Secure Global Desktop Administration Guide
> Getting started
> Creating and configuring a person object
Creating and configuring a person object
Problem
You want to create and configure a new person object for someone in
your organization.
Solution
In Object Manager, create a person
object in the appropriate place in the organizational hierarchy,
setting the attributes (especially the Username
attribute) appropriately. Then use the Links tab to add any
webtop content for this person.
Alternatives
- Use the
tarantella object
command to create
and configure the object from the command line.
- You can allow anonymous access --
logging in to Secure Global Desktop without a username or password --
without creating a person object.
- You can allow access by UNIX users without creating a person object.
- Integrate with an existing
LDAP directory server on your network containing the people in your
organization.
Case study
Indigo Insurance has a new recruit, Ginger Butcher. Ginger joins the
IT department, and will be a Secure Global Desktop Administrator. She has special
responsibility for training, and needs to use the presentation tool
Slide-o-Win regularly. You need to create and configure a person
object for Ginger.
Solution
- Log in to a Secure Global Desktop server as a Secure Global Desktop Administrator. Only
Secure Global Desktop Administrators can create person objects.
- On your webtop, click Object Manager. If you've used
Object Manager before, it appears just how you left it.
- The new recruit "belongs to" the IT department, so the person
object should belong in the IT organizational unit. Use the Search or
Browse tabs to locate the IT OU object. Right-click this object,
point to New, and then click Person.
- Object Manager opens the IT OU on the Browse tab, and displays
a text box. Type the name of the person in the box, in this case
Ginger Butcher
, and press Return. This name is used to
uniquely identify the object within the OU.
- Properties for the new object appear on the right. On the
Attributes tab, choose General from the list. These are the attributes
you're most likely to want to change. You can get help on any
attribute by clicking the context help button, in the lower-right
corner of Object Manager, and then clicking the attribute.
- For Surname, type the
person's family name, in this case
Butcher
.
- For Username, type the
UNIX username of the person, in this case
ginger
. This
attribute may be used for authentication: see user types for more information.
- For Email Address, type
the person's full email address, in this case
ginger@indigo-insurance.com
.
- If you want Ginger's webtop to include everything that's on the
webtop of the IT organizational unit, make sure that Inherit Parent's
Webtop Content is checked.
- As this person object is for Ginger only and isn't shared between
multiple users, make sure that Shared Between Users
(Guest) is not checked.
- To let Ginger log in to Secure Global Desktop, make sure that May Log In To
Secure Global Desktop is checked.
- If you like, choose different attribute groupings from the list,
to see what other settings you can change. When you've finished
changing attributes, click Apply.
- To define the webtop content that applies only for Ginger Butcher,
use the Links tab of the
person object. Use the Search or Browse tabs to locate application
objects you want to add to the webtop (they don't have to be in the
same OU as the person object), and just drag them onto the tab. You
can also drag group objects onto the tab: Secure Global Desktop shows
all the members of the group on Ginger's webtop.
- Ginger Butcher needs to be a Secure Global Desktop Administrator. On the Browse
tab, open the Secure Global Desktop System Objects organization, and
then double-click Global Administrators. Drag the person object for
Ginger Butcher to the Members tab to make Ginger a Secure Global Desktop Administrator.
Next steps
- If you want to create multiple objects, or to modify many users'
webtops at the same time, use the
tarantella object
command's batch processing
capabilities.
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