Configure notifications
The customizable notification service sends messages, based on changes to objects. The notification service uses filters to assess incoming requests. If the filter conditions are met, the service sends the corresponding notification. Notification messages are sent to whatever routes you specify.
In a JDBC repository, notifications are stored in the notificationobjects
table. The notificationobjectproperties
, serves as the index table. In a DS repository, notifications are stored under the DN "ou=notification,ou=internal,dc=openidm,dc=forgerock,dc=com"
.
The notification service is disabled by default. To enable the service, add openidm.notifications=true
to your project’s resolver/boot.properties
file. You can perform additional configuration using the conf/notificationFactory.json
file.
Default 'notificationFactory.json' Configuration
{
"enabled" :{
"$bool" : "&{openidm.notifications|false}"
},
"threadPool" : {
"steadyPoolThreads" : 1,
"maxPoolThreads" : 2,
"threadKeepAlive" : 60,
"maxQueueSize" : 20000
}
}
Changing the notifications thread pool settings can adversely affect performance. |
Notifications for a managed object are injected into a property in that object. The name of this property is specified in the managed object schema, in conf/managed.json
. For example, notifications for managed user objects rely on the following construct in the user
object definition in managed.json
:
{
"objects" : [
{
"name" : "user",
...
"notifications" : {
"property" : "_notifications"
},
...
},
...
]
}
This excerpt indicates that notifications are injected into the _notifications
property of the user object by default. The notifications
object is mandatory for notifications to be generated for that managed object type. However, you can change the name of the property that is injected into the managed object when notifications are generated. If you omit the property
field from the notifications
object, notifications are stored in the _notifications
field by default.
|
Custom notifications
Notifications are configured in files named notification-event.json
, where event refers to the event that triggers the notification.
By default, IDM doesn’t send any notifications for password or profile updates. To enable these notifications, add the applicable line to your project’s resolver/boot.properties
file:
-
openidm.notifications.passwordUpdate=true
-
openidm.notifications.profileUpdate=true
These notifications are configured in the conf/notification-passwordUpdate.json
and conf/notification-profileUpdate.json
files, respectively. You can use these default notification configuration files as the basis for setting up custom notifications.
The default notification-passwordUpdate.json
file shows the structure of a notification configuration:
{
"enabled" : {
"$bool" : "&{openidm.notifications.passwordUpdate|false}"
},
"path" : "managed/user/*",
"methods" : [
"update",
"patch"
],
"condition" : {
"type" : "groovy",
"globals" : {
"propertiesToCheck" : [
"password"
]
},
"file" : "propertiesModifiedFilter.groovy"
},
"target" : {
"resource" : "managed/user/{{response/_id}}"
},
"notification" : {
"notificationType": "info",
"message": "Your password has been updated."
}
}
enabled
boolean, true or false-
Specifies whether notifications will be triggered for that configured event. To enable/disable, set the
openidm.notifications.passwordUpdate
property in theresolver/boot.properties
file. path
string-
Specifies where the filter listens on the router. For user notifications, this is typically
managed/user/*
. methods
array of strings (optional)-
One or more ForgeRock REST verbs, specifying the actions that should trigger the notification. These can include
create
,read
,update
,delete
,patch
,action
, andquery
. If nomethods
are specified, the default is to listen for all methods. condition
string or object-
An inline script or a path to a script
file
that specifies the condition on which the notification is triggered. ThepasswordUpdate
notification configuration references the groovy script,/path/to/openidm/bin/defaults/script/propertiesModifiedFilter.groovy
. This script monitors the properties listed in thepropertiesToCheck
array, and sends a notification when those properties are changed. The script also checks whether a modified property is the child (or parent) of a watched property.To specify additional properties to watch, add the property names to the array of
propertiesToCheck
. The properties that you can specify here are limited to existing user properties defined in yourmanaged.json
file. For example, the following excerpt of thenotification-profileUpdate.json
file shows the properties that will trigger notifications if their values are changed:... "condition" : { "type" : "groovy", "globals" : { "propertiesToCheck" : [ "userName", "givenName", "sn", "mail", "description", "accountStatus", "telephoneNumber", "postalAddress", "city", "postalCode", "country", "stateProvince", "preferences" ] }, "file" : "propertiesModifiedFilter.groovy" }, ...
target
object-
The target resource to which notifications are sent, typically
managed/user/{{response/_id}}
.The
target.resource
field supports{{token}}
replacement with contextual variables. The following variables are in scope:-
request
-
context
-
resourceName
-
response
-
notification
-
The actual notification, including the
notificationType
(info
,warning
, orerror
) and themessage
that is sent to the user.The
notification.message
field supports{{token}}
replacement with contextual variables, as described previously fortarget.resource
.
Notification configuration files follow the format of the router.json
file. For more information about how filtering is configured in router.json
, see Router configuration.
Additional sample notification configuration files can be found in the /path/to/openidm/samples/example-configurations/conf
directory:
notification-newReport.json
-
This configuration notifies managers when a new direct reporting employee is assigned to them.
notification-termsUpdate.json
-
This configuration notifies all users who have accepted the Terms and Conditions of any updates to those Terms and Conditions.
To use these files (or create your own notifications based on these files), copy them to your project’s conf/
directory.
Limits on notification endpoints
Although notifications are highly configurable, you cannot apply them to services with their own internal routers, including internal objects. This list includes:
workflow/taskinstance
workflow/processdefinition
workflow/processinstance
metrics/api
metrics/prometheus
scheduler/job
scheduler/trigger
scheduler/waitingTriggers
scheduler/acquiredTriggers
info/ping
info/login
info/version
info/uiconfig
info/features
internal/{object}
internal/{object}/{object_id}/relationship
managed/{object}/{object_id}/relationship