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This section will show you how to manage users and user groups in your Kiuwan Account.
Contents:
Introduction to User Management
In this section, we will also refer to Permissions Management, Access Policy, and all the security-related issues of the Kiuwan account.
Single Sign-On
If your Kiuwan account is Single Sign-On (SSO) enabled, please visit How to integrate Kiuwan with SAML SSO - SSO login vs username-password login
The User Management module can be selected at the top-left drop-down menu.
The Users Management module contains 3 tabs that allow managing different aspects of users and permissions.
- Users
- Allows to manage Users (creation, modification, and deletion) as well as different actions on selected users (password setting, permissions granting, etc.)
- User Groups
- Allows managing Users Groups, i.e. to create sets of users that share the same privileges.
- Roles
- Allows managing Roles, i.e. named groupings of permissions that can be further used to grant privileges to users and user groups.
The use of these sections is straightforward if you clearly understand the concepts. So, in this document, we will focus on explaining the concepts.
Permission Model
Role-based Access Control (RBAC)
Kiuwan implements a role-based access control approach that allows you to fully define the permissions of your Kiuwan installation.
The Permission model is based in the tuple: Subject - Role - Object
- Subject means a User (John, Mary, etc) or a Group of Users (Developers, Functional Analysts, etc)
- Role means a grouped set of permissions (for example, Readonly, Write, etc)
- Object is any Kiuwan entity (basically, Portfolios and Applications)
A common misconception is to think that somebody can be assigned a role (John has Read role) that applies to all the objects. It does not work like this.
The three components of the tuple (Subject, Role, and Object) are always needed.
This permission model lets you define at a very fine-grain level your access policy.
Permissions
Kiuwan provides a set of permissions that you can grant to any user (or user group) over any portfolio or application.
Permission | Meaning |
---|---|
View deliveries | To view data of delivery analyses (defects, audit results, etc) |
Delete deliveries | To delete delivery analyses |
Execute deliveries | To execute delivery analyses |
View application data | To view analysis data (defects, metrics, action plans, etc) |
Execute analyses | To execute baseline analyses (CS, CA and IS) |
Execute analyses in the cloud | To execute baseline analyses uploading the code to the Kiuwan cloud Saas |
Delete analyses | To remove baseline analyses |
Mute defects | To mute defects on baseline and delivery analyses |
Save action plans | To create and edit actions plans |
Delete action plans | To remove existing action plans |
Export action plans to JIRA | To use the Jira plugin to create issue from action plans |
View analyzed source code | To view the defects together with the complete source code (this option is sold separately) |
Upload analyzed source code | To upload the complete source code to Kiuwan so the defects could be inspected in the full source code |
Upload source code fragments | To upload only the code line where the defect is found. |
Roles
A Role is a concrete set of permissions.
Kiuwan provides several built-in roles. These predefined roles are commonly used and can serve as templates to create your own custom roles.
Built-in role | Common use |
---|---|
None | An empty set of permissions. It means no access at all. |
Readonly | Users that should only be granted read-only access to analysis data (baselines and deliveries) |
Readonly deliveries | Similar to Readonly, but restricted to data coming from deliveries analyses, not granted to see baseline data |
Write | Suitable for users that should have full access to an application (execute analyses, delete them, etc) |
Write deliveries | For users that should only be allowed to execute (and view) delivery analyses, not being permitted to access baseline data. |
Built-in roles cannot be modified but you can create as many custom roles as you need, selecting among the available permissions.
Bear always in mind that roles are assigned to Portfolios or Applications. There are not global roles, a role always applies to some object.
Administration privileges
Admin privileges | Description |
---|---|
Manage applications | Any user with this privilege is allowed to create, edit and delete Applications and Portfolios. Granting this privilege to a user will allow full access to the Application Management module where that user will be able to create and manage Kiuwan apps (to classify the app on portfolios, to assign a quality model and audits, etc). Please, see Applications management for further information on this subject. |
Manage users | Granting this privilege to a user will allow full access to Users Management module where that user will be able to:
Additionally, combined with “Manage applications”, the user will be able to:
|
Manage models | To create, modify, publish and delete Models, as well as to configure the Default Model. Granting this privilege to a user will allow full access to the Models Management module where the user will be able to create and manage Quality Models. Please, see Models Manager User Guide for further information on this subject. |
Manage audits | To create, modify, publish and delete Audits as well as to configure the Default Audit. Please, see Audits Management for further information on this subject. |
Manage reports | To create, modify, publish and delete Custom Reports. Please, see Custom Reports for further information on this subject. |
Important :
Any user granted with ALL admin privileges becomes an “admin”
The account owner is the full “admin” of the account and can create additional admins by granting all the admin privileges.
Global permissions | Meaning |
---|---|
View governance | Access to the Governance module. Even with this privilege, the user will only see aggregated data from “allowed” applications (i.e. at least with Readonly role) Please, see Kiuwan Governance Doc for further info on this subject. |
Support Enabled | Access to Kiuwan Technical Support (chat or ticket-based) |
Users and User Groups
Kiuwan allows to create single Users as well as User Groups, and consequently to assign permissions to single Users or to User Groups.
If a user belongs to one User Group, the permissions granted to that user will be those granted to the User Groups he belongs to.
If a user belongs to more than one User Group, the resulting set of granted permissions is the union (OR) of every user group’s permissions, i.e. the user will have permissions from one group plus the permissions from the others group.
If you want to avoid this “user group’s inheritance”, select “Override User Group” and that user will be granted only with the permissions exclusively assigned to him, regardless of his/her membership to any user group.
Permissions on Portfolios and Applications
Any application can be classified according to the available Groups of Portfolios.
