On SharePoint when a user with read_write permissions tries to access a list (unique perimssions) on my page it says, you don't have access to this page.
But when I change his permissions to something else he can see the list, but I want some users to see it read_write permissions.
What should I do?
Related
In my scenario I am showing a ListViewWebpart on a WebPartPage. Here list has contribute access to Member group and full control to Owner group.
When a user from Member group logs in, I want he/her to edit list through webpartpage. But not the Page itself.
So, i have given contribute permissions to List and Read permissions to WebPartPage. With these permissions, user from Member group is getting access denied when he tries to edit the list through WebpartPage.
Please help me on this. How can i modify permissions to meet the above scenario?
Thanks in Advance.
I'm working on requirement, where we have a list with categories we want to maintain list own our own. we want others to restrict from add/ delete/modify, only we want to do that.
Is it possible to do it in SharePoint?
Yes. You can stop inheriting permissions from the site in the list and assign unique permissions to the users.
Go to List sttings > Permissions for this list.
Click Stop Inheriting Permissions in the ribbon > Slect all existing groups and users > Remove User Permissions > Grant full control Permissions to specific users and grant read permission to other users.
I have a SharePoint list that is populated via an InfoPath form. There are two groups of people who have access to the form: end users and owners. While I don't have any issue with assingning permissions to owners, for the end users, this proposition has been tricky.
My requirement is such that - the end users should be able to:
Add new items to the list via InfoPath form
Not interact with the list in any other way
Now if I give the end users contribute permission to the list, they will be able to view and edit other list items in the list (which is the function of owners only). But if I don't give the end users contribute permission, they cannot add to the list. Is this a real catch-22 or am I spawning this out of my ignorance?
How about using a custom web service that performs the task of inserting items. But the real query is - would you want them to view the items as well?
If yes, you can give the view permissions on the list to your end users and addition via your InfoPath form, which would essentially call a web service and execute the code to submit items with correct privileges.
Regards,
Nitin Rastogi
Go to site collection level >> Site Settings >> Site Permissions (under Users and Permissions) >> Permission Levels (under Manage section) >> Add Permission Level.
In this page, find List Permissions in Permissions section. Check "Add Items".
Create a group that you need and give it the Add Items permissions. Add all the users to this group who should only be able to add to the list and not edit it. Give the list unique permission (don't inherit form the parent). Then add the group to the list.
I have a user group set up in Sharepoint that has permission to access to a single site. I would like to restrict this groups access futher to a single survey within that site. Is there any way to set Sharepoint permissions to a more granular level?
You can give access to only specific lists, views or pages using the Limited Access Permission Level
Go into the list or view that you want to give people access to, go to Settings --> List Settings --> Permissions for this List
You can then give direct rights to users that do not have access to any objects higher up in the hierarchy.
I would like to create a folder that users who do not have privileges to view the rest of the site can see. This user group would be granted access to the site, but I only want them to be able to view one particular page.
Is this possible to do without going to every single page and removing the new user group's access?
yeah, you should be able to create a new group and add the users to that list/subweb/whatever and just that. This is assuming that you didn't grant access to all users somewhere. If you did, then hopefully the default access is granted to a default user group (like sharepoint visitors) and you can alter that group to exclude the users you only want to access the limited part of the site.
If created correctly the new group shouldn't have access to the rest of the site.
If you are getting thrown off by the fact that the user/group is listed as having "Limited Access" on the ACLs on, say, the parent site/web. That's just a placeholder SharePoint uses to make sure people have access to at least the bare minimum set of objects (e.g. theme and other UI files and the parent web itself) to get to the list or item you actually want them to have access to.
As long as the group only has access on a single list, you should have to worry about them having access to anything else.