Introduction to management sessions

  • Last update on September 13th, 2024

The CoreView management session allows operators to execute:

  • management actions
  • custom actions
  • and workflows. 

To enable the management session, you can create a management service account or use Microsoft 365 Global Admin credentials with disabled MFA.

 

 

You can find the Management session in the top bar in CoreView

 

What is a management session?

CoreView's “Management” is a tool that establishes a PowerShell channel to your Microsoft 365 tenant, allowing the execution of actions. Most actions necessitate that the “Management” is turned on for execution, although some actions require the API Graph instead.

The management session can be enabled by every operator with the “Management” role.  

 

How to enable management sessions

There are two possible configurations for CoreView management sessions:

Management Service Account - No credentials required (recommended)

This feature enables lower-level admins and help-desk operators to make delegated changes to defined user accounts, as no Microsoft credentials are used to enable this type of management session. 

 
 

Microsoft Global Admin credentials with MFA disabled required 

CoreView creates an interactive PowerShell session with Microsoft 365. As there isn't a good way to feed the token value into this session the Global Admin account used to activate the management session must NOT have MFA enabled. 

 
 

Follow the instructions in the article configure your tenant to enable the management session to implement your preferred solution. 


Management Service Account

Our recommendation

Using the Management Service Account configuration is recommended because it is more secure. It avoids the need to give Global Admin Credentials to delegated operators.

 

Why create the Management Service Account?

The Management Service Account configuration is the preferred one as:

  1. it prevents the sprawl of administrative accounts on Microsoft, while keeping everything within CoreView;
  2. ensures that delegated operators have the required permissions to perform management action at all times, as permissions themselves are set only on CoreView (other than on Microsoft as well);
  3. provides you with an “Auto-enable management session” toggle to automatically turn on the session when operators execute actions if the session happens to be off.  

How the Management Service Account works

CoreView creates a Management Service Account with the following Administrative roles: 

  • Authentication Administrator
  • Exchange Administrator
  • Global Reader
  • Reports Reader
  • SharePoint Administrator
  • Teams Administrator
  • and User Administrator. 

The credentials for this account are stored within Microsoft Azure Key Vault and changed once a week

What is Key Vault and why it's important

Key Vault is a hardware security module specifically designed to store highly confidential information such as passwords and credit card information. With the credentials stored in Key Vault, CoreView can elevate its privileges without ever having access to the password itself. In addition, Key Vault automatically changes the password each week. The password length is 16 characters, and its complexity is composed by:

  • Upper and lower case letters  
  • Special characters  
  • Numbers

Key Vault allows CoreView to gain access to an authorization token on demand, allowing it to elevate the rights of the service account and perform the action requested by the operator. This allows you to delegate very specific actions to an operator who would otherwise need to be entrusted with Global Admin credentials. All operations are audited by Microsoft Azure directly.