How to define the user as a stale user in azure active directory?





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In on Premises active directory, stale user can be define depends on last logon and last password reset activity, but i want to know how i will define user is a stale after some period of time in azure active directory,



Can anyone suggest? Thanks in advance.










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    0















    In on Premises active directory, stale user can be define depends on last logon and last password reset activity, but i want to know how i will define user is a stale after some period of time in azure active directory,



    Can anyone suggest? Thanks in advance.










    share|improve this question

























      0












      0








      0








      In on Premises active directory, stale user can be define depends on last logon and last password reset activity, but i want to know how i will define user is a stale after some period of time in azure active directory,



      Can anyone suggest? Thanks in advance.










      share|improve this question














      In on Premises active directory, stale user can be define depends on last logon and last password reset activity, but i want to know how i will define user is a stale after some period of time in azure active directory,



      Can anyone suggest? Thanks in advance.







      azure azure-active-directory






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Jan 4 at 6:22









      kadharbashakadharbasha

      92




      92
























          1 Answer
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          Azure AD does not provide direct feature for identifying stale user.



          Below article can help



          https://www.undocumented-features.com/2018/06/22/how-to-find-staleish-azure-b2b-guest-accounts/



          Below text borrowed from the above blog:



          This script uses the RefreshTokensValidFromDateTime property from the user in conjunction with one of the following:




          • default token refresh lifetime in Azure AD (90 days)

          • the actual token refresh lifetime if a policy has been configured and is able to be read

          • a user-specified value


          This will help you identify when users last logged on (using the RefreshTokensValidFromDateTimeProperty), and then, based on the tenant’s refresh token setting and a “stale” value (how long you want to specify without a refresh token being updated), lets you calculate a stale user.



          Script available at



          https://gallery.technet.microsoft.com/scriptcenter/Report-on-Azure-AD-Stale-8e64c1c5






          share|improve this answer


























          • Thanks for ur reply, but this is not right way to define as stale. because refreshTokensValidFromDateTime is not refreshing during user logged in, so we can't check when the user is logged in.

            – kadharbasha
            Jan 7 at 5:42














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          1 Answer
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          1 Answer
          1






          active

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          active

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          active

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          -1














          Azure AD does not provide direct feature for identifying stale user.



          Below article can help



          https://www.undocumented-features.com/2018/06/22/how-to-find-staleish-azure-b2b-guest-accounts/



          Below text borrowed from the above blog:



          This script uses the RefreshTokensValidFromDateTime property from the user in conjunction with one of the following:




          • default token refresh lifetime in Azure AD (90 days)

          • the actual token refresh lifetime if a policy has been configured and is able to be read

          • a user-specified value


          This will help you identify when users last logged on (using the RefreshTokensValidFromDateTimeProperty), and then, based on the tenant’s refresh token setting and a “stale” value (how long you want to specify without a refresh token being updated), lets you calculate a stale user.



          Script available at



          https://gallery.technet.microsoft.com/scriptcenter/Report-on-Azure-AD-Stale-8e64c1c5






          share|improve this answer


























          • Thanks for ur reply, but this is not right way to define as stale. because refreshTokensValidFromDateTime is not refreshing during user logged in, so we can't check when the user is logged in.

            – kadharbasha
            Jan 7 at 5:42


















          -1














          Azure AD does not provide direct feature for identifying stale user.



          Below article can help



          https://www.undocumented-features.com/2018/06/22/how-to-find-staleish-azure-b2b-guest-accounts/



          Below text borrowed from the above blog:



          This script uses the RefreshTokensValidFromDateTime property from the user in conjunction with one of the following:




          • default token refresh lifetime in Azure AD (90 days)

          • the actual token refresh lifetime if a policy has been configured and is able to be read

          • a user-specified value


          This will help you identify when users last logged on (using the RefreshTokensValidFromDateTimeProperty), and then, based on the tenant’s refresh token setting and a “stale” value (how long you want to specify without a refresh token being updated), lets you calculate a stale user.



          Script available at



          https://gallery.technet.microsoft.com/scriptcenter/Report-on-Azure-AD-Stale-8e64c1c5






          share|improve this answer


























          • Thanks for ur reply, but this is not right way to define as stale. because refreshTokensValidFromDateTime is not refreshing during user logged in, so we can't check when the user is logged in.

            – kadharbasha
            Jan 7 at 5:42
















          -1












          -1








          -1







          Azure AD does not provide direct feature for identifying stale user.



          Below article can help



          https://www.undocumented-features.com/2018/06/22/how-to-find-staleish-azure-b2b-guest-accounts/



          Below text borrowed from the above blog:



          This script uses the RefreshTokensValidFromDateTime property from the user in conjunction with one of the following:




          • default token refresh lifetime in Azure AD (90 days)

          • the actual token refresh lifetime if a policy has been configured and is able to be read

          • a user-specified value


          This will help you identify when users last logged on (using the RefreshTokensValidFromDateTimeProperty), and then, based on the tenant’s refresh token setting and a “stale” value (how long you want to specify without a refresh token being updated), lets you calculate a stale user.



          Script available at



          https://gallery.technet.microsoft.com/scriptcenter/Report-on-Azure-AD-Stale-8e64c1c5






          share|improve this answer















          Azure AD does not provide direct feature for identifying stale user.



          Below article can help



          https://www.undocumented-features.com/2018/06/22/how-to-find-staleish-azure-b2b-guest-accounts/



          Below text borrowed from the above blog:



          This script uses the RefreshTokensValidFromDateTime property from the user in conjunction with one of the following:




          • default token refresh lifetime in Azure AD (90 days)

          • the actual token refresh lifetime if a policy has been configured and is able to be read

          • a user-specified value


          This will help you identify when users last logged on (using the RefreshTokensValidFromDateTimeProperty), and then, based on the tenant’s refresh token setting and a “stale” value (how long you want to specify without a refresh token being updated), lets you calculate a stale user.



          Script available at



          https://gallery.technet.microsoft.com/scriptcenter/Report-on-Azure-AD-Stale-8e64c1c5







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Jan 4 at 7:09

























          answered Jan 4 at 6:26









          Manoj ChoudhariManoj Choudhari

          2,5672722




          2,5672722













          • Thanks for ur reply, but this is not right way to define as stale. because refreshTokensValidFromDateTime is not refreshing during user logged in, so we can't check when the user is logged in.

            – kadharbasha
            Jan 7 at 5:42





















          • Thanks for ur reply, but this is not right way to define as stale. because refreshTokensValidFromDateTime is not refreshing during user logged in, so we can't check when the user is logged in.

            – kadharbasha
            Jan 7 at 5:42



















          Thanks for ur reply, but this is not right way to define as stale. because refreshTokensValidFromDateTime is not refreshing during user logged in, so we can't check when the user is logged in.

          – kadharbasha
          Jan 7 at 5:42







          Thanks for ur reply, but this is not right way to define as stale. because refreshTokensValidFromDateTime is not refreshing during user logged in, so we can't check when the user is logged in.

          – kadharbasha
          Jan 7 at 5:42






















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