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The CData Cmdlets Module for PingOne is a standard PowerShell module offering straightforward integration with PingOne. Below, you will find examples of using our PingOne Cmdlets with native PowerShell cmdlets.
To connect to PingOne, configure these properties:
is the ID of the PingOne environment in which your Worker application resides. This parameter is used only when the environment is using the default PingOne domain (auth.pingone). It is configured after you have created the custom OAuth application you will use to authenticate to PingOne, as described in Creating a Custom OAuth Application in the Help documentation.
First, find the value for this property:
WorkerAppEnvironmentId='11e96fc7-aa4d-4a60-8196-9acf91424eca'
Now set to the value of the Environment ID field.
is the base URL of the PingOne authorization server for the environment where your application is located. This property is only used when you have set up a custom domain for the environment, as described in the PingOne platform API documentation. See Custom Domains.
PingOne supports both OAuth and OAuthClient authentication. In addition to performing the configuration steps described above, there are two more steps to complete to support OAuth or OAuthCliet authentication:
Set to OAuth.
Get and Refresh the OAuth Access Token
After setting the following, you are ready to connect:
When you connect, the driver opens PingOne's OAuth endpoint in your default browser. Log in and grant permissions to the application. The driver then completes the OAuth process:
The driver refreshes the access token automatically when it expires.
For other OAuth methods, including Web Applications, Headless Machines, or Client Credentials Grant, refer to the Help documentation.
$conn = Connect-PingOne -AuthScheme "$AuthScheme" -WorkerAppEnvironmentId "$WorkerAppEnvironmentId" -Region "$Region" -OAuthClientId "$OAuthClientId" -OAuthClientSecret "$OAuthClientSecret" -InitiateOAuth "$InitiateOAuth"
Follow the steps below to retrieve data from the [CData].[Administrators].Users table and pipe the result into to a CSV file:
Select-PingOne -Connection $conn -Table [CData].[Administrators].Users | Select -Property * -ExcludeProperty Connection,Table,Columns | Export-Csv -Path c:\my[CData].[Administrators].UsersData.csv -NoTypeInformation
You will notice that we piped the results from Select-PingOne into a Select-Object cmdlet and excluded some properties before piping them into an Export-Csv cmdlet. We do this because the CData Cmdlets append Connection, Table, and Columns information onto each "row" in the result set, and we do not necessarily want that information in our CSV file.
The Connection, Table, and Columns are appended to the results in order to facilitate piping results from one of the CData Cmdlets directly into another one.Download a free trial of the PingOne Cmdlets to get started:
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👁 PingOne IconAn easy-to-use set of PowerShell Cmdlets offering real-time access to PingOne. The Cmdlets allow users to easily read, write, update, and delete live data - just like working with SQL server.