The IDPs URL for the page that users authenticate with by entering the user name and password.
The client ID for the IDP application (OAuth Client) that was registered as described in Identity Provider Registration. With Microsoft identity platform, use the application ID.
The client secret for the IDP application (OAuth Client) that was registered as described in Identity Provider Registration. With Microsoft identity platform, use the application secret.
Usage of predefined tag keys. These predefined keys are scoped to namespaces. Example: {@code {"foo-namespace": {"bar-key": "value"}}}
Simple key-value pair that is applied without any predefined name, type, or scope. Example: {@code {"bar-key": "value"}}
The OAuth Redirect URL.
The number of days to keep the refresh token in the Digital Assistant cache. Note: Numbers greater than Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER will result in rounding issues.
If you want to revoke all the refresh tokens and access tokens of the logged-in user from a dialog flow, then you need the IDP's revoke refresh token URL. If you provide this URL, then you can use the System.OAuth2ResetTokens component to revoke the user's tokens for this service.
A space-separated list of the scopes that must be included when Digital Assistant requests an access token from the provider. Include all the scopes that are required to access the resources. If refresh tokens are enabled, include the scope that\u2019s necessary to get the refresh token (typically offline_access).
A shortened version of the authorization URL, which you can get from a URL shortener service (one that allows you to send query parameters). You might need this because the generated authorization-code-request URL could be too long for SMS and older smart phones.
The access-token profile claim to use to identify the user.
The IDPs URL for requesting access tokens.
Properties to update an Authentication Provider.