A user account can be a member of one or more user account groups and belongs to a particular domain.
A user account uniquely identifies a user to the system. When setting up user accounts, keep the following points in mind:
Configure as few settings as possible at the user account level.
Assign a required user name and password, which the system uses for identification and authentication purposes. For more information, see Password Administration .
The user account is unique within the domain it belongs to. For example, an admin user account is located in Domain A. This account cannot be used to administrate Domain B. For more information, see Domains .
Manage accounts at the domain level using a default administrator account. For more information, see Administration Accounts in SmartStruxure Server Local Domain .
Track user activity at the user-account level. For more information, see Audit Trailing of User Activity .
A User Account Group can contain both user accounts and other user account groups. To facilitate the creation and administration of users, assign software permissions and workspaces to user account groups instead of individual user accounts.
In this example, Paul is a member of the Janitor group and the Administrator group. His account inherits the software permissions and workspaces of both groups. Susan is a member of the Administrator group and inherits the software permissions and workspaces of the Administrator group.
Although user accounts are members of user account groups, they are not physically stored in user account groups. Instead, user accounts and user account groups are parallel entities so that individual accounts can be members of one or more groups.
You can map Windows Active Directory groups to Building Operation user account groups if Building Operation runs on a network that uses this directory to manage users and user account groups. A Building Operation user account group that includes a Windows account group can be member of another Building Operation user account group.
For more information, see Windows Active Directory User Groups .
As a WorkStation administrator, you can change passwords, track user activities, validate accounts, and set up user and user and user group accounts.
For more information, see WorkStation Account Management .