +ms.reviewer: CelesteDG |
| 8 | +ms.service: active-directory |
| 9 | +ms.subservice: saas-app-tutorial |
| 10 | +ms.workload: identity |
| 11 | +ms.topic: how-to |
| 12 | +ms.date: 07/14/2023 |
| 13 | +ms.author: jeedes |
| 14 | + |
| 15 | +--- |
| 16 | + |
| 17 | +# Azure Active Directory SSO integration with Tanium SSO |
| 18 | + |
| 19 | +In this article, you learn how to integrate Tanium SSO with Azure Active Directory (Azure AD). Tanium, the industry’s only provider of converged endpoint management (XEM), leads the paradigm shift in legacy approaches to managing complex security and technology environments. When you integrate Tanium SSO with Azure AD, you can: |
| 20 | + |
| 21 | +* Control in Azure AD who has access to Tanium SSO. |
| 22 | +* Enable your users to be automatically signed-in to Tanium SSO with their Azure AD accounts. |
| 23 | +* Manage your accounts in one central location - the Azure portal. |
| 24 | + |
| 25 | +You'll configure and test Azure AD single sign-on for Tanium SSO in a test environment. Tanium SSO supports both **SP** and **IDP** initiated single sign-on and also **Just In Time** user provisioning. |
| 26 | + |
| 27 | +## Prerequisites |
| 28 | + |
| 29 | +To integrate Azure Active Directory with Tanium SSO, you need: |
| 30 | + |
| 31 | +* An Azure AD user account. If you don't already have one, you can [Create an account for free](https://azure.microsoft.com/free/?WT.mc_id=A261C142F). |
| 32 | +* One of the following roles: Global Administrator, Cloud Application Administrator, Application Administrator, or owner of the service principal. |
| 33 | +* An Azure AD subscription. If you don't have a subscription, you can get a [free account](https://azure.microsoft.com/free/). |
| 34 | +* Tanium SSO single sign-on (SSO) enabled subscription. |
| 35 | + |
| 36 | +## Add application and assign a test user |
| 37 | + |
| 38 | +Before you begin the process of configuring single sign-on, you need to add the Tanium SSO application from the Azure AD gallery. You need a test user account to assign to the application and test the single sign-on configuration. |
| 39 | + |
| 40 | +### Add Tanium SSO from the Azure AD gallery |
| 41 | + |
| 42 | +Add Tanium SSO from the Azure AD application gallery to configure single sign-on with Tanium SSO. For more information on how to add application from the gallery, see the [Quickstart: Add application from the gallery](../manage-apps/add-application-portal.md). |
| 43 | + |
| 44 | +### Create and assign Azure AD test user |
| 45 | + |
| 46 | +Follow the guidelines in the [create and assign a user account](../manage-apps/add-application-portal-assign-users.md) article to create a test user account in the Azure portal called B.Simon. |
| 47 | + |
| 48 | +Alternatively, you can also use the [Enterprise App Configuration Wizard](https://portal.office.com/AdminPortal/home?Q=Docs#/azureadappintegration). In this wizard, you can add an application to your tenant, add users/groups to the app, and assign roles. The wizard also provides a link to the single sign-on configuration pane in the Azure portal. [Learn more about Microsoft 365 wizards.](/microsoft-365/admin/misc/azure-ad-setup-guides). |
| 49 | + |
| 50 | +## Configure Azure AD SSO |
| 51 | + |
| 52 | +Complete the following steps to enable Azure AD single sign-on in the Azure portal. |
| 53 | + |
| 54 | +1. In the Azure portal, on the **Tanium SSO** application integration page, find the **Manage** section and select **single sign-on**. |
| 55 | +1. On the **Select a single sign-on method** page, select **SAML**. |
| 56 | +1. On the **Set up single sign-on with SAML** page, select the pencil icon for **Basic SAML Configuration** to edit the settings. |
| 57 | + |
| 58 | + [  ](common/edit-urls.png#lightbox) |
| 59 | + |
| 60 | +1. On the **Basic SAML Configuration** section, perform the following steps: |
| 61 | + |
| 62 | + a. In the **Identifier** textbox, type a value using the following pattern: |
| 63 | + `urn:amazon:cognito:sp:<InstanceName>` |
| 64 | + |
| 65 | + b. In the **Reply URL** textbox, type a URL using the following pattern: |
| 66 | + `https://<InstanceName>-tanium.auth.<SUBDOMAIN>.amazoncognito.com/saml2/idpresponse` |
| 67 | + |
| 68 | +1. If you wish to configure the application in **SP** initiated mode, then perform the following step: |
| 69 | + |
| 70 | + In the **Sign on URL** textbox, type a URL using the following pattern: |
| 71 | + `https://<InstanceName>.cloud.tanium.com` |
| 72 | + |
| 73 | + > [!NOTE] |
| 74 | + > These values are not real. Update these values with the actual Identifier, Reply URL and Sign on URL. Contact [Tanium SSO support team](mailto:[email protected]) to get these values. You can also refer to the patterns shown in the **Basic SAML Configuration** section in the Azure portal. |
| 75 | +
|
| 76 | +1. On the **Set up single sign-on with SAML** page, in the **SAML Signing Certificate** section, click copy button to copy **App Federation Metadata Url** and save it on your computer. |
| 77 | + |
| 78 | + [  ](common/copy-metadataurl.png#lightbox) |
| 79 | + |
| 80 | +## Configure Tanium SSO |
| 81 | + |
| 82 | +To configure single sign-on on **Tanium SSO ** side, you need to send the **App Federation Metadata Url ** to [Tanium SSO support team ](mailto:[email protected]). They set this setting to have the SAML SSO connection set properly on both sides. |
| 83 | + |
| 84 | +### Create Tanium SSO test user |
| 85 | + |
| 86 | +In this section, a user called B.Simon is created in Tanium SSO. Tanium SSO supports just-in-time user provisioning, which is enabled by default. There's no action item for you in this section. If a user doesn't already exist in Tanium SSO, a new one is created after authentication. |
| 87 | + |
| 88 | +## Test SSO |
| 89 | + |
| 90 | +In this section, you test your Azure AD single sign-on configuration with following options. |
| 91 | + |
| 92 | +#### SP initiated: |
| 93 | + |
| 94 | +* Click on **Test this application** in Azure portal. This will redirect to Tanium SSO Sign-on URL where you can initiate the login flow. |
| 95 | + |
| 96 | +* Go to Tanium SSO Sign-on URL directly and initiate the login flow from there. |
| 97 | + |
| 98 | +#### IDP initiated: |
| 99 | + |
| 100 | +* Click on **Test this application** in Azure portal and you should be automatically signed in to the Tanium SSO for which you set up the SSO. |
| 101 | + |
| 102 | +You can also use Microsoft My Apps to test the application in any mode. When you click the Tanium SSO 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 Tanium SSO for which you set up the SSO. For more information about the My Apps, see [Introduction to the My Apps](../user-help/my-apps-portal-end-user-access.md). |
| 103 | + |
| 104 | +## Additional resources |
| 105 | + |
| 106 | +* [What is single sign-on with Azure Active Directory?](../manage-apps/what-is-single-sign-on.md) |
| 107 | +* [Plan a single sign-on deployment](../manage-apps/plan-sso-deployment.md). |
| 108 | + |
| 109 | +## Next steps |
| 110 | + |
| 111 | +Once you configure Tanium SSO 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 Cloud App Security](/cloud-app-security/proxy-deployment-aad). |
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