- 16 Oct 2024
- 2 Minutes to read
- DarkLight
TID Virtual OTP Email Request (Policy)
- Updated on 16 Oct 2024
- 2 Minutes to read
- DarkLight
The following is an overview of the relevant default settings for requesting a Virtual Mobile Authenticator OTP via email with OneSpan Cloud Authentication.
Parent policy: Identikey Local Authentication
TID Virtual OTP Email Request—Default parameter settings | ||
Parameter name | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|
pvdp_req_method | KeywordOnly | Request Method The method by which a user has to request a Virtual Mobile Authenticator login. The request is made in the password field during login. The request will be ignored if the user does not have a Virtual Mobile Authenticator assigned. Possible values:
|
pvdp_req_keyword | votp | Request Keyword This defines the request keyword that a user must enter to request a primary Virtual Mobile Authenticator login. This applies if a method using a keyword is selected in Request Method. This can be blank. |
vdp_delivery_method | Delivery Method The method used to deliver the Virtual Mobile Authenticator. Possible values:
This field also allows you to specify one of the following combinations of delivery methods:
| |
vdp_mdc_profile | - | MDC profile
The MDC profile to use for this delivery method. It defines a specific group of settings for a particular delivery method. If no MDC profile is specified in this field, the highest-ranked, enabled, and available MDC profile for the specified delivery method/s will be used. The MDC profile name is not unique, therefore, more than one MDC profile with the same name may exist for this delivery method. In that case, the highest-ranked, enabled, and available MDC profile with the specified name will be used. |
initial_window | 1 hour | Initial Time Window This controls the maximum allowed time variation between an authenticator and the host system, the first time that the authenticator is used. The time is specified in hours. This Initial Time Window is also used directly after a Reset Application operation, which can be used if it appears that the internal clock in the authenticator has drifted too much since the last successful login. This only applies to time-based authenticators when verifying an OTP. In either case, after the first successful login, the initial time window is no longer active. |
event_window | 10 events | Event Window This controls the maximum allowed number of event variations between an authenticator application and the host system during login. This only applies to event-based authenticator applications and always applies for OTP verification. For signature validation, it depends on the online signature level setting whether the event window is used or not. |