The description you assign to the auth token. Does not have to be unique, and it's changeable.
(For tenancies that support identity domains) You can have an empty description.
The OCID of the auth token.
The detailed status of INACTIVE lifecycleState. Note: Numbers greater than Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER will result in rounding issues.
The token's current state. After creating an auth token, make sure its {@code lifecycleState} changes from CREATING to ACTIVE before using it.
Date and time the {@code AuthToken} object was created, in the format defined by RFC3339.
Example: {@code 2016-08-25T21:10:29.600Z}
Date and time when this auth token will expire, in the format defined by RFC3339. Null if it never expires.
Example: {@code 2016-08-25T21:10:29.600Z}
The auth token. The value is available only in the response for {@code CreateAuthToken}, and not for {@code ListAuthTokens} or {@code UpdateAuthToken}.
The OCID of the user the auth token belongs to.
An {@code AuthToken} is an Oracle-generated token string that you can use to authenticate with third-party APIs that do not support Oracle Cloud Infrastructure's signature-based authentication. For example, use an {@code AuthToken} to authenticate with a Swift client with the Object Storage Service.
The auth token is associated with the user's Console login. Auth tokens never expire. A user can have up to two auth tokens at a time.
*Note:** The token is always an Oracle-generated string; you can't change it to a string of your choice.
For more information, see [Managing User Credentials](https://docs.cloud.oracle.com/Content/Identity/access/managing-user-credentials.htm).