I have a site running on 7.7.3 upgraded from 7.6.9. I removed all the default user groups created by the Umbraco migration process, and re-created them with more meaningful names. Here's a screenshot of the permissions I gave the group.
The documents have the same name but are under different nodes so have unique paths. i.e. one is /12thleg/Consideration of Bills Committee and the other is /13thleg/Consideration of Bills Committee.
Both of these documents have child nodes that existed prior to the upgrade. I've found that the users in the group cannot update any of the child nodes under those two documents. The only buttons they see are 'Return to List' and 'Preview' as below.
By default, the group also has browse rights across the whole content and media trees.
How do I give my users rights to child nodes under a document?
Before the big users update, we could add granular permissions to nodes and have their children inherit them. Now, we have to target nodes individually, which is simply not an option when a node has hundreds of descendants.
User Group permissions on child nodes
Hi,
I have a site running on 7.7.3 upgraded from 7.6.9. I removed all the default user groups created by the Umbraco migration process, and re-created them with more meaningful names. Here's a screenshot of the permissions I gave the group.
The documents have the same name but are under different nodes so have unique paths. i.e. one is /12thleg/Consideration of Bills Committee and the other is /13thleg/Consideration of Bills Committee.
Both of these documents have child nodes that existed prior to the upgrade. I've found that the users in the group cannot update any of the child nodes under those two documents. The only buttons they see are 'Return to List' and 'Preview' as below.
By default, the group also has browse rights across the whole content and media trees.
How do I give my users rights to child nodes under a document?
TIA
Ver
I've run into this issue.
Before the big users update, we could add granular permissions to nodes and have their children inherit them. Now, we have to target nodes individually, which is simply not an option when a node has hundreds of descendants.
Hi Matthew,
I can see that you have created this issue http://issues.umbraco.org/issue/U4-10894 #H5YR
Have a nice Friday and weekend.
Best,
/Dennis
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