6.0.3

Table Of Contents
See “ESXi Passwords and Account Lockout,” on page 157 for a discussion of passwords of ESXi local users.
Configuring vCenter Single Sign-On Identity Sources
When a user logs in, vCenter Single Sign-On checks in the default identity source whether that user can
authenticate. You can add identity sources, remove identity sources, and change the default.
You congure vCenter Single Sign-On from the vSphere Web Client. To congure vCenter Single Sign-On,
you must have vCenter Single Sign-On administrator privileges. Having vCenter Single Sign-On
administrator privileges is dierent from having the Administrator role on vCenter Server or ESXi. By
default, only the user administrator@vsphere.local has administrator privileges on the vCenter Single Sign-
On server in a new installation.
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Identity Sources for vCenter Server with vCenter Single Sign-On on page 29
You can use identity sources to aach one or more domains to vCenter Single Sign-On. A domain is a
repository for users and groups that the vCenter Single Sign-On server can use for user authentication.
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Set the Default Domain for vCenter Single Sign-On on page 30
Each vCenter Single Sign-On identity source is associated with a domain. vCenter Single Sign-On uses
the default domain to authenticate a user who logs in without a domain name. Users who belong to a
domain that is not the default domain must include the domain name when they log in.
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Add a vCenter Single Sign-On Identity Source on page 31
Users can log in to vCenter Server only if they are in a domain that has been added as a vCenter Single
Sign-On identity source. vCenter Single Sign-On administrator users can add identity sources from the
vSphere Web Client.
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Edit a vCenter Single Sign-On Identity Source on page 34
vSphere users are dened in an identity source. You can edit the details of an identity source that is
associated with vCenter Single Sign-On.
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Remove a vCenter Single Sign-On Identity Source on page 35
vSphere users are dened in an identity source. You can remove an identity source from the list of
registered identity sources.
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Use vCenter Single Sign-On with Windows Session Authentication on page 35
You can use vCenter Single Sign-On with Windows Session Authentication (SSPI). To make the
checkbox on the login page available, the Client Integration Plug-in must be installed.
Identity Sources for vCenter Server with vCenter Single Sign-On
You can use identity sources to aach one or more domains to vCenter Single Sign-On. A domain is a
repository for users and groups that the vCenter Single Sign-On server can use for user authentication.
An identity source is a collection of user and group data. The user and group data is stored in Active
Directory, OpenLDAP, or locally to the operating system of the machine where vCenter Single Sign-On is
installed.
After installation, every instance of vCenter Single Sign-On has the identity source your_domain_name, for
example vsphere.local. This identity source is internal to vCenter Single Sign-On. A vCenter Single Sign-On
administrator can add identity sources, set the default identity source, and create users and groups in the
vsphere.local identity source.
Chapter 2 vSphere Authentication with vCenter Single Sign-On
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