If you were logged in you would be able to see more operations.
|
|
|
QuickBuild
Created: 23/Sep/10 07:46 AM
Updated: 01/Oct/10 04:09 PM
|
|
Component/s: |
None
|
Affects Version/s: |
3.0.5
|
Fix Version/s: |
None
|
|
Original Estimate:
|
Unknown
|
Remaining Estimate:
|
Unknown
|
Time Spent:
|
Unknown
|
Environment:
|
QB server - Windows 2003 Server R2, DB - Mysql
QB client - Windows XP SP2
QB server - Windows 2003 Server R2, DB - Mysql
QB client - Windows XP SP2
|
|
Assume QBA - QB root user which is created in the very beginning
Login under QBA
Create two QB groups: Admins & Develop (such names do not exist in Active Directory (AD))
Create AD user <user-developer> with LDAP authenticator.
Include <user-developer> into that two groups created above.
Logout and login under <user-developer>. He has no any permissions
Logout and login back under QBA. See <user-developer>`s groups - they are reset (there are no any)
It`s confusing
I guess it is incorrect behaviour. Manually set groups have not to be reset. Not all the times AD groups and users are the same as at the build server
|
Description
|
Assume QBA - QB root user which is created in the very beginning
Login under QBA
Create two QB groups: Admins & Develop (such names do not exist in Active Directory (AD))
Create AD user <user-developer> with LDAP authenticator.
Include <user-developer> into that two groups created above.
Logout and login under <user-developer>. He has no any permissions
Logout and login back under QBA. See <user-developer>`s groups - they are reset (there are no any)
It`s confusing
I guess it is incorrect behaviour. Manually set groups have not to be reset. Not all the times AD groups and users are the same as at the build server
|
Show » |
|
I set "Search groups using filter" in LDAP authenticator settings
But the option I need is "Do not retreive groups"