Use this example to learn how the search flow works for a lookup operation that returns a target user identity from a default registry policy association.
In Figure 13, an administrator wants to map all desktop workstation users in a Windows® Active Directory registry to a single i5/OS™ user profile named general_user in an i5/OS registry that he named System_A in Enterprise Identity Mapping (EIM). Kerberos is the authentication method that Windows uses and the name of the Windows Active Directory registry as the administrator defined it in EIM is Desktops. One of the user identities that the administrator wants to map from is a Kerberos principal named sajones.
The administrator creates a default registry policy association with the following information:
Figure 13: A lookup operation returns a target user identity from a default registry policy association.
Source user identity and registry | ---> | Default registry policy association | ---> | Target user identity |
---|---|---|---|---|
sajones in Desktops registry | ---> | Default registry policy association | ---> | general_user (in System_A registry) |
The lookup operation search flows in this manner:
Sometimes an EIM lookup operation returns ambiguous results. This can happen, for example, when more than one target user identity matches the specified lookup operation criteria. Some EIM-enabled applications, including i5/OS applications and products are not designed to handle these ambiguous results and may fail or give unexpected results. You may need to take action to resolve this situation. For example, you may need to either change your EIM configuration or define lookup information for each target user identity to prevent multiple matching target user identities. Also, you can test a mapping to determine whether the changes you make work as expected.