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Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Single Sign On (SSO) / Google GSuite

Google GSuite This page provides a walkthrough of how to configure Cloud CMS Single Sign On (SSO) for Google GSuite. Google GSuite provides support for SSO (single-sign-on) to allow users to authenticate to Cloud CMS using their Google accounts. Google plays the role of the Identity Provider and uses SAML 2.0 to assert authentication to Cloud CMS. You can learn more about Google GSuite here: https://gsuite.google.com/ Create a SAML App To configure Cloud CMS to use Google GSuite, you must first

Score: 0.7772536

Gitana / 4.0 / Data Engine / Authentication / Single Sign On (SSO) / Google GSuite

Google GSuite This page provides a walkthrough of how to configure Cloud CMS Single Sign On (SSO) for Google GSuite. Google GSuite provides support for SSO (single-sign-on) to allow users to authenticate to Cloud CMS using their Google accounts. Google plays the role of the Identity Provider and uses SAML 2.0 to assert authentication to Cloud CMS. You can learn more about Google GSuite here: https://gsuite.google.com/ Create a SAML App To configure Cloud CMS to use Google GSuite, you must first

Score: 0.7772536

Users, Identities and SSO with Cloud CMS

One of the really interesting use cases for Cloud CMS is that of maintaining users across multiple domains while having those users share a common identity context. A common identity context allows an authentication session to transition seamlessly (via an authentication swap) from one user to the next. It also allows for properties (such as username, email, password or other custom user properties) to automatically synchronize across all of the user identities that are part of the context. Here

Score: 0.7772536

Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Cookbooks / Go Cookbook

Go Cookbook Getting Started To get started with the Go driver, visit the Github Page or Package Page to view the source code, tests and basic usage examples. You can install the driver via the command line: go get github.com/gitana/cloudcms-go-driver Connecting to Cloud CMS There are two ways to connect with the Go driver: By finding a gitana.json file in your working directory, or by providing a config configuration. // Connect to CloudCMS using gitana.json in working directory session, err :=

Score: 0.74524736

Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Cookbooks / Go Cookbook

Go Cookbook Getting Started To get started with the Go driver, visit the Github Page or Package Page to view the source code, tests and basic usage examples. You can install the driver via the command line: go get github.com/gitana/cloudcms-go-driver Connecting to Gitana There are two ways to connect with the Go driver: By finding a gitana.json file in your working directory, or by providing a config configuration. // Connect to Gitana using gitana.json in working directory session, err := clou

Score: 0.74524736

Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / API / Data Types / Registration

Registration Type {{#dataTypeArticle objectTypeId}}{{objectTypeId}}{{/dataTypeArticle}} Datastore Type {{#dataTypeArticle datastoreTypeId}}{{datastoreTypeId}}{{/dataTypeArticle}} Supports {{#article "security/authorities"}}authorities{{/article}}, {{#article "security/permissions"}}permissions{{/article}}, {{#article "transfer"}}transfer{{/article}} The minimum registration flow looks like this: The application collects the user's email The application creates an Registration object. It stores t

Score: 0.72526395

Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Applications / Public Services / Registration Flow

Registration Flow One of the more frequent flows that an application must achieve is that of registering a user. Cloud CMS already provides registration support. The application service convenience method shown below make it a little easier to register users for your web application by letting you predefine: The Custom Domain Name where new users will be created. The Email Provider to be used to send emails to new users. The Registrar where new tenants will be created (optional). The Domain User

Score: 0.72526395

Gitana / 4.0 / Data Engine / API / Data Types / Registration

Registration Type {{#dataTypeArticle objectTypeId}}{{objectTypeId}}{{/dataTypeArticle}} Datastore Type {{#dataTypeArticle datastoreTypeId}}{{datastoreTypeId}}{{/dataTypeArticle}} Supports {{#article "security/authorities"}}authorities{{/article}}, {{#article "security/permissions"}}permissions{{/article}}, {{#article "transfer"}}transfer{{/article}} The minimum registration flow looks like this: The application collects the user's email The application creates an Registration object. It stores t

Score: 0.72526395

Gitana / 4.0 / Data Engine / Platform / Applications / Public Services / Registration Flow

