Adobe Asset Link 3.0
Adobe Experience Manager assets can be used by designers and creative users within their favorite Adobe Creative Cloud desktop applications.
Adobe Asset Link extension for Adobe Creative Cloud for enterprise extends the capability to search and browse, sort, preview, upload assets, check out, modify, check-in and view metadata of AEM assets within Creative Cloud applications.
Adobe Asset Link and AEM creative workflows
The following video illustrates a common workflow used by creatives working in Adobe Creative Cloud applications, and integrating directly with AEM using Adobe Asset Link.
Adobe Experience Manager Assets, or just Assets is a world-class Enterprise Digital Asset Management platform designed to be a single source of truth for large and expanding list of media and marketing Asset types to manage a variety of content authoring to publishing workflows. Designers and content creators, users of Creative Cloud applications like Adobe Photoshop, InDesign, and Illustrator can work directly in their favorite tools and also work with Assets and files in AEM Assets by using Asset Link, a Creative Cloud panel in several Creative Cloud apps that connects directly to AEM Assets. What follows is a demonstration of working with Adobe InDesign and AEM Assets to manage a few common production steps while maintaining source files housed in AEM Assets, a useful single source of truth for this kind of workflow. In this demo, I’ll work with AEM Assets, Adobe InDesign, Adobe Photoshop, and Adobe Asset Link to access and modify content.
Note that for this demonstration, all of my Assets, my InDesign files and images that I will place in my InDesign file will originate from AEM Assets. When I uploaded these image files into AEM, an image processing profile generated an FPO rendition of each of the images. This FPO rendition is the same ratio and pixel count as the original, but it’s a highly compressed rendition reduced file size making for a faster handling between applications. Referencing this image inside of InDesign, we’ll use the FPO rendition whenever possible.
Now on InDesign with the Asset Link panel open, I’ve already navigated to the AEM folder that has the files I wish to access. I’ll check out and open a file for editing a half-baked document that has the design framework, but needs some images added for the purposes of this demo. In Asset Link panel, I’ll check out this InDesign document, which will lock it for editing from anyone else while it is checked out.
I’ll add a few images into this document using Asset Links place linked command. Once finished with these image additions, I’ll save this document and check it back in to AEM Assets.
Back in Assets, notice the thumbnail this document will begin to update as soon as the upload is complete. The checking in and re uploading over the source file creates a new version of this document, which you can see if you navigate to the Assets timeline and show the versions. The bottom most item is the current version. AEM maintains version control this way by showing all versions in this list. Any edit actions are always operating on the current version is the denoted by the word current at the bottom here. If needed, you can always roll back to an earlier version by selecting a version that’s not the current and click revert to this version.
In AEM Assets, you can see which files this document is referencing by selecting the Asset and choosing properties. This shows all the metadata associated with the Asset and in this case and reference files like the images that have been linked to it in InDesign. Notice my image files and some vector logo files under dependencies.
There has been an image edit requested on one of the file images I’m using in the travel story document. In Photoshop using Asset Link, I’ll check out the image, make an edit here, really something to show an obvious change in the image like tinting the image for demonstration purposes. Once done, I’ll save the file and check it back in into AEM.
Recall when you use Asset Link to check in and save over document, a document already existing in Assets, this creates a new current version while maintaining access to previous versions of Assets, always available from the versions list for any Asset.
Now, however, my InDesign file is out of sync with all of the referenced Assets. Back in InDesign, looking at my currently checked out design file, InDesign will attempt to check on the status of all linked files and let you know if one of them is out of sync.
On the Links panel, the status icon for the file that was just edited changed to show that it is out of sync. Click on the update icon to update all out of sync files and the design preview will update to show any new image edits.
This demonstrates a few ways to use Creative Cloud and authoring applications for design workflows while referencing source files housed in AEM Assets. -
Adobe Asset Link capabilities
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Adobe Asset Link integrates with AEM Assets and Assets Essentials.
