WAS v8.5 > Secure applications > Authenticate users > Use Microsoft Active Directory for authentication

Groups spanning domains with Microsoft Active Directory

The domains and forests functional levels of the Microsoft Active Directory control which configurations are available for use. How you configure Microsoft Active Directory affects how group membership is determined within WebSphere Application Server. Using groups to configure your Microsoft Active Directory installation with the product allows flexible management.

A breakdown follows of applicable functional levels that apply to a Microsoft Active Directory installation with the product.


Microsoft Active Directory groups

In a domain, Microsoft Active Directory provides support for different types of groups and group scopes. Groups in Microsoft Active Directory are containers with other objects within them as members. Those objects can be user objects, other group objects, which is group nesting, and other objects types, such as computers. The group type determines the type of task that you manage with the group. The group scope determines whether the group can have members from multiple domains or a single domain. In summary:

In WAS, security roles of the individual, which map to application permissions or authorizations, must be bound to either users or groups at application deployment time. From an administrative point of view, it is preferable to assign permissions once for a group instead of assigning permissions repeatedly for each user account. Then the ability to act in a given role is under the control of the directory administrator, instead of the WebSphere administrator. Because the job of the directory administrator is to create and delete users, change group memberships for users, and other tasks, this approach is generally the correct division of responsibilities.


Group types determine how the group is used. The Microsoft Active Directory group types are:

Although WAS can use either type of group, security groups are typically bound to WAS security roles.


Group scopes describe which type of objects can be arranged together within a group. Group nesting describes when one group is a member of other groups. The Microsoft Active Directory group scopes are:

When you select any of these scenarios, consult the appropriate Microsoft Active Directory information to completely understand any implications the scenarios might have on your configuation planning.


Related concepts:

Microsoft Active Directory Global Catalog
Options for finding group membership within a Microsoft Active Directory forest
Authentication using Microsoft Active Directory


Related


Locating user group memberships in a LDAP registry
Authenticate users with LDAP registries in a Microsoft Active Directory forest


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