This work is supported by the GSA Office of Government-wide IT Policy in coordination with the ICAM Subcommittee of the Federal CIO Council.
This repository is for the collaborative development of the Federal Identity, Credential, and Access Management segment architecture. The repository contains Version 3.0, and a draft of Version 3.1, replacing the older (circa 2009-2011) FICAM Roadmap and Implementation Guidance v2.0, Sections 1-4.
The FICAM Architecture focuses on the federal enterprise identity and access processes, practices, policies and information security disciplines.
A federal enterprise identity is the unique representation of an employee, contractor, or enterprise user, which could be a mission or business partner, or even a device or technology managed by a Federal agency to achieve its mission and business goals. See OMB Memo 19-17.
This content is Vendor neutral. Marketing materials for Commercial Products should not be submitted.
Contributors should consider the audience when submitting content. Plain language benefits a broad audience. Review your proposed content for use of acronyms and specialized jargon before submitting.
For information on how to contribute to the site, visit the Contribute page here. The source repository exists here.
- pages contains markdown pages for the Introduction, Goals & Objectives, Standards & Policies, and Component application examples.
- usecases contains pages for each of the example use cases. The example use cases do not represent all possible options. Additional use cases are welcome
- services contains pages for each of the ICAM service areas (Identity, Credential, Access, Governance, & Federation)
- All diagrams and images should be placed in img
Direct changes and line edits to the content may be submitted by clicking 'Edit this page'. You do not need to install any software to submit content. You can use GitHub's in-browser editor to edit files and submit a request for your changes to be merged.
This project is in the worldwide public domain.
This project is in the public domain within the United States, and copyright and related rights in the work worldwide are waived through the CC0 1.0 Universal public domain dedication.
All contributions to this project will be released under the CC0 dedication. By submitting a pull request, you are agreeing to comply with this waiver of copyright interest.
This site is deployed on Federalist.
Special thanks to the government wide teams for contributions, and adopting open and transparent models to benefit citizens, government, and technology.