Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
OAuth 2.0 was published as RFC 6749 and the Bearer Token Usage specification as RFC 6750, both standards track Requests for Comments, in October 2012. [2] [9] As of November 2024, the OAuth 2.1 Authorization Framework draft is a work in progress. It consolidates the functionality in RFCs OAuth 2.0, OAuth 2.0 for Native Apps, Proof Key for Code ...
Federated SSO (LDAP and Active Directory), standard protocols (OpenID Connect, OAuth 2.0 and SAML 2.0) for Web, clustering and single sign on. Red Hat Single Sign-On is version of Keycloak for which RedHat provides commercial support. Microsoft account: Microsoft: Proprietary: Microsoft single sign-on web service Microsoft Azure EntraID: Microsoft
WS-Security, WS-Federation, WS-Trust, SAML 1.1 / 2.0, Liberty, Single Sign-on, RBAC, CardSpace, OAuth 2.0, OpenID, STS. Includes out of the box integration with cloud and social media providers (Office 365, Windows Live (MSN), Google, Facebook, Salesforce, Amazon web services and 200+ preconfigured connections to SaaS providers etc ...
OAuth protocol OpenID Connect Amazon: 2.0 [1] AOL: 2.0 [2] Autodesk: 1.0,2.0 [3] Apple: 2.0 [4] Yes Basecamp: 2.0 [5] No Battle.net: 2.0 [6] Bitbucket: 1.0a 2.0 [7] No bitly: 2.0 Box: 2.0 [8] ClearScore: 2.0 Cloud Foundry: 2.0 [9] Dailymotion: 2.0 draft 11 [10] Deutsche Telekom: 2.0 deviantART: 2.0 drafts 10 and 15 Discogs: 1.0a Discord: 2.0 ...
Draft OpenID Connect Token Bound Authentication 1.0. [11] OpenID Connect (OIDC) is a simple identity layer on top of the OAuth 2.0 protocol. OIDC enables Clients to verify the identity of the End-User based on the authentication performed by an Authorization Server, as well as to obtain basic profile information about the End-User in an ...
The eXtensible Access Control Markup Language (XACML) is an XML-based standard markup language for specifying access control policies. The standard, published by OASIS, defines a declarative fine-grained, attribute-based access control policy language, an architecture, and a processing model describing how to evaluate access requests according to the rules defined in policies.
Although the two standards address the same use case, SAML 2.0 is incompatible with its predecessor. Although ID-FF 1.2 was contributed to OASIS as the basis of SAML 2.0, there are some important differences between SAML 2.0 and ID-FF 1.2. In particular, the two specifications, despite their common roots, are incompatible. [9]
The Central Authentication Service (CAS) is a single sign-on protocol for the web. [1] Its purpose is to permit a user to access multiple applications while providing their credentials (such as user ID and password) only once.