Connections

Use Connections to manage all your environment details for each integration.

A Connection is a property of an Integration. You must have a Connection set up to allow messages to be sent and received for your Integration.

The Connection stores all the authentication details of the Integration specific to a single environment. You can setup many Connections so you can easily switch between environments as necessary.

Activation

The Integration is controlled by the Connections. Making a Connection active will make it’s Integration active (and vice versa).

Although you can have multiple Connections per Integration, only one Connection can be active for an Integration at a time. Activating a different Connection will deactivate other Connections (for the Integration).

Environment

You can assign a Connection to a specific environment to make it easy to see what you are connecting to.

Available environment choices are:

  • Production

  • Pre-Production

  • Test

  • Development

  • Sandbox

Inbound Connectivity

The Connection is the link between the ServiceNow endpoint that is receiving messages and the Integration that is used to process them. If you want to receive messages from a remote system, you must specify an Inbound user which the remote system will use to authenticate with.

Outbound Connectivity

In order for a Connection to send messages to remote systems, you must provide an Endpoint URL and the method of authentication.

Authentication

Connections support several types of authentication: Basic, Mutual and OAuth.

Basic

Basic authentication is achieved by providing a username and password.

Mutual

Mutual Authentication (MAuth) using SSL certificates is available by selecting the Mutual auth checkbox and configuring certificates on a ServiceNow Protocol Profile record.

OAuth 2.0

You can connect using OAuth by configuring a ServiceNow OAuth Entity Profile.

MID Server

If the system you are connecting to is behind a firewall (such as an internal service) you can specify a MID Server for the integration to communicate over.

Fields

The following table is a summary of the fields to be configured for the Connection record:

*OAuth profile:

This field is visible when ‘OAuth’ has been selected as the choice from the Authentication field.

**Protocol profile:

This field is visible when Mutual auth is checked/set to ‘true’.

Connection Variables

A Connection Variable is simply a key-value pair. If you have multiple connection environments (e.g. Dev, Test, Prod) - each containing different data, or information that needs to be passed between environments but changes - then use Connection Variables to provide a consistent entry point in the code.

They are accessed via the variables object and can be used in most scripts. See the Variables page for details.

Example Use Cases

They can be used to define static data as variables that can change between endpoints. The following example is from the Outbound Settings for a Message:

They could also be used instead of scripting data values directly into the code of Poll Processor scripts. See the following Guides for examples:

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