Centrify Download Mac



Centrify DirectManage is an integrated set of tools that allow you to centralize the management and user administration, authentication, and authorization of UNIX, Linux, and Mac systems against the Pitt Enterprise Active Directory. With Centrify Identity Service,TM Mac Edition, you can use Active Directory to centrally manage authentication, policy enforcement, single sign-on (SSO), and user self-service for popular endpoint devices running Mac OS X, macOS, iOS, and Android. A key component of Centrify Identity Service, Mac Edition is the Centrify agent for Mac computers. Centrify Express for Linux is a comprehensive suite of free Active Directory-based integration solutions for authentication, single sign-on, remote access and file-sharing for heterogeneous systems. It is the quickest and most proven solution for integrating Linux systems with Windows, and delivers more functionality and more to upgrade to when compared to other free offerings.

With IT organizations looking to connect their non-Windows® resources to Microsoft® Active Directory®, one question comes up quite often: what is Centrify®? In web searches targeted at discovering a way to extend AD, Centrify comes up quite a bit, so it’s important to understand what their product does.

Centrify

What Was Centrify?

In short, Centrify was an identity bridge. We use the past tense to say that Centrify was an identity bridge because the product recently faced EOL, and Centrify split into two companies—Idaptive® and Centify. Previously, the Centrify Express product extended legacy, on-prem Microsoft Active Directory identities to non-Windows resources such as Mac® and Linux® systems as well as web applications. Centrify was essentially an add-on to on-prem Active Directory infrastructure.

What is Centrify Now?

It seems as though the current incarnation of Centrify will keep the privileged access management components (Linux and network infrastructure authentication). Idaptive, on the other hand, looks to follow the traditional first generation IDaaS path that has been paved by companies such as Okta® and OneLogin™.

What Can’t Centrify Manage?

What we should really be asking when we attempt to define Centrify’s now defunct role is more of a question about the right approach to identity management in the cloud era. Do we want to continue to leverage on-prem hardware and its expenses when the industry is shifting to the cloud? No longer are IT networks based on just Microsoft Windows®. They’re an amalgamation of different types of solutions including G Suite, Office 365, AWS® and GCP, Mac® and Linux® machines, web applications such as Slack, Github, Salesforce®, cloud and physical file servers (NAS devices, Samba file servers, and Box™) and many other types of IT resources. So, with all of these IT changes, why must the directory remain on-prem and require add ons like Centrify to work with all these resources?

Resulting from the shift of IT resources in most environments (Windows-based workstations, wired networks, on-prem file servers) to what we have today in our cloud-forward environment (Macbooks®, WiFi, and cloud storage) IT organizations are struggling to extend their legacy directory service to these modern IT resources. Historically, on-prem identity bridges such as Centrify extended AD to some of these new digital tools, but not all. While it may seem like a good approach, Centrify’s scope was limited in that it still required Active Directory on-prem to fulfill its purpose.

The shift to the cloud is underway; so IT admins really have two options. One is to extend AD identities to these modern, cloud IT resources and the second is to eliminate AD altogether and find a cloud directory service.

Both options have benefits and drawbacks and each organization’s requirements will be different. In the case of cloud forward organizations, continuing to purchase CALs, maintaining AD implementations, and spending time deploying add-ons to AD are all activities they would like to avoid. For those that are tied to their on-prem identity provider, a Centrify implementation made sense to extend AD to non-Windows resources.

Centrify Download Mac App

How Can I Move on Without Centrify?

What should IT admins do for identity and access management (IAM) in a modern IT network? The short answer is to look at replacing your identity provider (IdP), in this case AD, with something based in the cloud. For many organizations, the most effective cloud IdP is JumpCloud® Directory-as-a-Service®. JumpCloud thinks about the problem of securely connecting users to the IT resources differently. As a cloud-based source of truth for identities from the cloud, JumpCloud can connect you to more resources, more easily than you can using add-ons such as Centrify along with AD.

AD To Non-Windows Resources

But if the thought of having to get rid of all your existing on-prem Active Directory infrastructure is too much, JumpCloud has a solution there too. You can now leverage AD Integration from JumpCloud to fill the gap in your IAM solution left by Centrify’s EOL and extend AD to non-Windows IT resources.

With AD Sync (an add-on component of the AD Integration platform), you can tightly integrate your macOS® devices into Active Directory. End users can leverage their AD credentials to access their Mac systems while also accessing other on-prem Windows resources such as file servers, applications, and other IT resources. Further, with AD Sync end users can change passwords directly on their Mac systems which will automatically update to your Active Directory implementation and vice versa. For users, it means a streamlined and easy-to-use self-service password tool. For IT admins, that means a significant reduction in help desk tickets, and as a result, saved time. For both IT and end users it means that macOS systems (and non-Windows IT resources) can be leveraged for the good of the organization.

In addition to macOS systems, when you integrate JumpCloud with AD, our cloud-based directory service can securely connect users to web applications, WiFi via RADIUS, authorize and authenticate to LDAP applications, enforce system security standards with Policies, provision identities via Office 365 and G Suite, and much more.

Learn More About JumpCloud

When asking yourself, “What is Centrify,” consider asking instead, “how do I want to manage my IT resources going forward?” Do you want to do it from the cloud, with minimal upkeep, or do you want to maintain your AD implementation and modernize it with a cloud-based directory tool? If you’re ready to learn more about how JumpCloud can support your IT environment, drop us a line. Or, sign up today and start managing up to 10 users free — forever.

The latest version of Centrify's DirectControl, which can also integrate Linux and Unix systems with Active Directory, lets Macs running OS X automatically request, download and install a digital certificate when accessing a corporate network via Wi-Fi or virtual private network (VPN). In addition, the upgrade makes it possible to use Active Directory credentials to unlock a Mac hard drive that's been encrypted with Apple's FireVault technology.

For government customers, DirectControl provides access to the Mac through a smartcard, typically a photo ID with a chip that provides authentication. Apple dropped the drivers for smartcards in the latest version of Mac OS X, called Lion or version 10.7, according to David McNeely, senior director of product management for Sunnyvale, Calif.-based Centrify.

Download Mac Software

Sales of Macs have been increasing steadily for some time. In the September quarter, Apple reported a 26 percent jump in sales year over year. As a result, a growing number of employees are asking to use their Macs on corporate networks, which often use Active Directory. DirectConnect provides the Mac with services available to Windows PCs. 'An administrator can manage a Mac in the same way he manages a Windows machine,' McNeely says. DirectControl pricing starts at $65 per workstation. The latest version for the Mac was introduced Tuesday.

Centrify launched its Partner Network in 2007 to establish a 'channel-friendly distribution model.' The company, which started with 25 partners, lists more than 40 resellers or consultants worldwide on its web site.