orchestrator
2.2510
false
- Getting started
- Best practices
- Organization Modeling in Orchestrator
- Managing Large Deployments
- Automation Best Practices
- Optimizing Unattended Infrastructure Using Machine Templates
- Organizing Resources With Tags
- Orchestrator Read-only Replica
- Exporting grids in the background
- Enforcing user-level Integration Service connection governance
- Tenant
- About the Tenant Context
- Searching for Resources in a Tenant
- Managing Robots
- Connecting Robots to Orchestrator
- Storing Robot Credentials in CyberArk
- Storing Unattended Robot Passwords in Azure Key Vault (read only)
- Storing Unattended Robot Credentials in HashiCorp Vault (read only)
- Storing Unattended Robot Credentials in AWS Secrets Manager (read only)
- Deleting Disconnected and Unresponsive Unattended Sessions
- Robot Authentication
- Robot Authentication With Client Credentials
- Configuring automation capabilities
- Solutions
- Audit
- Resource Catalog Service
- Automation Suite Robots
- Folders Context
- Automations
- Processes
- Jobs
- Apps
- Triggers
- Logs
- Monitoring
- Queues
- Assets
- Storage Buckets
- Indexes
- Orchestrator testing
- Integrations
- Troubleshooting

Orchestrator user guide
Last updated Nov 11, 2025
When using client credentials to connect your Automation Suite robots to Orchestrator, the Automation Suite Robots machine template generates a client ID and client secret pair that authorizes the connection between that host machine and Orchestrator. If you feel that the secret key has been compromised, you can regenerate the client secret:
- Go to Tenant > Machines.
- At the right of the row for the Automation Suite Robot machine template, click More Actions
and select Edit Machine. - On the Edit Machine page, in the Client secrets section at the bottom, click Regenerate.