Registration Flow One of the more frequent flows that an application must achieve is that of registering a user. Cloud CMS already provides registration support. The application service convenience method shown below make it a little easier to register users for your web application by letting you predefine: The Custom Domain Name where new users will be created. The Email Provider to be used to send emails to new users. The Registrar where new tenants will be created (optional). The Domain User

Score: 0.72526395

Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / API / Data Types / Authentication Grant

Authentication Grant Type {{#dataTypeArticle objectTypeId}}{{objectTypeId}}{{/dataTypeArticle}} Datastore Type {{#dataTypeArticle datastoreTypeId}}{{datastoreTypeId}}{{/dataTypeArticle}} Supports {{#article "security/authorities"}}authorities{{/article}}, {{#article "security/permissions"}}permissions{{/article}}, {{#article "transfer"}}transfer{{/article}} Why would you want to use an Authentication Grant? Here are a few reasons: Authentication Grants provide a way for you to distribute user au

Score: 0.7157726

Gitana / 4.0 / Data Engine / API / Data Types / Authentication Grant

Authentication Grant Type {{#dataTypeArticle objectTypeId}}{{objectTypeId}}{{/dataTypeArticle}} Datastore Type {{#dataTypeArticle datastoreTypeId}}{{datastoreTypeId}}{{/dataTypeArticle}} Supports {{#article "security/authorities"}}authorities{{/article}}, {{#article "security/permissions"}}permissions{{/article}}, {{#article "transfer"}}transfer{{/article}} Why would you want to use an Authentication Grant? Here are a few reasons: Authentication Grants provide a way for you to distribute user au

Score: 0.7157726

Product Releases - Gitana

Product Releases - Gitana Status Releases Registry Blog Cloud CMS Platform Content Management Create, Approve and Publish quality content to production on-time. Easy editorial and workflow tools let your best work reach your customers. Enterprise Data Engine Manage, collaborate, search and distribute your highly-structured data across branches, versions and workflow-driven lifecycle. Automate Automate your content creation and approval flows while taking advantage of AI services to enhance and c

Score: 0.6448271

Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / UI Developers Guide / Contexts

Contexts Cloud CMS uses a browser-side configuration service that evaluates "blocks" of configuration rules to determine the overall runtime configuration that drives every page render. Each block contains an evaluator and a snippet of configuration. If the evaluator evaluates to true, the snippet of configuration is included. It is merged into the overall runtime set and then used to make rendering decisions. Most of the Cloud CMS components that render on the screen, such as the left-hand navi

Score: 0.6398537

Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / API / Data Types / Client

Client Type {{#dataTypeArticle objectTypeId}}{{objectTypeId}}{{/dataTypeArticle}} Datastore Type {{#dataTypeArticle datastoreTypeId}}{{datastoreTypeId}}{{/dataTypeArticle}} Supports {{#article "security/authorities"}}authorities{{/article}}, {{#article "security/permissions"}}permissions{{/article}}, {{#article "transfer"}}transfer{{/article}} Configuration Clients maintain a configuration that you can adjust or consult as you create, update and query for them. The following table presents you t

Score: 0.6398537

Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / User Interface Customization / Contexts

Contexts Cloud CMS uses a browser-side configuration service that evaluates "blocks" of configuration rules to determine the overall runtime configuration that drives every page render. Each block contains an evaluator and a snippet of configuration. If the evaluator evaluates to true, the snippet of configuration is included. It is merged into the overall runtime set and then used to make rendering decisions. Most of the Cloud CMS components that render on the screen, such as the left-hand navi

Score: 0.6398537

Gitana / 4.0 / Data Engine / API / Data Types / Client

Client Type {{#dataTypeArticle objectTypeId}}{{objectTypeId}}{{/dataTypeArticle}} Datastore Type {{#dataTypeArticle datastoreTypeId}}{{datastoreTypeId}}{{/dataTypeArticle}} Supports {{#article "security/authorities"}}authorities{{/article}}, {{#article "security/permissions"}}permissions{{/article}}, {{#article "transfer"}}transfer{{/article}} Configuration Clients maintain a configuration that you can adjust or consult as you create, update and query for them. The following table presents you t

