Monday, October 09, 2006
"Plain talk" rights
We're beginning to get a few more requests from manager-types along the lines of, 'who has access to my stuff,' and, 'how are rights set up in my shared areas?'
It's pretty easy to give them a list of which groups have rights to what directories. What isn't so easy is explaining how trustees work, inheritance, and how rights-filters (which we use in a few key areas) affect flow. Plus, NDS rights factor into this significantly and those aren't presented on the file-system.
I'm pretty sure that we'll get a request from a high level manager to develop a system that will allow managers to see who as rights to their areas. Not just groups, but a full de-referenced list of users for who has rights to a specific directory and what those rights are. We'd also have to provide a second column next to each user showing what groups they got their rights from and where said right was assigned.
In other words, a big ole mess.
There is a reason we've tried to keep the managing of rights to be as much of a black-box as possible. I fully understand how they work. But explaining that to managers would require, IIRC, Day 2 of the Certified NetWare Administrator class.
What makes it even more fun is that we use IIS for some of our web-development, and we use rights there. Rights flow on Windows is different than on NetWare. Explaining THAT will take even more happy-fun meeting time.
Tags: netware, rights
It's pretty easy to give them a list of which groups have rights to what directories. What isn't so easy is explaining how trustees work, inheritance, and how rights-filters (which we use in a few key areas) affect flow. Plus, NDS rights factor into this significantly and those aren't presented on the file-system.
I'm pretty sure that we'll get a request from a high level manager to develop a system that will allow managers to see who as rights to their areas. Not just groups, but a full de-referenced list of users for who has rights to a specific directory and what those rights are. We'd also have to provide a second column next to each user showing what groups they got their rights from and where said right was assigned.
In other words, a big ole mess.
There is a reason we've tried to keep the managing of rights to be as much of a black-box as possible. I fully understand how they work. But explaining that to managers would require, IIRC, Day 2 of the Certified NetWare Administrator class.
What makes it even more fun is that we use IIS for some of our web-development, and we use rights there. Rights flow on Windows is different than on NetWare. Explaining THAT will take even more happy-fun meeting time.
Tags: netware, rights
