3.Comment out the <LoginHandlerType>Default</LoginHandlerType> tag as follows:

<!--LoginHandlerType>Default</LoginHandlerType-->

4.Uncomment the line containing the class name and login handler type so that it appears as follows:

<LoginHandlerClass>com.appiq.security.server.ActiveDirectoryLoginHandler</L

oginHandlerClass>

<LoginHandlerType>ActiveDirectory</LoginHandlerType>

5.Replace directory.hp.com with the primary Domain Controller server in the example:

IP address or the fully qualified DNS name of your login-handler.xmlfile, as shown in the following

<PrimaryServer port="389">192.168.10.1</PrimaryServer>

where

192.168.10.1 is the IP address of the primary Domain Controller server running AD.

389 is the port on which AD is running on the server.

6.Replace directory2.hp.com with the IP address or the fully qualified DNS name of your secondary Domain Controller server, if available.

<SecondaryServer>192.168.10.2</SecondaryServer>

where 192.168.10.2 is the IP address of the secondary Domain Controller server running AD.

7.If you want the password to be saved in the management server database, change the value of the <ShadowPassword> tags to true, as shown in the following example:

<ShadowPassword>true</ShadowPassword>

Saving the passwords in the management server database allows a user to also log into the management server if the management server is changed back to local mode. This, however, is not recommended as it defeats the purpose of externalizing a user's credentials.

The login-handler.xmlfile contains two sets of <ShadowPassword> tags: one for AD and one for LDAP. Make sure you change the value of the <ShadowPassword> tags that are children of the <ActiveDirectory> tag.

8.If you want the user name to be case sensitive, change the value of the <CaseSensitiveUserName> tag to true, as shown in the following example:

<CaseSensitiveUserName>true</CaseSensitiveUserName>

If you change the value of <CaseSensitiveUserName> to true, the management server becomes case-sensitive to user names. The management server sees MyUserName and myusername as different users.

IMPORTANT: AD servers are not case sensitive for user names, so changing this tag to true for AD authentication is not recommended.

The login-handler.xml file contains two sets of <CaseSensitiveUserName> tags: one for AD and one for LDAP. Make sure you also change the value of the

<CaseSensitiveUserName> tags that are children of the <ActiveDirectory> tag.

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