HubSpot connector
Connectors continue to be released outside the IDM release. For the latest documentation, refer to the ICF documentation. |
The HubSpot connector lets you synchronize HubSpot contacts and companies with managed objects in an IDM repository.
This topic describes how to install and configure the HubSpot connector, and how to perform basic tests to ensure that it’s running correctly.
For a complete example that includes the configuration required to synchronize users with this connector, see Synchronize data between IDM and HubSpot.
Before you configure the HubSpot connector, you must have a client app in HubSpot, with the corresponding clientID
, clientSecret
and refreshToken
.
Install the HubSpot connector
-
Download the connector .jar file from the ForgeRock BackStage download site.
-
If you are running the connector locally, place it in the
/path/to/openidm/connectors
directory, for example:mv ~/Downloads/hubspot-connector-1.5.2.0.jar /path/to/openidm/connectors/
-
If you are using a remote connector server (RCS), place it in the
/path/to/openicf/connectors
directory on the RCS.
-
Configure the HubSpot connector
If you had already started IDM (or your RCS) before copying the connector .jar file to the connectors
directory, you must restart the server for the connector to be loaded.
|
Create a connector configuration using the admin UI:
-
From the navigation bar, click Configure > Connectors.
-
On the Connectors page, click New Connector.
-
On the New Connector page, type a Connector Name.
-
From the Connector Type drop-down list, select HubSpot Connector - 1.5.2.0.
-
Complete the Base Connector Details.
-
Click Save.
Alternatively, configure the connector with a configuration file.
IDM provides a sample connector configuration file in the /path/to/openidm/samples/example-configurations/provisioners
directory. Copy this sample file (provisioner.openicf-hubspot.json
) to your project’s conf
directory.
Adjust the configurationProperties
to match your HubSpot application details. You must provide a clientId
, clientSecret
, and refreshToken
. Other properties are optional:
"configurationProperties" : {
"clientId" : "daa533ae-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-6e66d84e6448",
"clientSecret" : "c598a365-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-24b32b6ae04d",
"refreshToken" : "f37e1132-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-4b9e724ce4a0",
"acceptSelfSignedCertificates" : true,
"readSchema" : "true",
"disableHostNameVerifier" : false,
"maximumConnections" : "10",
"permitsPerSecond" : "10",
"httpProxyHost" : null,
"httpProxyPort" : null
}
IDM encrypts the clientSecret
and refreshToken
as soon as the connector is enabled.
When your connector is configured correctly, the connector displays as Active in the UI.
Alternatively, test the configuration over REST:
curl \ --header "X-OpenIDM-Username: openidm-admin" \ --header "X-OpenIDM-Password: openidm-admin" \ --header "Accept-API-Version: resource=1.0" \ --request POST \ "http://localhost:8080/openidm/system?_action=test" [ { "name": "hubspot", "enabled": true, "config": "config/provisioner.openicf/hubspot", "connectorRef": { "bundleVersion": "[1.5.0.0,1.6.0.0)", "bundleName": "org.forgerock.openicf.connectors.hubspot-connector", "connectorName": "org.forgerock.openicf.connectors.hubspot.HubspotConnector" }, "displayName": "Hubspot Connector", "objectTypes": [ "company", "contactProperties", "__ALL__", "companyProperties", "contact" ], "ok": true } ]
A status of "ok": true
indicates that the connector can connect to HubSpot.
Implementation specifics
For PATCH requests, a connector can potentially add, remove, or replace an attribute value. The HubSpot connector does not implement the add or remove operations, so a PATCH request always replaces the entire attribute value with the new value.
Using the HubSpot connector With a proxy server
If the IDM server is hosted behind a firewall and requests to the resource provider are routed through a proxy, you must specify the proxy host and port in the connector configuration.
To specify the proxy server details, set the httpProxyHost
, and httpProxyPort
properties in the connector configuration. For example:
"configurationProperties": {
...
"httpProxyHost": "myproxy.home.com",
"httpProxyPort": 8080,
...
}
OpenICF interfaces implemented by the Hubspot connector
The Hubspot Connector implements the following OpenICF interfaces.
- Create
-
Creates an object and its
uid
. - Delete
-
Deletes an object, referenced by its
uid
. - Schema
-
Describes the object types, operations, and options that the connector supports.
- Script on Connector
-
Enables an application to run a script in the context of the connector. Any script that runs on the connector has the following characteristics:
-
The script runs in the same execution environment as the connector and has access to all the classes to which the connector has access.
-
The script has access to a
connector
variable that is equivalent to an initialized instance of the connector. At a minimum, the script can access the connector configuration. -
The script has access to any script-arguments passed in by the application.
-
- Search
-
Searches the target resource for all objects that match the specified object class and filter.
- Test
-
Tests the connector configuration. Testing a configuration checks all elements of the environment that are referred to by the configuration are available. For example, the connector might make a physical connection to a host that is specified in the configuration to verify that it exists and that the credentials that are specified in the configuration are valid.
This operation might need to connect to a resource, and, as such, might take some time. Do not invoke this operation too often, such as before every provisioning operation. The test operation is not intended to check that the connector is alive (that is, that its physical connection to the resource has not timed out).
You can invoke the test operation before a connector configuration has been validated.
- Update
-
Updates (modifies or replaces) objects on a target resource.
Hubspot connector configuration
Connectors continue to be released outside the IDM release. For the latest documentation, refer to the ICF documentation. |
The Hubspot Connector has the following configurable properties.
Basic configuration properties
Property | Type | Default | Encrypted [1] | Required [2] |
---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
||
Client ID of the OAuth application in Hubspot |
||||
|
|
|
||
Client Secret for the preceding Client ID |
||||
|
|
|
||
Refresh token for application in Hubspot |
||||
Advanced connection properties
Property | Type | Default | Encrypted [3] | Required [4] |
---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
||
Specifies whether the HubSpot server should accept self-signed certificates. Defaults to false. |
||||
|
|
|
||
If false, the Hubspot connector provides a default schema for Hubspot contacts and companies |
||||
|
|
|
||
If hostname verification is disabled, the HubSpot server accepts connections from any host. Defaults to false. |
||||
|
|
|
||
Maximum number of simultaneous connections to HubSpot. |
||||
|
|
|
||
Number of Api calls to be made per second |
||||
|
|
|
||
Specifies the Hostname if an HTTP proxy is used between the connector and HubSpot. Defaults to null. |
||||
|
|
|
||
Specifies the Port number if an HTTP proxy is used between the connector and HubSpot . Defaults to null. |
||||