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SharePoint Permissions

SharePoint Permissions. Who has access? What can they do with the access? What is the easiest way to manage the permissions? What structure of sites and lists/libraries makes the most sense for your workflow?. All sites inheriting permissions. “Breaking” some of the inheritance lines.

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SharePoint Permissions

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  1. SharePoint Permissions • Who has access? • What can they do with the access? • What is the easiest way to manage the permissions? • What structure of sites and lists/libraries makes the most sense for your workflow?

  2. All sites inheriting permissions

  3. “Breaking” some of the inheritance lines

  4. All securable objects inheriting permissions

  5. “Breaking” some of the inheritance lines

  6. Authentication – establishes identity • We use Active Directory as the authentication provider • AD user accounts can represent individuals or groups of people • NPS\dsmith • NPS\domain users • AD user accounts are added to SharePoint, either as individual users or as part of SharePoint groups

  7. Authorization -permission to do certain tasks • What can a user see? Apply permissions so users can get to the information they need, but not have access to restricted information • What can a user do with the resource? Apply permissions so that the ability to modify the resources is not more than is necessary

  8. Permissions and Permission Levels • Thirty-three distinct permissions • Permission levels are groups of distinct permissions • Permission levels are assigned to individual users or to SharePoint groups • Default permission levels are full control, design, contribute and read

  9. Default permission levels • Full Control (Owners group): All permissions. • Design: Create lists and document libraries, edit pages and apply themes to the web site. • Contribute (Members group): Add, edit, and delete items in existing lists and document libraries. • Read (Visitors group): Read-only access. View and open items and documents. • Limited Access: Automatically assigned, to give enough access so the user can navigate to the item that they do have permission for.

  10. Planning • Design a clear hierarchy of inheritance • Separate sensitive data into its own lists, libraries, or even better, subsites • Balance ease of administration with the control of granular permissions • Decide what groups to use and what permission levels to give them

  11. SharePoint Groups

  12. Who might be in these groups? • Team Site Owners (Full Control) • Two or three individuals at the most • Team Site Members (Contribute) • Might be individuals if a small workgroup • Might be an Active Directory group that includes everybody in an office or organizational group (e.g. NPS\inpnridg for NRPC) • Might be all NPS domain users • Team Site Visitors • Often all NPS domain users if not sensitive info on site

  13. A group can have different permissions on different sites!

  14. Fine Points • In most cases, assign permission levels to SharePoint groups instead of individuals • Look for existing Active Directory groups or ask that they be created • All groups have an owner (can be a single person or a single group) • Settings determine who can view or edit the membership of a group • Restricted access sites should be lower in the hierarchy

  15. Planning Matters!

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