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Adobe Asset Link auto-configures connection to cloud-based AEM environments (AEM Assets as a Cloud Service and Assets Essentials)
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Adobe Asset Link is an extension that works within Adobe Creative Cloud applications:
- Adobe XD
- Adobe Photoshop
- Adobe Illustrator
- Adobe InDesign
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Automatic authentication to AEM using their Adobe Enterprise ID or Federated ID
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Browse and search for digital assets in AEM
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Access file details for assets residing in AEM from with the panel:
- Thumbnail
- Basic metadata
- Versions
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Place, download or drag-n-drop assets into their layout
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Modify assets by checking them out from AEM and working on them (WIP) within their Creative Cloud Assets account
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Check an asset back into AEM after they have finished modifying it, and the new version is reflected in AEM
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Search for assets in AEM from the Adobe Asset Link In-App panel
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Browse AEM Assets collections and smart collections directly from the Asset Link panel
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Add newly created assets to AEM directly from the panel
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Drag-and-drop assets directly into InDesign frames
Placing assets in InDesign
Adobe Asset Link provides InDesign direct linking support between Adobe Asset Link and AEM. With InDesign direct linking support, you can place (Place Linked or Place Copy) or drag-n-drop digital assets into InDesign from AEM via the Adobe Asset Link panel. Also, introduces the *For Placement Only+ (FPO) rendition.
You can place an asset to your InDesign layout using one of the below options:
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Place Copy - Embedding an asset (using the Place Copy option) places a copy of the original asset into your InDesign layout after downloading the binaries to your local system. Adobe Asset Link does not maintain any link between the embedded copy and the original asset. If the original asset is modified in AEM, you must delete the embedded asset from the InDesign file, and re-embed the asset from AEM.
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Place Linked - When working with InDesign documents, you have the option to reference the assets from AEM in addition to directly embedding the assets (using the Place Copy option in the context menu). Referencing assets lets you collaborate with other users and incorporate any updates made to the original asset in AEM. To reference an asset from AEM, use the Place Linked option in the context menu.
For Placement Only images
When large asset files are placed into InDesign Documents from AEM using Adobe Asset Link, creatives users need to wait for few seconds after initiating the place operation. This impacts the overall user experience. With Adobe Asset Link you can temporarily place a low resolution image of the original asset from AEM, thereby reducing the time taken to place an image. At the same time, it increases the overall user experience and productivity. The lower resolution image is placed temporarily and when the final output is required for printing or publishing, you need to replace the FPO renditions with the originals. If you want to replace multiple FPO images with respective original images, navigate to Windows > Links panel and then download the original assets. After the original images are downloaded, choose Replace all FPO’s With Originals.
FPO renditions are lightweight substitutes of the original assets. They have the same aspect ratio, but are of smaller size compared to the original images. Currently, InDesign supports importing FPO renditions for the following image types only:
- JPEG
- GIF
- PNG
- TIFF
- PSD
- BMP
If an FPO rendition is not available for a specific asset in AEM, the original high-resolution asset is referenced instead. For FPO images, the status FPO is displayed in the InDesign Links panel.
Adobe Asset Link authentication with AEM Assets
How Adobe Asset Link authentication works in the context of Adobe Identity Management Services (IMS) and Adobe Experience Manager Author.
- The Adobe Asset Link extension makes an authorization request, via the Adobe Creative Cloud Desktop App, to Adobe Identity Manage Service (IMS), and upon success, receives a Bearer token.
- Adobe Asset Link extension connects to AEM Author over HTTP(S), including the Bearer token obtained in Step 1, using the scheme (HTTP/HTTPS), host and port provided in the extension’s settings JSON.
- AEM’s Bearer Authentication Handler extracts the Bearer token from the request and validates it with Adobe IMS.
- Once Adobe IMS validates the Bearer token, a user is created in AEM (if it doesn’t already exist), and syncs profile and group/memberships data from Adobe IMS. The AEM user is issued a standard AEM login token, which is sent back to the Adobe Asset Link extension as a Cookie on the HTTP(S) response.
- Subsequent interactions (ie. browsing, searching, checking in/out assets, etc.) with the Adobe Asset Link extension results in HTTP(S) requests to AEM Author which are validated using the AEM login token, using the standard AEM Token Authentication Handler.