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Identity Manager 9.2.1 - Administration Guide for Connecting to Azure Active Directory

Managing Azure Active Directory environments Synchronizing an Azure Active Directory environment
Setting up initial synchronization with an Azure Active Directory tenant Adjusting the synchronization configuration for Azure Active Directory environments Running synchronization Tasks following synchronization Troubleshooting Ignoring data error in synchronization Pausing handling of target system specific processes (Offline mode)
Managing Azure Active Directory user accounts and identities Managing memberships in Azure Active Directory groups Managing Azure Active Directory administrator roles assignments Managing Azure Active Directory subscription and Azure Active Directory service plan assignments
Displaying enabled and disabled Azure Active Directory service plans forAzure Active Directory user accounts and Azure Active Directory groups Assigning Azure Active Directory subscriptions to Azure Active Directory user accounts Assigning disabled Azure Active Directory service plans to Azure Active Directory user accounts Inheriting Azure Active Directory subscriptions based on categories Inheritance of disabled Azure Active Directory service plans based on categories
Login credentials for Azure Active Directory user accounts Azure Active Directory role management
Azure Active Directory role management tenants Enabling new Azure Active Directory role management features Azure Active Directory role main data Displaying Azure Active Directory scoped role assignments Displaying scoped role eligibilities for Azure Active Directory roles Overview of Azure Active Directory scoped role assignments Main data of Azure Active Directory scoped role assignments Managing Azure Active Directory scoped role assignments Adding Azure Active Directory scoped role assignments Editing Azure Active Directory scoped role assignments Deleting Azure Active Directory scoped role assignments Assigning Azure Active Directory scoped role assignments Assigning Azure Active Directory system roles to scopes through role assignments Assigning Azure Active Directory business roles to scopes though role assignments Assigning Azure Active Directory organizations to scopes through role assignments Overview of Azure Active Directory scoped role eligibilities Main data of Azure Active Directory scoped role assignments Managing Azure Active Directory scoped role eligibilities Adding Azure Active Directory scoped role eligibilities Editing Azure Active Directory scoped role eligibilities Deleting Azure Active Directory scoped role eligibilities Assigning Azure Active Directory scoped role eligibilities Assigning Azure Active Directory system roles to scopes through role eligibilities Assigning Azure Active Directory business roles to scopes though role eligibilities Assigning Azure Active Directory organizations to scopes through role eligibilities
Mapping Azure Active Directory objects in One Identity Manager
Azure Active Directory core directories Azure Active Directory user accounts Azure Active Directory user identities Azure Active Directory groups Azure Active Directory administrator roles Azure Active Directory administrative units Azure Active Directory subscriptions and Azure Active Directory service principals Disabled Azure Active Directory service plans Azure Active Directory app registrations and Azure Active Directory service principals Reports about Azure Active Directory objects
Handling of Azure Active Directory objects in the Web Portal Recommendations for federations Basic configuration data for managing an Azure Active Directory environment Troubleshooting Configuration parameters for managing an Azure Active Directory environment Default project template for Azure Active Directory Editing Azure Active Directory system objects Azure Active Directory connector settings

Displaying user identities for Azure Active Directory user accounts

User identities of an Azure Active Directory user account are displayed on the user account's overview form.

To obtain an overview of all user identities of a user account

  1. In the Manager, select the Azure Active Directory > User accounts category.

  2. Select the user account in the result list.

  3. Select the Azure Active Directory user account overview task.

    The Azure Active Directory user identities form element displays the user identities of the user account.

Related topics

Displaying Azure Active Directory user identities' main data

You cannot edit the main data of an existing user identity. You can create additional user identities or delete user identities.

To display a user identity's main data

  1. In the Manager, select the Azure Active Directory > User accounts > User identities category.

  2. Select the user identity in the result list.

  3. Select the Change main data task.

Table 36: Main data for a user identity

Property

Description

Azure Active Directory user account

Name of the Azure Active Directory user account used by the identity.

Issuer

Issuer of the identity, Facebook for example. Local user accounts use the name of the Azure Active Directory B2C tenant's default domain, for example <your organization>.onmicrosoft.com.

Assigned ID

ID used to log in depending on sign-in type. If the sign-in type is emailAddress, the ID must be a valid email address, if it is userName the ID must be a valid local part of an email address, and if it is federated, the issuer expects a unique identifier of the federated account.

Sign-in type

Ways in which a user can sign in to the directory. For example, emailAddress or userName for local user accounts and federated for social network identities.

Related topics

Displaying the Azure Active Directory user identity overview

Use this task to obtain an overview of the most important information about a user identity.

To obtain an overview of a user identity

  1. In the Manager, select the Azure Active Directory > User accounts > User identities category.

  2. Select the user identity in the result list.

  3. Select the Azure Active Directory user identity overview task.

Related topics

Azure Active Directory groups

Azure Active Directory recognizes several group types into which you can organize users and groups to regulate access to resources or email distribution, for example.

Azure Active Directory groups are loaded into One Identity Manager by synchronization. You can edit individual main data of the group and you can create new security groups in One Identity Manager. However, you cannot create more group types in One Identity Manager.

To add users to groups, you assign the groups directly to users. This can be assignments of groups to departments, cost centers, locations, business roles, or the IT Shop.

NOTE: Assignments to Azure Active Directory groups that are synchronized with the local Active Directory are not allowed in One Identity Manager. These groups cannot be requested through the web portal. You can only manage these groups in your locally. For more information, see the Azure Active Directory documentation from Microsoft.

The group types supported in One Identity Manager are listed below.

Table 37: Support groups types

Group type

Description

Security group

Resource permissions are distributed through security groups. User accounts and other groups are added to security groups, which makes administration easier.

Security groups are loaded into One Identity Manager by synchronization. You can edit security groups in One Identity Manager and also create new ones.

Office 365 group

Office 365 groups are loaded into One Identity Manager by synchronization. You can edit Office 365 groups in One Identity Manager but

you can only create new Office 365 groups in One Identity Manager if the Exchange Online Module in installed. For more information, see the One Identity Manager Administration Guide for Connecting to Exchange Online.

Distribution group

Distribution groups are used to send emails to group members. Distribution groups are loaded into One Identity Manager by synchronization. You can edit distribution groups in One Identity Manager but you cannot create them in One Identity Manager.

Mail-enabled security groups

Mail-enabled security groups are security groups that are used as distribution groups.

Mail-enabled security groups are loaded into One Identity Manager by synchronization. You can edit mail-enabled security groups in One Identity Manager but you can only create new mail-enabled security groups in One Identity Manager if the Exchange Online Module is installed. For more information, see the One Identity Manager Administration Guide for Connecting to Exchange Online.

Dynamic group

Members of a dynamic group are not strictly assigned, but determined through defined rules. Dynamic groups are loaded into One Identity Manager by synchronization. You can change dynamic groups in One Identity Manager. You cannot create new dynamic groups in One Identity Manager.

Related topics
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