Security Domains
To divide administrative responsibilities, your deployment can be divided into smaller units called security domains. Security domains typically represent a company’s internal business units, for example, departments.
Security domains are organized in a hierarchical tree. You can create up to 1000 security domains, and transfer users, user groups, and so on, between security domains as necessary.
After you create the security domain hierarchy and link the identity source to the system, all users are added to the top-level security domain. To help you organize users, manage the deployment, and limit administrative scope, you may want to move users to another security domain in the hierarchy.
Just as you have likely created security domains to match either your organization’s structure or geographic locations, you can use the Security Console to transfer users from each department or location to their respective security domains.
For example, if the top-level security domain is named SystemDomain, and you have lower-level security domains named Boston, New York, and San Jose, you would likely move users from SystemDomain to their respective security domains.
Each security domain has policies assigned to it that dictate requirements. For example, the password policy determines when users may become locked out.
You can create custom policies for each security domain, or use the default policies. Default policies are assigned to each new security domain.
Related Tasks
Related Articles
Move Users Between Security Domains 19Number of Views Move User Groups Between Security Domains 7Number of Views CUSD command generates a failure when moving tokens between security domains in RSA Authentication Manager Bulk Administra… 75Number of Views Unable to delete a Security Domain in RSA Authentication Manager 8.x 93Number of Views Allow the Use of Nonstandard Email Domains 17Number of Views
Trending Articles
Passwordless Authentication in Windows MFA Agent for Active Directory – Quick Setup Guide RSA Authentication Manager 8.9 Release Notes (January 2026) RSA Authentication Manager Upgrade Process RSA Authentication Manager 8.7 SP2 Setup and Configuration Guide An example of SSO using SAML and ADFS with RSA Identity Management and Governance 6.9.x