Name | Type | Multiplicity | Description |
---|---|---|---|
name |
property PolyStringType |
[0,1] | Human-readable, mutable name of the object. |
description |
property string |
[0,1] | Free-form textual description of the object. |
fetchResult |
property OperationResultType |
[0,1] | Result of the operation that fetched this instance of the object. |
extension |
container ExtensionType |
[0,1] | Extension container that provides generic extensibility mechanism. |
parentOrgRef |
reference ObjectReferenceType |
[0,-1] | Set of the orgs (organizational units, projects, teams) that the object relates to. |
trigger |
container TriggerType |
[0,-1] | Defines triggers for an object. |
metadata |
container MetadataType |
[0,1] | Meta-data about object creation, modification, etc. |
tenantRef |
reference ObjectReferenceType |
[0,1] | Reference to the tenant to which this object belongs. |
objectType |
property anyURI |
[1,1] |
Flags: RAM,runtime
Multiplicity: [0,1]
Human-readable, mutable name of the object. It
may also be an identifier (login name, group name).
It is usually unique in the respective context of
interpretation. E.g. the name of the UserType subtype
is usually unique in the whole system.
The name of the ShadowType subtype is usually unique in the
scope of resource (target system) that it belongs to.
The name may not be human-readable in a sense to display
to a common end-user. It is intended to be displayed to
IDM system administrator. Therefore it may contain quite
a "ugly" structures such as LDAP DN or URL.
Name is mutable. It is considered to be ordinary property
of the object. Therefore it can be changed by invoking
usual modifyObject operations. However, change of the name
may have side effects (rename process).
Although name is specified as optional by this schema, it
is in fact mandatory for most object types. The reason for
specifying the name as optional is that the name may be
generated by the system instead of supplied by the clients.
However, all objects stored in the repository must have a name.
Flags: RAM,runtime
Multiplicity: [0,1]
Free-form textual description of the object. This is meant to
be displayed in the user interface.
Flags: RAM,runtime,oper
Multiplicity: [0,1]
Result of the operation that fetched this instance of the object.
It is mostly used to indicate that the object is not complete or
there is some problem with the object. This is used instead of
exception if the object is part of larger structures (lists as in
list/search operations or composite objets). If not present then
the "SUCCESS" state is assumed.
This field is TRANSIENT. It must only be used in runtime. It should
never be stored in the repository.
Flags: dyn,RAM,runtime
Multiplicity: [0,1]
Extension container that provides generic extensibility mechanism.
Almost any extension property can be placed in this container.
This mechanism is used to extend objects with new properties.
The extension is treated exactly the same as other object
properties by the code (storage, modifications, etc), except
that the system may not be able to understand their meaning.
Flags: RAM
Multiplicity: [0,-1]
Set of the orgs (organizational units, projects, teams) that the object relates to.
This usually means that the object belongs to them but it may have other meanings as well
(e.g. user manages an organizational unit).
Flags: RAM,runtime,oper
Multiplicity: [0,-1]
Flags: RAM,runtime,oper
Multiplicity: [0,1]
Meta-data about object creation, modification, etc.
Flags: RAM
Multiplicity: [0,1]
Reference to the tenant to which this object belongs. It is a computed value set automatically
by midPoint. It is determined from the organizational structure. Even though this value is
compted it is also stored in the repository due to performance reasons.
Flags: RAM,runtime
Multiplicity: [1,1]