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In Tiki19, permissions were further improved with better handling of the parent-child concept. Tiki21 introduces Templated Groups and Roles. This is not necessarily reflected in the documentation below.

Permissions Settings

Understanding Tiki Permissions

onclick=role="">Along with setting the features, setting permissions is one of the basic aspects of Tiki administration. This page describes the basic concepts in Tiki's permission system and how the various aspects interact. A complete list of permissions can be found on the Permissions List page.

How Permissions Work

Main points of the permission system in Tiki

  • When Tiki is installed, there are three pre-defined Groups of users:
    • Anonymous: Users that are not logged in are in the Anonymous group.
    • Registered: Users that are logged in are in the Registered group.
    • Admin: The person who installs Tiki is the initial member of the Admin group.
  • Administrators (Admin group members) can create and edit Groups of users.
    • Each group can have fully customized access to all site features.
    • Users can be assigned to one or several groups.
    • Groups can have subgroups.
    • Permissions are assigned to groups of users, not to individual users.
  • Individual objects such as wiki pages can have permissions applied to them directly, for particular user groups.
  • If no permissions are specified for a group for an object or content category, then global permisions apply.
  • Administrators can create and edit a content Category.
    • Objects can be added to content categories.
    • A content category can then be assigned to a group.
    • Category-based permissions, when used (it's an "advanced" feature), give members of the groups the permissions assigned to them.


In what order are permissions settings applied?

It is important to understand that Tiki uses several types of permissions:

  • Global permissions: Each site visitor belongs to a Group (such as Anonymous or Registered). The permissions you assign to the group define the global site-wide permissions for that user.
  • Category permissions: These permissions define the actions that users can take for objects in a specific content category.
  • Object permissions: These permissions define the actions that user can take for an individual object.
  • See also: Permission Enforcement Order

    Tip: The setup of permissions is much easier when you are still learning how to master them if you avoid the level of Category permissions, and you only use Global and Object permissions.


Permissions are inherited from from the top-down, but override from the bottom-up.


Tiki's permissions model may look like complex... but is also very customizable.

Managing permissions

Warning
While entering a filter, JQuery will rebuild the list. Do not press enter or you'll start all over.


The interface has three tabs. The first tab is for assigning permissions.



The second tab is to select which groups should be included in the table for assigning permissions, because, when the list of groups is large, assigning permissions could be slow.



The third tab is to filter the number of features that should be shown in the interface. This is specially needed when managing category permissions, to avoid having a list bigger than needed for our purposes in specific cases.



In addition, this new interface to manage permissions includes several features:

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  1. You can assign or remove all object permissions on all child categories if this box is checked.
  2. You can filter the whole list of permissions dynamically to list only those containing some text
  3. You can expand or collapse at will any of the sections of permissions
  4. You can select one by one the permissions to be assigned or checking the box at the column title (group name) level, and that selection will propagate to all the checkbox shown in that column.

Permissions by section

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September 2025
SU MO TU WE TH FR SA
31 01 02 03 04 05 06
07 08 09 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 01 02 03 04

Demo site for testing

Category permissions

Permissions can be restricted via the category feature. Basically, you can already assign all the permissions you need as described above. The full granularity of permissions can be assigned to categories (and thus inherited when objects belong to a given category).

If an object has no specific (object) permissions, then:

  1. If the object is not part of any category with specific permissions, global permissions apply.
  2. If the object is part of at least one category with specific permissions, the permissions on that object are the sum of the permissions granted to all of the object's categories which have specific permissions.

For example, if...

  1. wiki page Foo has no specific permissions
  2. the set of categories Foo is in is category #3 and category #5
  3. and category #3 has no specific (category) permissions

... then:

  1. If category #5 has no with specific permissions, global permissions apply.
  2. If category #5 has specific permissions, the permissions on Foo are the permissions on category #5.


Because adding a category to an object can provide additional rights, it is important to protect who can assign categories to prevent undesired escalation. For example, if the site contains public and private information, someone with access to edit private information should not be able to make it available publicly by changing the categories. To resolve this issue, multiple permissions can be assigned to the categories.

To begin with, tiki_p_modify_object_categories allows to determine if the user is allowed to modify the categories of the object at all. Without this permission, it will be impossible to modify the categories. Typically, it is safe to grant this permission widely.

Then, there is higher granularity available for each category. tiki_p_add_object and tiki_p_remove_object determine if the user can add or remove elements from the category. Categories on which permissions are specified should also specify who can assign to or remove from those categories. When a user has the tiki_p_modify_object_categories permission on an object and modifies that object, but lacks the tiki_p_add_object permission on a certain category, the user will see a checkbox for that category, but the checkbox will be disabled.

Additionally, some category changes may be allowed in certain contexts by defining Category Transitions, which would allow to change a category only from a certain state. A group of transitions create a workflow.

Workspaces

Workspaces further facilitate management of large and complex Tiki sites.

Admin permissions and special permissions

When a group has an admin permission on a feature such as tiki_p_admin_sheet, the group will lost his admin permission for an object with local perms or categories permissions.

Customising the permissions list (re-ordering it) for power users.

Since Tiki19 it is possible to customise and re-order the list of the permissions displayed under Setting => Permissions (tiki-objectpermissions.php). Super user can edit a yaml file located at : tiki-objectpermissions_order.yml.

Note

Some information on this page is from Tiki for Dummies Smarties, copyright (C) by Rick Sapir, published by KeyContent.org, and available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike License.

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Created by system. Last Modification: Wednesday 02 December, 2020 01:52:32 UTC by Marc Laporte.