Difference between revisions of "Mice & Men"

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(Active Directory User Authentication vs. Local User Authentication)
(Configuring Users for AD Authentication)
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# When the Properties dialog box display, move to the Authentication field, click the drop-down list, and select the applicable authentication method. (If Men & Mice Central is not running on a Windows machine, only the Men & Mice Suite authentication method displays.)  
 
# When the Properties dialog box display, move to the Authentication field, click the drop-down list, and select the applicable authentication method. (If Men & Mice Central is not running on a Windows machine, only the Men & Mice Suite authentication method displays.)  
 
# Click OK. '''''NOTE: When the AD authentication method is selected, the Password field is disabled, since the password is not stored in the Men & Mice Suite.'''''
 
# Click OK. '''''NOTE: When the AD authentication method is selected, the Password field is disabled, since the password is not stored in the Men & Mice Suite.'''''
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== Active Directory Single Sign-on ==
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You can enable the Single Sign-on so that Active Directory users do not have to authenticate when logging in through the Management Console or the Command Line Interface.
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To enable Active Directory Single Sign-on, do the following:
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# From the menu bar, select Tools, System Settings.
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# In the System Settings dialog box, click the General Settings tab.
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# Select the Allow Single Sign-on option.
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# Click OK.
  
 
[[Category:Work]]
 
[[Category:Work]]

Revision as of 14:33, 4 November 2020

AUTHENTICATION NOTES

Only one authentication method can be used per user, but different users can have different authentication methods. That means you can have some users log in using AD user authentication, while other users log in using local user authentication.

Active Directory User Authentication vs. Local User Authentication

  • Even when you are using AD User Authentication, you must create users in the Management Console and assign privileges to them using the Men & Mice access system.
  • The only difference between AD vs. local user authentication is that when AD user authentication is used, users are authenticated using the AD User Authentication system before they can access the Management Console.
  • When AD User Authentication is used, the user password is not stored in the Men & Mice software.
  • AD user authentication using Active Directory is only possible when you run Men & Mice Central on a Windows machine (Windows 2003/2008).
  • The machine running Men & Mice Central must be a member in an Active Directory domain or forest.

Configuring Users for AD Authentication

To configure a user to use AD user authentication, do the following:

  1. From the menu, select Tools, Users and Groups.
  2. Select the applicable user from the list. If the desired user is not shown, the user must be added to the application. Refer to Administration Functions—User Management.
  3. When the Properties dialog box display, move to the Authentication field, click the drop-down list, and select the applicable authentication method. (If Men & Mice Central is not running on a Windows machine, only the Men & Mice Suite authentication method displays.)
  4. Click OK. NOTE: When the AD authentication method is selected, the Password field is disabled, since the password is not stored in the Men & Mice Suite.

Active Directory Single Sign-on

You can enable the Single Sign-on so that Active Directory users do not have to authenticate when logging in through the Management Console or the Command Line Interface. To enable Active Directory Single Sign-on, do the following:

  1. From the menu bar, select Tools, System Settings.
  2. In the System Settings dialog box, click the General Settings tab.
  3. Select the Allow Single Sign-on option.
  4. Click OK.