20.4.3 Understanding Preconfigured Authentication Schemes
Learn about the preconfigured authentication schemes.
When you create an authentication scheme from the gallery, you can select a preconfigured authentication scheme which follows a standard behavior for authentication and session management. To associate an authentication scheme with an application, you select the application and create a new authentication scheme. The new authentication scheme automatically becomes the Current authentication scheme for the selected application. This section describes all preconfigured authentication schemes that ship with Oracle APEX.
Tip:
Authentication schemes support plug-ins. To learn more, see Implementing Plug-ins.
- Oracle APEX Accounts
Oracle APEX Accounts are user accounts that are created within and managed in the APEX user repository. When you use this method, your application is authenticated against these accounts. - Custom Authentication
Creating a Custom Authentication scheme from scratch to have complete control over your authentication interface. - Database Accounts
Database Account Credentials authentication utilizes database schema accounts to authenticate users. - HTTP Header Variable
Authenticate users externally by storing the username in a HTTP Header variable set by the web server. - Open Door Credentials
Enable anyone to access your application using a built-in login page that captures a user name. - No Authentication (using DAD)
Adopts the current database user. This approach can be used in combination with a mod_plsql Database Access Descriptor (DAD) configuration that uses basic authentication to set the database session user. - LDAP Directory
Authenticate a user and password with an authentication request to a LDAP server. - Oracle Application Server Single Sign-On Server
Delegates authentication to the Oracle AS Single Sign-On (SSO) Server. To use this authentication scheme, your site must have been registered as a partner application with the SSO server. - SAML Sign-In
Delegates authentication to the Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) Sign In authentication scheme. - Social Sign-In
Social Sign-In supports authentication with Google, Facebook, and other social network that supportsOpenID Connect
orOAuth2
standards.
Parent topic: Establishing User Identity Through Authentication
20.4.3.1 Open Door Credentials
Enable anyone to access your application using a built-in login page that captures a user name.
Open Door Credentials enables anyone to access your application using a login page that captures a user name. This authentication scheme is useful during application development.
20.4.3.1.1 Setting Up Open Door Credentials
To set up Open Door Credentials:
Parent topic: Open Door Credentials