How to manage administrators in Landscape
See also: Administrators
Note: You must be an administrator to perform these tasks.
This document describes how to manage additional administrators and roles.
Contents:
Invite administrators
You can make someone an administrator by sending them an invitation via email. To invite an administrator:
- Navigate to your organisation’s home page
- Click the Administrators tab
- Enter the requested information
- Click Invite
The invitation will send from the email address you specified during Landscape setup. The options available in the Roles section are the same roles defined in the Roles tab.
Users who receive an invitation will see an HTML link in the email. Clicking this link takes them to a page where they’re asked to log in to Landscape or create an Ubuntu Single Sign-on account. Once they do, they gain the administrator privileges associated with the role to which they’ve been assigned.
The first person to click on the link and submit information becomes an administrator, even if it’s not the person with the name and email address to which you sent the invitation. Take care to keep track of the status of administrator invitations.
Disable administrators
To disable one or more administrators:
- Navigate to your organisation’s home page
- Click the Administrators tab
- Select the checkboxes next to the administrator(s) you want to disable
- Click Disable
The administrator is permanently disabled and will no longer be in Landscape. Although this operation cannot be reversed, you can send another administrator invitation to the same email address.
Create roles
To add a role:
- Navigate to your organisation’s home page
- Click the Roles tab
- Click Add role
- Enter the requested information
- Click Save
When you add a role, you also specify a set of one or more access groups to which the role applies, and what permissions you want the role to have.
By specifying different permission levels and different access groups, you can create roles and associate them with administrators to get a granular level of control over sets of computers.