Score: 0.6398537

Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Workflow

Workflow In explaining workflow, let's first take a look at the following things: Workflow Models Workflow Instances Workflow Tasks Workflow Payload Resources Workflow Comments Workflow History Item Workflow Events Workflow Event Handlers A workflow model is a definition of a workflow consisting of a full set of instructions on how content should be routed between participants or activities on its way toward completion. A workflow model is kind of like a blueprint describing the sequence of step

Score: 0.63479316

Gitana / 4.0 / Data Engine / Workflow / Overview

Workflow In explaining workflow, let's first take a look at the following things: Workflow Models Workflow Instances Workflow Tasks Workflow Payload Resources Workflow Comments Workflow History Item Workflow Events Workflow Event Handlers A workflow model is a definition of a workflow consisting of a full set of instructions on how content should be routed between participants or activities on its way toward completion. A workflow model is kind of like a blueprint describing the sequence of step

Score: 0.63479316

Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / User Interface / Releases

Releases Releases allow you to set up collaborative workspaces where future sets of content can be worked on in real-time. Content can be created, edited and deleted in the workspace and then scheduled for publishing at a future date. Scheduled publishing allows your content to "go live" automatically - merging your content changes back into the mainline while triggering release actions for things like: Email Notifications CDN Synchronization Web Hook Calls Releases give your content team the ab

Score: 0.59759736

Gitana / 4.0 / Forms / API / Views

Views When Alpaca runs, the very first thing it does is sort out which view implementation it will use to render the schema and options that you provide. A view implementation consists of an ID and an implementation class. The implementation class serves as a reference object that Alpaca uses to determine things along the way such as: which template to render for a given form, container or control type what CSS classes to inject into rendered elements what callback behaviors to run against rende

Score: 0.59759736

Gitana / 4.0 / User Interface / User Interface / Releases

Releases Releases allow you to set up collaborative workspaces where future sets of content can be worked on in real-time. Content can be created, edited and deleted in the workspace and then scheduled for publishing at a future date. Scheduled publishing allows your content to "go live" automatically - merging your content changes back into the mainline while triggering release actions for things like: Email Notifications CDN Synchronization Web Hook Calls Releases give your content team the ab

Score: 0.59759736

Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Cookbooks / JavaScript 2.0 Cookbook

JavaScript 2.0 Cookbook Getting Started To get started with the JavaScript driver, please visit the Gitana JavaScript 2.0 Driver Page. This JavaScript driver, in contrast to the Gitana JavaScript 1.0 Driver, fully supports ECMAScript promises, which makes it easier to seamlessly integrate with your javascript apps. Connecting to Cloud CMS You can connect and then use this driver in three different but equivalent ways: Async / Await Promises Callbacks Async / Await const cloudcms = require("cloud

Score: 0.56057656

Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Cookbooks / JavaScript 2.0 Cookbook

JavaScript 2.0 Cookbook Getting Started To get started with the JavaScript driver, please visit the Gitana JavaScript 2.0 Driver Page. This JavaScript driver, in contrast to the Gitana JavaScript 1.0 Driver, fully supports ECMAScript promises, which makes it easier to seamlessly integrate with your javascript apps. Connecting to Gitana You can connect and then use this driver in three different but equivalent ways: Async / Await Promises Callbacks Async / Await const cloudcms = require("cloudcms

Score: 0.56057656

Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Cookbooks / Python Cookbook

Python Cookbook Getting Started To get started with the Python driver, visit Gitana Python Driver Page or the Github Page. It is written with Python 3 and can be used in any compatible project. You can install the driver via the command line: pip install cloudcms or pip3 install cloudcms Or add something like this to your requirements.txt: cloudcms==1.1.0 Connecting to Gitana You can connect to Gitana by providing a config file or the oauth variables directly. Using a Gitana JSON file You ca

Score: 0.49877834

Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Cookbooks / Python Cookbook

Python Cookbook Getting Started To get started with the Python driver, visit Gitana Python Driver Page or the Github Page. It is written with Python 3 and can be used in any compatible project. You can install the driver via the command line: pip install cloudcms or pip3 install cloudcms Or add something like this to your requirements.txt: cloudcms==1.1.0 Connecting to Gitana You can connect to Gitana by providing a config file or the oauth variables directly. Using a Gitana JSON file You ca

Score: 0.49877834