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I'm trying to use the Microsoft Graph API through the OAUTH2 Authentication however I'm struggling to work out how to use Delegated Permissions and not require a user to login.

I'm happy to authenticate the app with myself once, but this will be running on a daemon/service and won't be interacted with via a user. Because of this I can't use the way Microsoft describes Delegated Permissions as that uses /authorize first and then a call can be made to /token.

I know you can use secret keys for /token but it seems that only is using the Application Permissions and not Delegated - which is what I have access to.

Is there a way to authenticate using Delegated Permissions as if I was a user but without a user having to use a sign in page every time?

2 Answers 2

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I needed to do something similar in a daemon app, but application permissions weren't available for the resource to which I needed access (Planner). I was able to accomplish it using the Resource Owner Password Credentials flow and supplying credentials for a service account instead of an actual user.

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/active-directory/develop/v2-oauth-ropc

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This isn't possible. The term "delegated" is very intentional here in that it means "the user has delegated their permissions to your application so you can operate on behalf of that user". Application permissions are not delegated because there is no user in context to delegate their access rights to you.

Much of the Microsoft Graph functionality works with both Application and Delegated scopes so in many cases you can still execute the same scenarios. There are some caveats such as using the shorthand /me which doesn't exist when there isn't a user authenticated (instead you need to use /users[{id}]). There are however some cases where there isn't an equivalent Application scope and these are regularly looked at in an effort to close the gap.

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  • So since Application Permissions require admin approval and grant access to All items (not perfect for a large AD), if I have set delegated permissions to an application but still use the API token method would I be able to use the /users[{id}] but just for things my user has permission to?
    – Dom
    Aug 31, 2017 at 15:44
  • If you have requested a Delegated Permission that requires Admin Consent (i.e. User.Read.All) and you've received that Consent from an Admin, then yes. Once a user goes through OAUTH they would have permission to execute both calls to /me and /users{someone-other-than me endpoints. They still cannot execute functions that they otherwise wouldn't (i.e. if the user can't edit other users normally than your app wouldn't be able to either). Aug 31, 2017 at 16:12
  • And there is no way to not use the admin only All application permissions without a user logging in via a UI for the application?
    – Dom
    Aug 31, 2017 at 16:17
  • You cannot use the Delegated Permissions without a User but most of the All scopes have Application equivalents. For example, there is a Delegated User.Read.All and an Application User.Read.All scope. There are some exceptions for very risky scopes; Directory.AccessAsUser.All for example is only available to an Admin using Delegated scopes. Aug 31, 2017 at 16:51

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