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Home/ Questions/Q 939983
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T21:52:48+00:00 2026-05-15T21:52:48+00:00

We’re currently using the SSO component of Oracle 10g App Server to authenticate users

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We’re currently using the SSO component of Oracle 10g App Server to authenticate users on our external / internet facing client “portal” (think similar to online banking)

SSO uses Oracle Internet Directory to store it’s data, and we’ve been able to use PL/SQL and Java to access and modify the data held in OID (e.g create/drop users, change/verify passwords etc)

With the advent of 11g, Oracle appears to have “orphaned” SSO… it is available, but only as an add-on, and it appears to have been superseded by Oracle Access Manager. I’m guessing that it will have been dropped together by 12g. Plus it looks pretty difficult to install and get running correctly.

So, I’m wondering if anyone has any experience of having had the same migration problem as us? If so, what did you do?

Alternatively, does anyone have any experience of doing something similar using Oracle Access Manager? Do you think it will do what we want?

Or is there a better road to go down? Is there something else I should be considering?

Sorry for the very broad question, but it’s one of those situations where a person’s experience of what does + doesn’t work can make an enormous difference to us making some progress in a timely fashion. Thanks.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T21:52:49+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 9:52 pm

    From my knowledge, Oracle Internet Directory (OID) is an LDAP compliant directory whereas Oracle Access Manager (OAM) is much more complex and consists of two main systems:

    1. Identity System (users, groups,
      workflows)
    2. Access System (single/multi domain
      SSO solution for Web and non-Web
      based applications).

    Access Manager relies on an Identity Server which is a stand-alone server process that communicates with any Directory Server (AD, OID, Sun Directory server..).

    So you can use the new OAM and link it with your existing OID… to retrieve users/groups and metadata. All that you could do with OID will be doable with OAM as it brings more abstraction layers.

    But in my opinion, and considering your case, directly accessing LDAP servers (OID, AD, etc) and using a light and “home made” SSO system is cheaper than relying on those big systems…. I think OAM is a usefull solution when you have lots of heterogeneous applications (web, non web, mobile, …) and/or multiple organizations/domains with links and/or you need a very scalable approach.

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