Establishing a Connection
Configure a Connection Profile
From the CData ribbon, click Get Data and select From Certinia connection/s to launch the CData Query window. To setup a new connection, you will have to click the New Certinia Connection button. Here you can set the connection settings, test the connection, and save the connection profile.
Connecting to Certinia APIs
By default, the add-in connects to production environments. Set UseSandbox to true to use a Certinia sandbox account. Ensure that you specify a sandbox user name in User.
Authenticating to Certinia
The following authentication methods available for connecting to Certinia:
- login credentials
- SSO
- OAuth
Login and Token
Set the User and Password to your login credentials. Additionally, set the SecurityToken. By default, the SecurityToken is required, but you can make it optional by allowing a range of trusted IP addresses.
To disable the security token:
- Log in to FinancialForce and enter Network Access in the Quick Find box in the setup section.
- Add your IP address to the list of trusted IP addresses.
To obtain the security token:
- Open the personal information page on FinancialForce.com.
- Click the link to reset your security token. The token will be emailed to you.
- Specify the security token in the SecurityToken connection property or append it to the Password.
OAuth
In all OAuth flows, you must set AuthScheme to OAuth. The following sections assume that you have done so.Desktop Applications
CData provides an embedded OAuth application that simplifies OAuth desktop Authentication. Alternatively, you can create a custom OAuth application. See Creating an Azure AD Application for information about creating custom applications and reasons for doing so.For authentication, the only difference between the two methods is that you must set two additional connection properties when using custom OAuth applications.
After setting the following connection properties, you are ready to connect:
- OAuthClientId: (custom applications only) Set this to the client Id in your application settings.
- OAuthClientSecret: (custom applications only) Set this to the client secret in your application settings.
- CallbackURL: Set this to the Redirect URL in your application settings.
When you connect the add-in opens the OAuth endpoint in your default browser. Log in and grant permissions to the application.
OAuth Password Grant
Follow these steps to set up the Password Grant option:
- Set the AuthScheme to OAuthPassword to perform authentication with the password grant type.
- Set all the properties specified in either the web or desktop authentication sections above.
- Set the User and Password to your login credentials, as well as the SecurityToken if required.
Azure AD
This configuration requires two separate Azure AD applications:
- The "Certinia" application used for single sign-on, and
- A custom OAuth application with user_impersonation permission on the "Certinia" application. (See Creating a Custom OAuth App.)
To connect to Azure AD, set the AuthScheme to AzureAD, and set these properties:
- SSOExchangeUrl: The Salesforce OAuth 2.0 token endpoint for the identity provider. This can be found in the Salesforce account settings by navigating to Administration Setup > Security Controls > SAML Single Sign-On Settings and then choosing the desired organization.
- OAuthClientId: The application Id of the connector application, listed in the Overview section of the app registration.
- OAuthClientSecret: The client secret value of the connector application. Azure AD displays this when you create a new client secret.
- CallbackURL: The redirect URI of the connector application. For example: https://localhost:33333.
To authenticate to Azure AD, set these SSOProperties:
- Resource: The application Id URI of the Certinia application, listed in the app registration's Overview section. In most cases this is the URL of your custom Certinia domain.
- AzureTenant: The Id of the Azure AD tenant where the applications are registered.
Example connection string:
AuthScheme=AzureAD;OAuthClientId=3ea1c786-d527-4399-8c3b-2e3696ae4b48;OauthClientSecret=xxx;CallbackUrl=https://localhost:33333;SSOExchangeUrl=https://domain.my.salesforce.com/services/oauth2/token?so=00D3000006JDF;SSOProperties='Resource=https://example.my.salesforce.com;AzureTenant=6ee709df-9de0-4cdf-10e6b7a51d95;AzureTenant=xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx';
Okta
To connect to Okta, set the AuthScheme to Okta, and set these properties:
- User: The Okta user.
- Password: The Okta user's password.
- SSOLoginURL: The SSO provider's login URL.
- SSOExchangeUrl: The Salesforce OAuth 2.0 token endpoint for the identity provider. This can be found in the Salesforce account settings by navigating to Administration Setup > Security Controls > SAML Single Sign-On Settings and then choosing the desired organization.
If you are using a trusted application or proxy that overrides the Okta client request OR configuring MFA, you must use combinations of SSOProperties to authenticate using Okta. Set any of the following, as applicable:
- APIToken: When authenticating a user via a trusted application or proxy that overrides the Okta client request context, set this to the API Token the customer created from the Okta organization.
- MFAType: If you have configured the MFA flow, set this to one of the following supported types: OktaVerify, Email, or SMS.
- MFAPassCode: If you have configured the MFA flow, set this to a valid passcode.
If you set this to empty or an invalid value, the add-in issues a one-time password challenge to your device or email. After the passcode is received, reopen the connection where the retrieved one-time password value is set to the MFAPassCode connection property. - MFARememberDevice: True by default. Okta supports remembering devices when MFA is required. If remembering devices is allowed according to the configured authentication policies, the add-in sends a device token to extend MFA authentication lifetime. If you do not want MFA to be remembered, set this variable to False.
