Without it, systems fracture, accounts sprawl, and security collapses. The community version of IAM brings that control into reach without the cost or licensing complexity of enterprise editions. It is lean, open, and built to scale with precision.
IAM Community Version lets teams define who can do what, when, and from where. At its core is authentication, authorization, and user lifecycle management. You can centralize policies, enforce MFA, control sessions, and audit access changes in real time. The stack is flexible — integrate with existing identity providers, sync with cloud services, or run it bare-metal.
Deploying IAM Community Version means starting with role-based access control (RBAC) or policy-based access control (PBAC) depending on the complexity of your operations. RBAC uses predefined roles to assign permissions. PBAC creates rules that evaluate conditions, context, and environment. Both are supported out of the box.