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The CTD Sensor and SRA Site have smaller sizing scenarios where a smaller form factor and resource requirements can satisfy certain deployments. The Optiplex 7090 Micro has been validated to successfully run basic functionality for CTD Sensor and SRA Site software running on CentOS 7.9.
The following steps must be followed for the Optiplex 7090 Micro to recognize the built-in Ethernet adapter. At a high level, the user must download the appropriate Intel driver and configure the operating system to use the driver. CentOS 7.9 natively recognizes the built-in WiFi adapter, which can also be used as a primary/secondary interface.
sudo yum update
sudo yum install "kernel-devel-uname-r == $(uname -r)" gcc
tar e100e-<version>.tar.gz
cd e1000e-<version>/src
sudo make install
The Optiplex 7090 Micro is limited to one RJ45 Ethernet port. In some use cases, such as with the CTD Sensor, it may be required to have two RJ45 Ethernet ports (management and data ingest). To satisfy this requirement, a USB-to-Ethernet adapter can be plugged into one of the Optiplex USB ports to provide the second Ethernet adapter.
The Optiplex 7090 Micro, running CentOS 7.9, has been validated to natively recognize USB-Ethernet adapters using the AX88179 driver. This should come standard as part of the CentOS distribution and should show up on the device without any extra steps.
At a high level, a relying party trust is the trust between the application (relying party) and AD FS (the IdP in this use case). The function of the trust is for the relying party to pass the authentication process to AD FS. The configuration tells AD FS that it can trust the application and where to redirect the authentication request after successful authentication.
For more information on AD FS and its functions, see the following link: Active Directory Federation Services
For more information, see the following link: The Role of Claim Rules