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Microsoft Identity Manager 2016 Handbook

Microsoft Identity Manager 2016 Handbook

By : David Steadman, Jeff Ingalls
3.8 (5)
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Microsoft Identity Manager 2016 Handbook

Microsoft Identity Manager 2016 Handbook

3.8 (5)
By: David Steadman, Jeff Ingalls

Overview of this book

Microsoft Identity Manager 2016 is Microsoft’s solution to identity management. When fully installed, the product utilizes SQL, SharePoint, IIS, web services, the .NET Framework, and SCSM to name a few, allowing it to be customized to meet nearly every business requirement. The book is divided into 15 chapters and begins with an overview of the product, what it does, and what it does not do. To better understand the concepts in MIM, we introduce a fictitious company and their problems and goals, then build an identity solutions to fit those goals. Over the course of this book, we cover topics such as MIM installation and configuration, user and group management options, self-service solutions, role-based access control, reducing security threats, and finally operational troubleshooting and best practices. By the end of this book, you will have gained the necessary skills to deploy, manage and operate Microsoft Identity Manager 2016 to meet your business requirements and solve real-world customer problems.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
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16
Index

How does it work?


We can summarize the end user interaction in four steps, as follows:

  1. After PAM is deployed, a user in one of the corporate forests (for us TFC), will request the role activation (some sort of elevation) of a secondary account that resides in a managed domain. If the request is performed via the PowerShell cmdlet, then a call is made directly to the MIM service, whereas if a custom PAM client is used, then the call is made to the REST API first, which interacts with the MIM service.

  2. If the role request requires approval, then we will wait for approval. In Windows 2012 R2 deployments, once approved or autoapproved, the MIM service account (in the management forest) adds the end user's secondary account (in the management forest) to a shadow group (in the management forest). The SID of the sourced TFC group will be in the shadow group's SID History. Note that we did not change the membership of any TFC groups; however, you will see the shadow group membership change.

  3. The person...

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Microsoft Identity Manager 2016 Handbook
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