- 20 Jan 2025
- 2 Minutes à lire
- SombreLumière
- PDF
Advanced Settings
- Mis à jour le 20 Jan 2025
- 2 Minutes à lire
- SombreLumière
- PDF
Field name | Description |
---|---|
Advanced Settings | |
Connection Wait Time (ms) | When OneSpan Authentication Server already has the maximum number of database connections open and a new request arrives, OneSpan Authentication Server will wait for a database connection to become available (unless the Enable Load Sharing option is used). The Connection Wait Time value specifies this waiting period. If the database does not respond within the connection wait time, OneSpan Authentication Server will report a timeout on that database. OneSpan Authentication Server will then attempt to connect to the next available database (if any). If OneSpan Authentication Server reports a timeout on all available databases, then it will report a timeout on the authentication request. However, if the database rejects the connection before the connection wait time expires, OneSpan Authentication Server will wait for the connection wait time to pass before retrying a connection to the same database. If load sharing is enabled, OneSpan Authentication Server will immediately attempt to connect to the next available database if its connection attempt was refused or if the connection wait time expires. |
Enable Load Sharing | Select this checkbox if you have multiple databases and want the OneSpan Authentication Server service to switch to another database when it exceeds the connection limit or if the current database becomes unavailable. |
Connection Management | |
Max Connections | The maximum number of connections, which OneSpan Authentication Server should make to the database at the same time. |
Idle Timeout (seconds) | The period (in seconds) before unused connections to the database should be closed by OneSpan Authentication Server. |
User ID Conversion | |
Case | The character casing that OneSpan Authentication Server will use to save and retrieve user IDs in. Possible values:
|
Master Domain | The master domain is used as a default domain. It has also special significance for administrative access. |
To modify the master domain
- If the new master domain does not already have a domain record, create the new domain using the OneSpan Authentication Server Administration Web Interface.
- Make sure that there is an administrator account in the new master domain that has the Set Administrative Privileges permission.
- Modify the name in the Master Domain box.
- Click OK.
- Repeat these steps for each database for each OneSpan Authentication Server instance. This setting change is not replicated automatically to other databases.
- Log on to the Administration Web Interface as the administrator account identified in step 2. Grant to that account any privileges that it requires, but that are missing. You need to log off and on again for the new privileges to take effect.
Ensure that the name of the master domain is set to the correct case, as required by the Case Conversion setting. For example, if the case conversion is set to Convert to Lower-case, the master domain name must be all lower case.