Windows Authentication
When turned on, Cobra implements Windows authentication on the selected data source during initial login to the application. This is also implemented when switching to a different data source during re-login to the application.
If you use Windows authentication, your users' access to Cobra is based on their Windows credentials instead of a different set of Cobra credentials.
To set up Windows authentication, use the Authentication Options dialog box in the EPM Security Administrator. Refer to the Turn Windows Authentication On or Off topic for more information and the EPM Security Administrator Help System for more information.
You have three options for using Windows Authentication to verify credentials when users attempt to log into Cobra.
Authentication Mode | Description | Deployment Type |
---|---|---|
Windows User Name authentication | This mode uses the authenticated Windows User Name and validates it against the Cobra user list. The Windows User Name is used as the Cobra login ID. The Windows Domain is not validated.
This mode is the same as the Windows Authentication option used in Cobra 5.1 SP1 and earlier. |
Standalone, Client/Server, N-tier |
Windows Domain and User Name authentication | This mode uses the authenticated Windows Domain and User Name and validates both against the Cobra user list. Each Cobra user must have a Domain name assigned to his or her user record. The Windows User Name is used as the Cobra login ID. | Standalone, Client/Server, N-tier |
Windows Domain and User Name authentication plus role authentication with communication security | This mode is the same as Windows Domain and User Name authentication but also supports further restricting access to Cobra through the use of a Windows Security Group (role), and supports security on communication between the client and server.
This mode requires additional configuration through the communication configuration files used by n-tier deployments. |
N-tier |
- Related Topics:
- Windows Domain and User Name Authentication Plus Role Authentication
One of your options for authenticating a user's credentials at login is Windows Domain and User Name authentication, plus role authentication and communication security. This authentication is available only for n-tier deployments. - Configure Windows Authentication in an N-Tier Deployment
Follow these steps to set up Windows authentication in an n-tier deployment. - Configuring Windows Authentication Using the Configuration Files
You can configure Windows authentication by adding netTcpBinding or wsHttpBinding to the configuration files.