7.1

Table Of Contents
"description" : "Tenant for all developers",
"contactEmail" : "admin@mycompany.com",
"defaultTenant" : false
}
Examples Command
Example 1
Call the above newTenant.json file,
which contains parameters for the
tenant request.
curl --insecure -H "Content-Type: application/json"
-H "Authorization: Bearer $token"
https://$host/identity/api/tenants/development --data
@C:\Temp\newTenant.json
Example 2
Specify the parameters for the tenant
request by using inline text.
curl --insecure -H "Accept: application/json" -H "Content-
Type: application/json"
-H "Authorization: Bearer $token"
--data
'{"@type":"Tenant","id":"development","urlName":"development","
name":
"DevelopmentTenant","description":"Tenant for all
developers","contactEmail":
"admin@mycompany.com","defaultTenant":false}'
3 List all available identity stores for a named tenant, such as the default tenant vsphere.local by using
variables, instead of the full token and host name.domain name.
curl --insecure -H "Accept: application/json" -H 'Content-Type: application/json'
-H "Authorization: Bearer $token” https://$host/identity/api/tenants/MYCOMPANY/directories
4 Link an LDAP, Active Directory, or Native Active Directory identity store to the tenant by using the
identity service.
Call the following sample ldap.json.txt input file from the command line to specify necessary
parameters.
{
"alias": "example.com",
"domain": "example.mycompany.com",
"groupBaseSearchDn": "ou=demo,dc=example,dc=mycompany,dc=com",
"name": "openLDAPDemo",
"password": "password",
"type": "LDAP",
Programming Guide
VMware, Inc. 19