Progressive profile completion form
If you’re testing progressive profile completion, you can start from the selfservice-profile.json
file in the following directory: openidm/samples/example-configurations/self-service/
Copy this file to your project’s conf/
directory and start IDM. After the conditions shown in this configuration file are met, end users will see a form prompting them to add a telephone number.
{
"stageConfigs" : [
{
"name" : "conditionaluser",
"identityServiceUrl" : "managed/user",
"condition" : {
"type" : "loginCount",
"interval" : "at",
"amount" : 25
},
"evaluateConditionOnField" : "user",
"onConditionTrue" : {
"name" : "attributecollection",
"identityServiceUrl" : "managed/user",
"uiConfig" : {
"displayName" : "Add your telephone number",
"purpose" : "Help us verify your identity",
"buttonText" : "Save"
},
"attributes" : [
{
"name" : "telephoneNumber",
"isRequired" : true
}
]
}
}
]
}
The following table includes a detailed list of each property shown in this file:
Property | Description |
---|---|
|
Progressive profile completion is a stage of user self-service. |
|
|
|
|
|
Condition when to display the form. |
|
Type of |
|
IDM evaluates the condition, per |
|
Presents the form with the following properties. |
|
Data that you collect with the form is an |
|
Labels to include the in the form seen by the end user. |
|
Form title. |
|
Form explanation. |
|
Customizable. |
|
Attribute name from |
|
If an end user has to enter data to complete a connection to IDM. |
The default progressive profile completion process involves two mandatory stages:
With the previous configuration, users logging in to the End User UI must submit a telephone number on the 25th login.
Progressive profile completion conditions
You can set up a number of different conditions for when users are prompted to add information to their profiles. IDM includes the following pre-defined criteria:
loginCount
-
May specify
at
orevery
number of logins, as defined by the following value:amount
.End users can bypass progressive profile completion screens, when configured with a loginCount
. Every time they see such a request, they can open a new browser window to bypass that request, and log in to the End User UI. They won’t have to provide the information requested, even if you’ve set the attribute as Required under the Attributes tab. timeSince
-
May specify a time since the user was created, the
createDate
, inyears
,months
,weeks
,days
,hours
, andminutes
. profileCompleteness
-
Based on the number of items completed by the user from
managed.json
, in percent, as defined bypercentLessThan
; for more information, see Defining Overall Profile Completion. propertyValue
-
Based on the value of a specific user entry, such as
postalAddress
, which can be defined by Presence Expressions.
Custom progressive profile conditions
You can also set up custom conditions with query filters and scripts. These criteria may deviate from standard query filters described in Construct Queries and standard scripted conditions described in Add Conditional Policy Definitions.
-
A queryFilter. For example, the following query filter checks user information for users who live in the city of Portland:
"condition" : { "type" : "queryFilter", "filter" : "/city eq \"Portland\"" },
In addition, you can also reference metadata, as described in Track User Metadata. For example, the following query filter searches for users with:
-
A
loginCount
greater than or equal to five. -
Does not have a telephone number:
"filter" : "(/_meta/loginCount ge 5 and !(/telephoneNumber pr))"
If you include
_meta
in query filters, the admin UI will not work for the subject progressive profiling form.While it’s technically possible to include a number like
5
in the admin UI with the query filter, IDM would write the number as a string to theselfservice-profile.json
file. You’d still have to change that number directly in the noted file.
-
-
An inline script (
scripted
), or a reference to a script file; IDM works with scripts written in either JavaScript or Groovy. For example, you could set up a script here:"condition" : { "type" : "scripted", "script" : { "type" : "text/javascript", "globals" : { }, "source" : "<some script code>" },
Alternatively, you could point to some JavaScript or Groovy file:
"condition" : { "type" : "scripted", "script" : { "type" : "text/javascript", "globals" : { }, "file" : "path/to/someScript.js" },
For the script code, you’ll need to reference fields directly, and not by
object.field
. For example, the following code would test for the presence of a telephone number:typeof telephoneNumber === 'undefined' || telephoneNumber === ''
While you can also reference metadata for scripts, you can’t check for all available fields, as there is no outer
object
field. However, you can refer to fields that are part of the user object.
Configuring progressive profile completion through the admin UI
The UI is straightforward; in the admin UI, when you select Configure > Progressive Profile, you’ll add a New Form, with:
-
Attributes defined in
managed.json
. -
Conditions that may be based on a query filter, a script, or pre-defined criteria such as number of logins.
What you configure in the admin UI is written to the selfservice-profile.json
file. The information under the following admin UI Progressive Profile Completion page tabs is written to the following code blocks in that file:
-
Details:
uiConfig
-
Display Condition:
condition
-
Attributes:
attributes
When you use the UI, you must specify a property under the Attributes tab. Otherwise, IDM won’t display a Progressive Profile form. To specify a property, select Configure > Progressive Profile. Select a Progressive Profile form > Attributes tab > Add a Property. Be sure to select an Attribute Name based on user properties configured in the |