2. OpenSSO 8.0 Update 2 Patch Releases
3. Installing OpenSSO 8.0 Update 2
4. Using the Security Token Service
5. Using the Oracle OpenSSO Fedlet
6. Integrating the OpenSSO 8.0 Update 2 with Oracle Access Manager
Unpacking the Integration Bits
Building Source Files for Oracle Access Manager in OpenSSO
To Build the Source Files for Oracle Access Manager
(Optional) Build an Authentication Scheme for OpenSSO in Oracle Access Manager
To Build an Authentication Scheme for OpenSSO in Oracle Access Manager
Configuring Single Sign-On Using Oracle Access Manager and Oracle OpenSSO STS
To Configure Single Sign-On Using Oracle Access Manager and Oracle OpenSSO 8.0 Update 2
(Optional) Installing of Oblix AuthScheme into Oracle Access Manager
Integrating the OpenSSO 8.0 Update 2 with Oracle Access Manager
Be sure you have access to the following components before you attempt to install OpenSSO 8.0 Update 2 for integration with Oracle Access Manager:
This zip file contains the opensso.war file, integration source code, configuration files and other tools that are required for OpenSSO 8.0 Update 2 installation and configuration.
The OpenSSO Agent is used when an application protected by OpenSSO can actually use the authentication session established by Oracle Access Manager.
Download Oracle Access Manager from Oracle web site. See the http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/middleware/weblogic/downloads/index.html page.
Download Oracle Webgate for a container that is supported by both OpenSSO and Oracle Webgate. At this time, Sun Web Server 7.x is the only container that is supported by both the products.
See the http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/middleware/weblogic/downloads/index.htmlpage.
Download Oracle Access Manager. The SDK is required to compile and build OpenSSO Authentication Modules for Oracle Access Manager integration.
See the See the http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/middleware/weblogic/downloads/index.html page
(Optional) The OpenSSO C-SDK is required for creating an authentication module in Oracle Access Manager itself to generate an OAM session. This may not be a common use case from OpenSSO perspective. See Where is the C SDK? in Sun OpenSSO Enterprise 8.0 C API Reference for Application and Web Policy Agent Developers