5 Extending the Functionality of the Connector
You can extend the functionality of the connector to address your specific business requirements.
The following topics discuss information related to using the connector for performing reconciliation and provisioning operations:
Implementing Custom Authentication
If your target system uses an authentication mechanism that is not supported by this connector, then you must implement the authentication that your target system uses and then attach it to the connector by using the plug-ins exposed by this connector. Implementing custom authentication involves creating a Java class, overriding the Map<String, String> getAuthHeaders(Map<String, Object> authParams) method that returns the authorization header in the form of a map, and updating the connector installation media to include the new Java class.
Implementing Custom Parsing
By default, the connector supports only JSON parsing during reconciliation runs. If the reconciliation data from your target system is not in JSON format, then you must write a custom parser implementation for your data format.
Configuring Transformation and Validation of Data
Configure transformation and validation of user account data by writing Groovy script logic while creating your application.
You can configure transformation of reconciled single-valued user data according to your requirements. For example, you can use First Name and Last Name values to create a value for the Full Name field in Oracle Identity Governance.
Similarly, you can configure validation of reconciled and provisioned single-valued data according to your requirements. For example, you can validate data fetched from the First Name attribute to ensure that it does not contain the number sign (#). In addition, you can validate data entered in the First Name field on the process form so that the number sign (#) is not sent to the target system during provisioning operations.
To configure transformation or validation of user account data, you must write Groovy scripts while creating your application. For more information about writing Groovy script-based validation and transformation logic, see Validation and Transformation of Provisioning and Reconciliation Attributes of Oracle Fusion Middleware Performing Self Service Tasks with Oracle Identity Governance.
Configuring Action Scripts
You can configure Action Scripts by writing your own Groovy scripts while creating your application.
These scripts can be configured to run before or after the create, update, or delete an account provisioning operation. For example, you can configure a script to run before every user creation operation.
For information on adding or editing action scripts, see Updating the Provisioning Configuration in Oracle Fusion Middleware Performing Self Service Tasks with Oracle Identity Governance.
Configuring the Connector for Multiple Installations of the Target System
You must create copies of configurations of your base application to configure it for multiple installations of the target system.
The following example illustrates this requirement:
The London and New York offices of Example Multinational Inc have their own installations of the target system, including independent schema for each. The company has recently installed Oracle Identity Governance, and they want to configure it to link all the installations of the target system.
To meet the requirement posed by such a scenario, you must clone your application which copies all configurations of the base application into the cloned application. For more information about cloning applications, see Cloning Applications in Oracle Fusion Middleware Performing Self Service Tasks with Oracle Identity Governance.