There are two built-in groups of portfolios: Business Value and Provider
Group of Portfolio | Meaning | Values |
---|---|---|
Business Value | Classification of the app according to this value from a business point of view | Fixed and not-modifiable set:
|
Provider | Company in charge of developing/maintaining the application | Empty by default,
|
Besides these built-in groups, you can create as many custom groups of portfolios as you need.
Any application will always have a value for each of the existing groups of portfolios:
either a concrete value
or unassigned (if that app has not been explicitly classified into that group
Then, if you want to grant permissions based on Portfolios just select the option Permissions on portfolios.
Then, you will be able to select the specific access Role (i.e. the set of permissions) to every portfolio of the available groups.
IMPORTANT: If some application is unassigned in some group, None role is assumed (i.e. no-access)
Since any application can be classified in several portfolio groups, the final permissions set for the app is the union of allowed actions for every role assigned to every portfolio group.
Let see with an example.
- You define a user with ReadOnly permissions on apps with portfolio value High in a Business Value portfolio.
- This means that for any application classified as such, that user will have the allowed actions defined in ReadOnly role.
- Also, you define for the same user None as the role for apps with value South Africa in the Provider portfolio group.
What would be the permissions for an app that is High (in Business Value) and South Africa (in Provider)?
As said above, it would be the union set, being in this case equal to the ReadOnly role.
Another example.
- You define a Mute defects role with only Mute defects action, and a Create Notes role with only Create Note action.
- You associate Mute defects to High and Create Notes to South Africa.
What would be the resulting set for any app classified as such?
The user will be able to Mute defects AND Create Notes.
Because every application is always classified into every group of the portfolio, permissions on portfolios take precedence to permissions on applications.
If you need to override this behavior and grant permissions directly to the application (regardless of its classification):
- select Permissions on applications,
- select the Role and
- be sure to check Override (otherwise, the portfolios permissions will apply).
Users Management
The User Management section allows you to manage the users and their permissions associated with your account.
At CSV option menu you can export to a CSV file a full list of users and permissions.
Add a new user
Click Add to open the New User form.
Name | Description |
---|---|
Username | This is the unique identifier of a Kiuwan user. The user needs to specify this username whenever accessing Kiuwan. The username must be unique so it’s recommended to use a suffix that identifies all users in your organization. |
This is the email address of the user so any Kiuwan notification will be sent to that email address. Email does not need to be unique, so there can be users with the same email address. | |
Name & Lastname | These are descriptive fields to further identify the user. |
Enabled | This checkbox allows enabling/disabling the user to access the Kiuwan account. |
Generate Password | If this checkbox is checked, Kiuwan will send a new password to the user. New users can not access Kiuwan until they receive their password. |
Set user as owner
In the dropdown menu of each user, select Set user as owner to change the account owner.
Every Kiuwan account has a unique account owner. The account owner is granted full permissions on account administration, applications, and portfolios.
Once a new user is set as the owner, the old owner will be set with default permissions (none).
Confirm this action in the pop-up window that will show up once you have selected the Set as owner option for any user:
Set a new password
In the dropdown menu of each user, you can also select New password for the selected user.
Selecting this option will generate a new password and send it to the user’s email address.
Set administration privileges
Administration privileges can be granted to any users, which enable them to manage applications, users, quality models and/or audits as if they were the account owner.
For a full explanation of admin privileges, see Administration privileges
Set permissions on portfolios
The account owner (or any user with Manage Users privilege) can assign application permissions based on the app classification in portfolio groups.
Permissions can be assigned to portfolio values by selecting a Role (i.e. a defined set of allowed actions) for every portfolio value.
Please see Permissions on Portfolios and Applications to fully understand the permissions assignment.
Important: Permissions based on portfolio values take precedence over app permissions.
In case you want app permissions to take precedence over portfolios permissions, you should check Override in Application Access Permissions.
Set permissions on applications
The account owner (or any user with Manage User privilege) is entitled to assign specific application permissions.
Select Override to prioritize the role assigned to that user and application over the role selected on Access permissions to Portfolios.
Please see Permissions on Portfolios and Applications section to fully understand the permission assignment.
Bulk actions
If you want to set the same option for several users at once, you can do it by selecting those users and, then, choosing the corresponding option on Bulk actions dropdown menu, as shown below:
User groups
A User Group is a set of users that shares the same permissions (admin privileges and/or permissions on apps and portfolios).
Whenever you need to assign the same permissions on the same entities (apps and portfolios), you can define a User Group, define the set of privileges and assign users to that User Group.
Doing this way, with one click you will be able to grant all the users of that group the same permissions instead of granting one by one.
For example, you can divide users into development teams, so the users in the same user group will be able to manage the applications they are working with the same set of privileges.
Any user can be assigned to many user groups. In this case, a union of all user group's permissions will be granted to that user.
If a user belongs to one User Group, the permissions granted to that user will be those granted to the User Groups he belongs to.
If a user belongs to more than one User Group, the resulting set of granted permissions is the union (OR) of every user group’s permissions, i.e. the user will have permissions from one group plus the permissions from the others group.
In case of conflicting permissions on the same entities (apps and portfolios), the most permissive set is applied.
Once a user belongs to a User Group it will not be possible to assign individual permissions for that user.
If you want to avoid this user group inheritance, select Override User Group and that user will be granted only with the permissions exclusively assigned to him, regardless of his membership to any user group.
In this way, individual permissions will be granted instead of a user group’s permissions.
Create a new User Group
To create a new User Group, click on Add button and drag&drop users from Not Member Users to Group Members.
Roles
You can manage the different user roles by clicking on the namesake button in User Management.
Please visit Roles for details.
Create a new Role
You can add new roles and select their enabled actions by clicking on Create New Role.
You can manage the actions the different roles can perform by selecting the appropriate checkboxes for each role.
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