Groups and licenses introduction
Groups and licenses are methods for managing users in your Spotfire environment and determining what permissions and features different users have access to.
Groups
At installation Spotfire includes a number of groups that correspond to common user roles, such as Deployment Administrator or Scheduled Updates User. The administrator enables appropriate licenses for these groups, and adds to them the groups and users that perform these tasks.
Administrators often import their groups and users by synchronizing with an external user directory, but it is also possible to import users and groups from a file or create them manually. Administrators then build a hierarchy of groups to meet company requirements.
Groups can be added as subgroups to other groups, in which case group members inherit access to the licenses of all their parent groups in addition to any licenses specifically set for their own group.
Licenses and license features
With licenses and license features you can distribute and control what features of Spotfire different users can access. As an administrator, you set licenses for groups, thereby determining what the group members have permission to do within the Spotfire environment. The access users have to Spotfire is determined by a combination of a product license, feature licenses, and product license models.
Through careful planning, administrators are able to provide users with appropriate access to the Spotfire environment, within a group structure designed for easy maintenance. For more information, see License inheritance in group hierarchies and the License feature reference.
- Spotfire Server introduction
- Spotfire database introduction
- Nodes and services introduction
- Environment communication introduction
- Authentication introduction
- Administration interface introduction
- Spotfire clients introduction
- Spotfire library introduction
- Users introduction
- Routing introduction
- Logging introduction
- Preferences introduction
- Deployments and deployment areas introduction
- Data sources introduction