Example connection string:
AuthScheme=Okta;SSOLoginURL='https://example.okta.com/home/appType/0bg4ivz6cJRZgCz5d6/46';User=oktaUserName;Password=oktaPassword;SSOExchangeUrl=https://domain.my.salesforce.com/services/oauth2/token?so=00D3000006JDF;
OneLogin
To connect to OneLogin, set the AuthScheme to OneLogin, and set these properties:
- User: The OneLogin user.
- Password: The OneLogin user's password.
- SSOExchangeUrl: The Salesforce OAuth 2.0 token endpoint for the identity provider. This can be found in the Salesforce account settings by navigating to Administration Setup > Security Controls > SAML Single Sign-On Settings and then choosing the desired organization.
To authenticate to OneLogin, set these SSOProperties:
- OAuthClientId: The OAuthClientId, which can be obtained by selecting Developers > API Credentials > Credential > ClientId.
- OAuthClientSecret: The OAuthClientSecret, which can be obtained by selecting Developers > API Credentials > Credential > ClientSecret.
- Subdomain: The subdomain of the OneLogin user accessing the SSO application. For example, if your OneLogin URL is splinkly.onelogin.com, splinkly is the subdomain value.
- AppId: The Id of the SSO application.
- Region (optional): The region your OneLogin account resides in. Legal values are US (default) or EU.
The following example connection string uses an API key to connect to OneLogin:
AuthScheme=OneLogin;User=OneLoginUserName;Password=OneLoginPassword;SSOExchangeUrl=https://domain.my.salesforce.com/services/oauth2/token?so=00D3000006JDF;SSOProperties='OAuthClientID=3fc8394584f153ce3b7924d9cd4f686443a52b;OAuthClientSecret=ca9257fd5cc3277abb5818cea28c06fe9b3b285d73d06;Subdomain=OneLoginSubDomain;AppId=1433920';
To connect to PingFederate, set AuthScheme to PingFederate, and set these properties:
- User: The PingFederate user.
- Password: The PingFederate user's password.
- SSOLoginURL: The SSO provider's login url.
- AWSRoleARN (optional): If you have multiple role ARNs, specify the one you want to use for authorization.
- AWSPrincipalARN (optional): If you have multiple principal ARNs, specify the one you want to use for authorization.
- SSOExchangeUrl: The Salesforce OAuth 2.0 token endpoint for the identity provider. This can be found in the Salesforce account settings by navigating to Administration Setup > Security Controls > SAML Single Sign-On Settings and then choosing the desired organization.
- SSOProperties (optional): Authscheme=Basic if you want to include your username and password as an authorization header in requests to Amazon S3.
To enable mutual SSL authentication for SSOLoginURL, the WS-Trust STS endpoint, configure these SSOProperties:
- SSLClientCert
- SSLClientCertType
- SSLClientCertSubject
- SSLClientCertPassword
Example connection string:
authScheme=pingfederate;SSOLoginURL=https://mycustomserver.com:9033/idp/sts.wst;SSOExchangeUrl=https://us-east-1.signin.aws.amazon.com/platform/saml/acs/764ef411-xxxxxx;user=admin;password=PassValue;AWSPrincipalARN=arn:aws:iam::215338515180:saml-provider/pingFederate;AWSRoleArn=arn:aws:iam::215338515180:role/SSOTest2;
ADFS
To connect to ADFS, set the AuthScheme to ADFS, and set these properties:
- User: The ADFS user.
- Password: The ADFS user's password.
- SSOLoginURL: The SSO provider's login url.
- SSOExchangeUrl: The Salesforce OAuth 2.0 token endpoint for the identity provider. This can be found in the Salesforce account settings by navigating to Administration Setup > Security Controls > SAML Single Sign-On Settings and then choosing the desired organization.
To authenticate to ADFS, set these SSOProperties:
- RelyingParty: The value of the ADFS server's Relying Party Identifier.
Example connection string:
AuthScheme=ADFS;User=username;Password=password;SSOLoginURL='https://sts.company.com';SSOExchangeUrl=https://domain.my.salesforce.com/services/oauth2/token?so=00D3000006JDF;SSOProperties='RelyingParty=https://saml.salesforce.com';
ADFS Integrated
The ADFS Integrated flow indicates you are connecting with the currently logged in Windows user credentials. To use the ADFS Integrated flow, do not specify the User and Password, but otherwise follow the same steps in the ADFS guide above.
Connection Properties
The Connection properties describe the various options that can be used to establish a connection.
Managing Connections
After successfully authenticating to Certinia you will be able to customize the data you are importing. To learn more about this, see Managing Connections.
See Also
- Querying Data: Use the data selection wizard to pull data into a spreadsheet. You can also configure scheduled data refresh here.
- Using the Excel Add-In: Find other ways to interact with Certinia data, such as using the available CData Excel Functions.