The following files must be at least these minimum versions:īy default, these DLL files will be in one of the following locations based on whether the 32-bit or 64-bit version of SharePoint Designer installed:ģ2-bit folder: C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\OFFICE15\Ħ4-bit folder: C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\OFFICE15\ģ. HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Office\15.0\Common\Identity\EnableADAL = 1Ģ. The EnableADAL registry key referenced earlier must be set to 1 and the Type must be REG_DWORD: When successfully authenticating with SharePoint Online, the "Sign in" dialog should look like this:įor SharePoint Designer to attempt modern authentication the following requirements must be met:ġ. Without meeting all the requirements, the typical experience will be a repeated authentication challenge with a generic credential dialog like this: Most Office 2013 applications will be able to successfully use modern authentication once the EnableADAL=1 registry key has been set as documented in this article:Įnable Modern Authentication for Office 2013 on Windows devicesīut SharePoint Designer has additional requirements that need to be met before it will attempt to use Modern Authentication. While SharePoint Designer wasn’t natively designed to work with Modern Authentication (ADAL) there are updates available that allow it to work. I’ve seen a few requests from customers encountering authentication issues with SharePoint Designer 2013 after disabling legacy authentication (IDCRL) in SharePoint Online.
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