SailPoint IIQ Web Service Connector: Stop the Unwanted “Add Entitlement” After Create
You create an account via your Web Service connector and (by design) you already send the entitlement in the create payload. Smooth. Then IIQ helpfully
You create an account via your Web Service connector and (by design) you already send the entitlement in the create payload. Smooth. Then IIQ helpfully
Ever wonder how attackers get in so easily these days? They don’t break down digital doors—they walk right through them with stolen credentials. That’s right:
Remember when security was just about firewalls and antivirus? Yeah, those days are gone. In today’s financial world, identity and access management (IAM) isn’t just
Ever wonder why some people at work still have access to systems they haven’t used in years? Or why a developer has permanent admin rights
Ever wonder how hackers are still getting in when companies have more security tools than a James Bond movie? It’s not because your firewall failed.
Modern IdentityIQ (IIQ) environments often need to talk to other systems. REST APIs make that possible. Since version 6.2, SailPoint lets you create REST services
BeanShell scripts in SailPoint IdentityIQ are often used to transform identity data, especially inside connector rules like BuildMap or Customization rules. These scripts help generate
Ever tried to pull data from an external system into SailPoint IIQ and felt like you were wiring an old phone line with a blindfold
Don’t Let Your Logs Slow You Down Debug logs are like spice: add just enough, and your code is flavorful. Overdo it, and everything burns.
Imagine IdentityIQ as a factory. Each BeanShell script is like a conveyor belt—when one belt lags, everything downstream slows too. Now, would you run a
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