Right, but for that to happen wouldn't we need to alter the SSO site
for domain1 to have a "Login to a different domain" feature?  If so
what would the algorithm for that look like given that domain2 does
NOT have SSO enabled?



On Mar 26, 12:42 pm, "Tony (Google)" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Jason,
>
> When users on domain2 tries to view the shared sites, they should be
> redirected to a interstitial login page that allows them to login
> either thru SSO of domain1 or sign in with another Google account or
> Google Apps domain account.  The situation you described should not
> happen.  Please file a support request if you experience the issue so
> we can troubleshoot with you.  Instructions on how to contact API
> support can be found under the Support tab.
>
> Thanks,
>
> --Tony
>
> On Mar 25, 7:32 am, Jason13013 <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Our company has 2 domains...
>
> > domain1 - SSO enabled
> > domain2 - SSO NOT enabled
>
> > A user on domain1 has shared a "site" with a user on domain2.  When
> > the user on domain2 tries to view the shared site, he gets redirected
> > to the domain1 SSO page.  He does not have an LDAP account for
> > domain1, so it is impossible for him to get into this domain and site.
>
> > Is there a way to handle this?  We could alter the SSO site to have a
> > "not a member of this domain?" link, but how do we get the person to
> > auth against domain2 (NO SSO), then get him back to domain1's site?
>
>
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