Following the above example, let's suppose @clsr1@ is our "home cluster", that is to say, we use our @clsr1@ user account as our federated identity and both @clsr2@ and @clsr3@ remote clusters are set up to allow users from @clsr1@ and to auto-activate them. The first thing to do would be to log into a remote workbench using the local user token. This can be done following these steps:
1. Log into the local workbench and get the user token
Following the above example, let's suppose @clsr1@ is our "home cluster", that is to say, we use our @clsr1@ user account as our federated identity and both @clsr2@ and @clsr3@ remote clusters are set up to allow users from @clsr1@ and to auto-activate them. The first thing to do would be to log into a remote workbench using the local user token. This can be done following these steps:
1. Log into the local workbench and get the user token