Administrator Portal resource rule

IDaaS adds an Administrator portal resource rule by default. Follow these steps if you want to add another resource rule for the Administrator Portal.

Create a resource rule to protect access to the IDaaS Administrator Portal

1.      Log in to your Identity as a Service administrator account.

2.      Click > Security > Resource Rule. The Resource Rules List page appears.

3.      Click + next to the application you want to protect with a resource rule. The Add Resource Rules page appears.

4.      Enter a Rule Name and Rule Description for the resource rule.

5.      In the Groups list, select the group or groups of users restricted by the resource rule.

These are the groups to which the resource rule applies. If you do not select any groups, by default the resource rule applies to all groups.

6.      Click Next. The Authentication Conditions Settings page appears.

7.      Optional: Select Disable Single Sign-On for Application to force a user to re-authenticate whenever they attempt a new login.

8.      If you do not Enable Advanced Risk Factors, do the following:

a.      Select the Authentication Flow from the drop-down list. The Authentication Flow flowchart updates based on the selection.

b.      Click Submit to save the Resource Rule.

9.      If you want to Enable Advanced Risk Factors complete the remaining steps in this procedure.

10.  Select Enable Advanced Risk Factors to add additional risk factors to the resource rule.

11.  Select Enable Strict Access for Application to set the resource rule to deny access regardless of the outcome from other resource rules. If this option is disabled for any resource rule that denies access, the user is allowed access if at least one resource rule allows access.

12.  For each Advanced Risk Factor, click the Deny option to deny access to the application if the risk factor fails regardless of the results of the other risk factors.

13.  Click Date/Time to set the conditions as follows:

a.      Select one of the following:

  Allow Date/Time  to set when a user can access the application.

  Deny Date/Time to set when the user cannot access the application.

The Date/Time Context Condition Settings appear.

b.      Select the Condition Type:

  Specific Date Range ConditionAllows or denies access to the application during a select period of days.

  Time-of-day and/or Day of Week Recurring ConditionsAllows or denies access to the application on a specific time of day, day of the week, or both. Recurring times selected only apply to days not denied.

  Clear SelectionClears existing Date and Time conditions.

c.      Set the Condition Type settings, as follows:

i)        Select Use local time zone to use the local time zone or deselect Use local time zone to use the local time zone and begin typing the time zone in the Begin Typing Timezone name field and select the time zone from the drop-down list.

ii)      If you selected Specific Date Range Condition, click Start Date to select a start date from the pop-up calendar. Optionally, select the End Date.

iii)     If you selected Time-of-Day and/or Day-of-Week, click Start Time and select the start time from the pop-up clock. Optionally set the End Time. You must also select the days of the week for the condition.

d.      Click Save to return to the Authentication Conditions Settings page.

14.  Click Geolocation to set the Location Condition Settings, as follows:

a.      Select Allow or Deny to create an allowed or denied country list.

b.      From the Selected Countries drop-down list, select the countries to add or deny access to the application. Repeat until you have added all the desired countries to the list.

c.      Select Allow Anonymous IP Address to increase the risk of users authenticating from an anonymous IP.

d.      Click Save to save to return to the Authentication Conditions Settings page.

15.  Click Source IP Address. The IP Address Risk Setting dialog box appears. Do one of the following:

a.      Select Custom and add the required IP Allowed Addresses and IP Denied Addresses.

b.      Select IP List Address and select the IP List to allow or deny.

c.      Select None to not restrict any IP addresses.

d.      Click OK to return to the Authentication Conditions Settings.

16.  Click Machine Authentication to set the Machine Authentication Condition Settings, as follows:

a.      Set the Machine Authentication Risk is less than or equal to the value that the machine authenticator's total risk score must be less than during authentication to pass this condition.

The risk score is based on the attribute differences between a user's Machine Authentication information and that recorded on Identity as a Service before the condition fails. If an attribute does not match, the attribute incurs the number of risk points shown in Non-Matching Risk Points for that attribute. The Non-Matching Risk Points values of each non-matching attribute are added together, resulting in a total risk score. This score is normalized to be out of 100 as follows:

Total Risk Score = (Total Risk Points of Failing Attributes / Maximum Risk Points of All Enabled Attributes) * 100

The resource rule condition fails when the number of non-matching risk points exceeds the Machine Authentication Risk value defined in this step. A value of 0 means that a single attribute difference causes the Device Fingerprint condition to fail. The default value is 3. The value between 0-50 can be entered.

The default value is defined by the Machine Risk Limit. See Manage machine authenticator settings.

b.      Click Save.

17.  Define the Location History / Known Locations and Travel Velocity conditions.

The Risk-Based Authentication (RBA) settings of your Identity as a Service account define the location history and travel velocity conditions. See Manage risk-based authentication settings for more information.

18.  Set the Device Certificates risk factor to require the client to perform client-authenticated SSL with a certificate issued from a trusted CA to pass.

19.  Set the risk score for application conditions to set the risk percentage a user receives if they fail to meet the condition, as follows:

       Click the dot next to the condition setting and slide the risk scale to the risk percentage

-or-

       Click the 0% and enter the risk points and then click OK.

The default setting is 0%. The Risk percentage determines the authentication requirements as set by the Authentication Decision. When a user attempts to authenticate to an application, the final risk percentage is the sum of all failed conditions.

20.  Set the Authentication Decision risk level for Medium Risk and High Risk as follows:

a.      Click the risk threshold percentage to the right of Medium Risk or High Risk. The Risk Threshold dialog box appears.

b.      Enter the risk percentage.

c.      Click OK.

21.  Select the Authentication Flows for Low Risk, Medium Risk, and High Risk from the drop-down lists. The Authentication Flows flowchart updates based on your selections.

22.  Click Submit to create the resource rule.