> -----Original Message----- > From: [email protected] [mailto:baruwa- > [email protected]] On Behalf Of Andrew Colin Kissa > Sent: 24 January 2012 09:44 > To: Baruwa users list > Subject: Re: [Baruwa] Error adding to whitelists > > > On 24 Jan 2012, at 11:27 AM, Jason Ede wrote: > > > We've 1 superadmin account and several administrator accounts > (superadmin not ticked, but administrator set for account) and I had thought > that the only thing administrator accounts couldn't do was get to the > account settings to add accounts. However, I've just tried whitelisting an > email using the administrator accounts and I'm getting > > > > "Error adding to whitelist: Select a valid choice. XXXXXXXXX.com is not one > of the available choices." > > > > This works fine if I use the superadmin account so it must be a restriction > on the standard administrator account? I think there can be only 1 system > admin account as that is used for the default spam score settings so I need > administrator accounts to do what I want. We have multiple administrator > accounts as it makes it easier keeping track of who has access and access can > be turned off without having to change the superadmin password each time. > > Actually there is nothing like a standard administrator account, at the > moment, you have a administrator who has to have the superadmin flag on, > a domain admin and a normal user.
If I look under the profile settings for a user there are the options User, Domain Admin and Administrator for Account Type... I thought Administrator meant the user would be an admin for all domains? Does that not really function without the superadmin status set? > > There are restrictions with this work flow, you can only have on domain > admin for each domain. > > You can however have multiple superadmins, if you want to track who > accessed what. If we have multiple superadmins then what determines which account the default spam scores get taken from or is that the admins setting in the config file? > In recognition of the above deficiencies Baruwa 2.0 uses a different system > where domains are grouped under an organization which in turn can have > multiple admins who manage all aspects of the domain apart from a few > restricted actions which only the super admin can do. > So in effect we could have an organisation with multiple admins and all domains in that organisation would be able to be managed by the admins? I'm guessing that organisations could be nested if needed too (sort of like sub-organisations)? > _______________________________________________ > Keep Baruwa FREE - http://pledgie.com/campaigns/12056 _______________________________________________ Keep Baruwa FREE - http://pledgie.com/campaigns/12056

