Forum Discussion
Azure AD OAuth2 Limits
For 3rd party SaaS applications you require Azure AD Premium P1 licenses for SSO and Oauth2
- Mitch KingJun 27, 2018Iron Contributor
Hmm this must have changed, didn't realise this was now possible for free tier...
"With Azure AD Free and Azure AD Basic, end users who have been assigned access to SaaS apps, can see up to 10 apps in their Access panel and get SSO access to them. Admins can configure SSO and assign user access to as many SaaS apps as they want with Free and Basic however, end users will only see 10 apps in their Access panel at a time."
is it a SaaS app or a custom internal app published via the Azure app proxy?
- Myles GallagherJun 27, 2018Brass Contributor
It’s not some 3rd party “SaaS” app. It actually doesn’t exist yet, and I don’t fully understand Microsoft’s terminology here. I’m not 100% sure what the role of the app proxy is. If for example, we develop a web application and make it accessible on the internet (but only to authorized individuals, i.e through azure AD credentials), is this “proxy” component even needed?
The names obviously mean something because the licensing details include them, I just don’t know the difference between “SaaS” applications from a 3rd party, and some home-grown application. Are all “served” applications that come over the internet considered SaaS now?