17.8 OAM in a Domain Containing OAAM and OIN

This topic describes how to configure Oracle Access Manager (OAM) in an Oracle Identity Management domain that has Oracle Adaptive Access Manager (OAAM) and Oracle Identity Navigator (OIN) installed. It includes the following sections:

17.8.1 Appropriate Deployment Environment

Perform the configuration in this topic if you want to install Oracle Access Manager in an environment where Oracle Adaptive Access Manager and Oracle Identity Navigator are already installed. At a later time, you may install Oracle Identity Manager in the same domain and set up integration between Oracle Access Manager and Oracle Identity Manager. You can also set up integration between Oracle Adaptive Access Manager and Oracle Access Manager, as described in the "Integrating OIM, OAM, and OAAM" topic in the Oracle Fusion Middleware Developer's Guide for Oracle Adaptive Access Manager.

You can use Oracle Identity Navigator to discover and launch Consoles for Oracle Access Manager, Oracle Adaptive Access Manager, and Oracle Identity Manager from within the Oracle Identity Navigator user interface

17.8.2 Components Deployed

Performing the configuration in this section deploys the following:

  • Managed Server for Oracle Access Manager

  • Oracle Access Manager Console on the existing Administration Server

17.8.3 Dependencies

The configuration in this section depends on the following:

17.8.4 Procedure

Perform the following steps to configure Oracle Access Manager in an Oracle Identity Management domain that has Oracle Adaptive Access Manager and Oracle Identity Navigator installed:

  1. Ensure that all prerequisites, listed in Prerequisites, are satisfied. In addition, see Important Notes Before You Begin.

  2. Configure Oracle Adaptive Access Manager and Oracle Identity Navigator in a new WebLogic domain, as described in OAAM in a New WebLogic Domain. A new WebLogic domain to support Oracle Adaptive Access Manager and Oracle Identity Navigator is created in the <MW_HOME>\user_projects\domains directory (on Windows). On UNIX, the domain is created in the <MW_HOME>/user_projects/domains directory.

  3. Run the <Oracle_IDM2>/common/bin/config.sh script (on UNIX). (<Oracle_IDM2>\common\bin\config.cmd on Windows). The Oracle Fusion Middleware Configuration Wizard appears.

  4. On the Welcome screen, select the Extend an existing WebLogic domain option. Click Next.

  5. On the Select a WebLogic Domain Directory screen, browse to the directory that contains the WebLogic domain in which you configured Oracle Adaptive Access Manager and Oracle Identity Navigator. Click Next. The Select Extension Source screen appears.

  6. On the Select Extension Source screen, select the Oracle Access Manager with Database Policy Store - 11.1.1.3.0 [Oracle_IDM2] domain configuration option.

  7. After selecting the domain configuration options, click Next. The Configure JDBC Data Sources Screen is displayed. Configure the oamDS data source, as required. After the test succeeds, the Configure JDBC Component Schema screen is displayed.

  8. On the Configure JDBC Component Schema screen, select a component schema, such as the OAAM Admin Server Schema, the OAAM Admin MDS Schema, the User Messaging Service Schema, the OWSM MDS Schema, the OIM MDS Schema, or the SOA MDS Schema, that you want to modify.

    You can set values for Schema Owner, Schema Password, Database and Service, Host Name, and Port. Click Next. The Test JDBC Component Schema screen appears. After the test succeeds, the Select Optional Configuration screen appears.

  9. On the Select Optional Configuration screen, you can configure Managed Servers, Clusters, and Machines and Deployments and Services. Select the relevant check boxes and click Next.

    • Optional: Configure Managed Servers, as required.

    • Optional: Configure Clusters, as required.

      For more information about configuring clusters for Oracle Identity Management products, see the "Configuring High Availability for Identity Management Components" topic in the guide Oracle Fusion Middleware High Availability Guide.

    • Optional: Assign Managed Servers to Clusters, as required.

    • Optional: Configure Machines, as needed. This step is useful when you want to run the Administration Server on one machine and Managed Servers on another physical machine.

      Tip:

      Before configuring a machine, use the ping command to verify whether the machine or host name is accessible.
    • Optional: Assign the Administration Server to a machine.

    • Optional: Select Deployments, such as applications and libraries, and Services to target them to a particular cluster or server.

  10. On the Configuration Summary screen, review the domain configuration, and click Extend to start extending the domain.

Your existing domain with Oracle Adaptive Access Manager and Oracle Identity Navigator is extended to support Oracle Access Manager.