I cannot create a new organization named ''OnLineO'', as this name already exists.
I'm about sure it's me who created it a few time ago, but none of my logons run.
Must I send an email to Visual Studio Marketplace (VSMarketplace#microsoft.com) as stated in this post : Recovering access to an organization ?
Through the query, I found that your organization:"OnLineO" has been backed up to AAD:"OnLineO".
Please go to azure DevOps profile page,switch to OnLineO domain and try to login. Please do this in the new incognito window of browser. Note that your login account also needs to be backed up to AAD.
If you still cannot log in, please provide vsid as shown below. Pay attention to the processing of personal privacy information.
Sorry for the delay. If organization OnLineO is backed up to AAD "OnLineO", this is a great info, but I don't understand what it means... ?
On my DevOps profile page in an Invited session in Chrome (more isolated than incognito in other browsers), I am switched to OnLineO
DevOps profile page
It's when I try to create OnLineO as a New Organization that I get this message :
New Organization
Related
My account and subscription is active in portal.azure.com and also same account I have been using for azure devops as well, However while trying to add new service connection in release pipeline section I am seeing below error. Please help.
enter image description here
Please follow these steps to troubleshoot the error "You don’t appear to have an active Azure subscription".
Open a new InPrivate/incognito window of browser, and try to create a service connection again.
Go to https://ms.portal.azure.com/#blade/Microsoft_Azure_Billing/SubscriptionsBlade to check if your subscription status is active.
Go to https://ms.portal.azure.com/#blade/Microsoft_AAD_IAM/TenantPropertiesBlade to check whether the Security defaults is disabled.
In addition, when the user is assigned the subscription for the first time, it needs time to sync the changes when logging in to Azure DevOps.
If there is still the error, please report your issue to Developer Community, you could share your detailed messages in private channel (Microsoft Only).
I created a number of organizations in Azure DevOps to experiment with.
They were all visible under existing Microsoft accounts (subscription accounts).
Then I created an Active Directory and linked one of the organizations to the newly-created directory.
After signoff and signon, the organization can no longer be found.
When I select the new directory in DevOps, there is only a default organization without my test project.
When I tried the same with another organization, this one also disappeared.
Where did my DevOps organization go?
And how can I get them back?
You can try the following two ways to see if the organizations can be displayed.
1.Please try to access https://aex.dev.azure.com/ and change domain to see if your organization lists here.
2.Sign out completely from Azure DevOps by completing the following steps. Closing your browser might not sign you out completely. Sign in again and select your other identity:
Close all browsers, including browsers that aren't running Azure
DevOps.
Open a private or incognito browsing session.
Go to this URL: https://aka.ms/vssignout.
You see a message that says, "Sign out in progress." After you sign
out, you're redirected to the Azure DevOps #dev.azure.microsoft.com
webpage. If the sign-out page takes more than a minute to sign you out, close the browser and continue.
Sign in to Azure DevOps again. Select your other identity.
I had a similar issue when I previously logged in using "Personal" account, created organisation, and when logged out and logged in again selected "Work or Department" account, so I wasn't able to see my organisations because they were created and visible only on "Personal" account 'plan'.
I added a user to my Azure Devops project but when they click on the link in the invitation email they get the "401 - Uh-oh, you do not have access." error. What am I doing wrong?
What I did that seems to have worked, was I made the project public, and the other user was able to access it. After they had accessed one time successfully I made it private again. They are still able to get to it.
First, check if your Azure DevOps organization is AAD based or not. Then that invited user should use corresponding account, work/school account for AAD based, personal account for the other. For example:
A highly specific 401 error case. In this case, both a personal Microsoft account and a work or school account (Azure AD) that have the same sign-in address exist. You've signed in with your work or school account, but your personal account is the identity with access to the organization.
More detail explanation you could take a look at our official documentation here:
Why can't I sign in after I select "personal Microsoft account" or
"work or school account"?
Although both identities use the same sign-in address, they're separate: they have different profiles, security settings, and permissions. Sign out completely from Azure DevOps by completing the following steps. Closing your browser might not sign you out
completely. Sign in again and select your other identity:
Close all browsers, including browsers that aren't running Azure DevOps.
Open a private or incognito browsing session.
Go to this URL: https://aka.ms/vssignout.
You see a message that says, "Sign out in progress." After you sign out, you're redirected to the Azure DevOps #dev.azure.microsoft.com webpage.
If the sign-out page takes more than a minute to sign you out, close the browser and continue.
Sign in to Azure DevOps again. Select your other identity.
Suggest you to use a InPrivate mode browser to login, then use your Microsoft Account to authenticate, also select personal account if you need to choose between a "work or school account" and my "personal account".
I try to use alternative credentials.
