You create the Manual Task Service driver by importing the driver’s basic configuration file and then modifying the configuration to suit your environment. After you create and configure the driver, you need to deploy it to the Identity Vault and start it.
In Designer, open your project.
In the Modeler, right-click the driver set where you want to create the driver, then select
> to display the Driver Configuration Wizard.In the Driver Configuration list, select the desired Manual Task Driver configuration file (
, , , or ), then click .The configuration files include the filters and policies needed to implement each scenario. If you have a different scenario you want to implement, you should select the basic configuration that most closely resembles your desired scenario and modify it as needed.
On the Import Information Requested page, fill in the following fields:
Driver Name: Specify a name that is unique within the driver set.
Driver is Local/Remote: Select
if this driver will run on the Metadirectory server without using the Remote Loader service. Select if you want the driver to use the Remote Loader service, either locally on the Metadirectory server or remotely on another server.(Conditional) If you chose to run the driver remotely, click Step 6.
, then fill in the fields listed below. Otherwise, skip toRemote Host Name and Port: Specify the host name or IP address of the server where the driver’s Remote Loader service is running.
Driver Password: Specify the driver object password that is defined in the Remote Loader service. The Remote Loader requires this password to authenticate to the Metadirectory server.
Remote Password: Specify the Remote Loader’s password (as defined on the Remote Loader service). The Metadirectory engine (or Remote Loader shim) requires this password to authenticate to the Remote Loader
Click
to import the driver configuration.At this point, the driver is created from the basic configuration file. To ensure that the driver works the way you want it to for your environment, you must review and modify (if necessary) the driver’s default configuration settings.
To review or modify the default configuration settings, click Configuring the Driver.
, then continue with the next section,or
To skip the configuration settings at this time, click Configuring the Driver.
. When you are ready to configure the settings, continue with the next section,There are many settings, policies, and templates that you use to configure and optimize the driver. The ones you use depend on what you are trying to accomplish with the driver.
The driver settings, policies, and templates are explained in Section A.0, Driver Settings, Policies, and Templates.
After you configure the driver, it must by deployed. Continue with the next section, Deploying the Driver.
After a driver is created in Designer, it must be deployed into the Identity Vault.
In Designer, open your project.
In the Modeler, right-click the driver icon or the driver line, then select
.If you are authenticated to the Identity Vault, skip to Step 5; otherwise, specify the following information:
Host: Specify the IP address or DNS name of the server hosting the Identity Vault.
Username: Specify the DN of the user object used to authenticate to the Identity Vault.
Password: Specify the user’s password.
Click
.Read the deployment summary, then click
.Read the message, then click
.Click
to assign rights to the driver.The driver requires rights to objects within the Identity Vault and to the input and output directories on the server. The Admin user object is most often used to supply these rights. However, you might want to create a DriversUser (for example) and assign security equivalence to that user. Whatever rights that the driver needs to have on the server, the DriversUser object must have the same security rights.
Click
, then browse to and select the object with the correct rights.Click
twice.Click
to exclude users that should not be synchronized.You should exclude any administrative User objects (for example, Admin and DriversUser) from synchronization.
Click
.When a driver is created, it is stopped by default. To make the driver work, you must start the driver and cause events to occur. Identity Manager is an event-driven system, so after the driver is started, it won’t do anything until an event occurs.
To start the driver:
In Designer, open your project.
In the Modeler, right-click the driver icon or the driver line, then select
.For information about management tasks with the driver, see Section 5.0, Managing the Driver.