I write the name and password, then I press "Save", Azure DevOps shows me the message that the user was saved.
I navigate to other pages, if I return to the page, alternative credentials do not appear.
I have collection administrator permissions.
Another partner with the same permissions creates the alternative credential and Azure DevOps keeps the account.
The difference between the two users is that, I have a hotmail account associated with my Visual Studio license and the partner has the organization account.
I appreciate any support.
Alternate credentials has not been saved
As we know, the alternate credentials are created based on each user's account. To resolve this issue, make sure your account in current Organization.
However, what i want to say is that the security level of the alternate credentials is Least secure:
MS don't recommend using alternate credentials and Azure DevOps will no longer support Alternate Credentials authentication.
Deprecation Timeline
Beginning December 9, 2019 we will disable and hide Alternate Credentials settings for organizations that don’t have Alternate
Credentials set. This change will be in effect for all these
organizations by December 20, 2019.
In the coming months we will work with our customers that are still using the feature, to help them switch to another, more secure
authentication method.
March 2, 2020 – Start gradually disabling Alternate Credentials for all Azure DevOps organizations.
Check the dev blogs for some more details.
Hope this helps.
There are good instructions available here on changing the VSTS connection from one Azure AD to another: Change VSTS AD.
But what if you just want to remove the Azure AD integration, and just revert to using Microsoft Accounts?
I successfully performed all the steps in the instruction, up to the point of attaching a new target Azure AD. You'd think when the VSTS account was unlinked in Azure, it would no longer show up in VSTS.
But going to https://[AccountName].visualstudio.com/_admin/_home/settings still shows account being backed by the source directory.
Attempting to add a Microsoft Account based user at https://[AccountName].visualstudio.com/_user fails to find the account, presumably because it is looking the the Source Azure AD.
This is an important capability when transferring ownership of an account. Thanks for taking a look!
You can follow the steps here: Disconnect your Team Services account from Azure AD.
To stop using Azure AD and revert to using Microsoft accounts, you can
disconnect your Team Services account from its directory.
Here's what you'll need:
Microsoft accounts added to your Team Services account for all users.
Team Services account owner permissions for your Microsoft account.
Directory membership for your Microsoft account as an external user
and global administrator permissions. Azure AD members can't
disconnect Team Services accounts from directories.
With the help of Microsoft Premium Support, we did manage to get this worked out.
The problem was the Team Services was not disconnected from the associated Azure AD before it was unlinked. Then once it was unlinked, it appeared gone from Azure, leaving no way to disassociate Azure AD.
The documentation does show to first disconnect the VSTS account from Azure AD, and then “unlink” the account. Where I got into trouble was by using the new portal. It's pretty hard to even find the old portal anymore BTW).
The new portal has this nice handy unlink button, which is practically irresistible. If clicking it, then it declares success. There is nothing in the UI that prevents you from unlinking while still leaving the AD association. There is no option at all in the new UI portal, as far as I could find, to disconnect Team Services from Azure AD.
Once unlinked, the only fix is to relink, and then redo it all in the old portal as is indicated by the documentation.
This is much more difficult than it should be because it seems like something that should be simple to achieve through the web UI. These posts helped me, but I wanted to add my 2 cents:
In order to disconnect VSTS from AAD you need to be able to use the disconnect button on the configure tab in the old portal seen here. However, you can only use that button if you're the VSTS account owner and if your account is not sourced from the currently linked active directory (i.e. - a MS Account). But you can't make the VSTS account owner a MS account if you've used the portal's interface to add the MS Account to your AAD as an external user. This is because external users are added as Guest account type by default (rather than Member type). If you try to set the MS account as VSTS owner you get the "AAD guest users are not allowed to be collection owners" message seen here.
It's a chicken/egg thing which is made more difficult by the fact that the official documents for this process make no mention of the conflict you'll face. They read as if this should just work.
The answer is that (as of today) you can't do this without using Powershell or an AAD API to convert the MS Account from a "Guest" to a "Member" user type. There are a number or articles out there which walk through the older APIs to do this. Here is what I did with the latest PS:
First, log in to the directory you wish to unlink with an account which has permissions to modify members. Ideally an admin or owner.
Connect-AzureAD
Next, find the account you want to modify using this command:
Get-AzureADUser
Find the ObjectID of the user you want to convert from Guest to Member and then run this command:
Set-AzureADUser -ObjectId [ObjectID GUID Here] -UserType Member
This will convert the MS Account in the AAD you want to unlink to a 'member' type. In my situation I found that I had to remove the MS Account from VSTS and re-add it in order to trigger a refresh which allowed me to set it as account owner.
Now you just follow the documented steps:
set MS account as project owner. Save.
log in to old portal, go to configure tab, and disconnect
log back in everywhere to see the changes