Privileges Required to Use Process Locks

To use Process Locks, you need one of the following:

  • scheduler-administrator or redwood-administrator role
  • system or partition-level permissions
  • object-specific privileges

Using Process Locks

The following privilege ranks are available on Process Locks:

  • Create - allows you to create a Process Lock on the level the privilege was granted (system, partition), you have no further privileges through this rank, you automatically get All privilege rank on Process Locks you create.
  • View - allows you to view a Process Lock on the level the privilege was granted (system, partition), you have no further privileges through this rank.
  • Edit - allows you to create, view, and edit a Process Lock on the level the privilege was granted (system, partition).
  • Delete - allows you to create, view, and delete a Process Lock on the level the privilege was granted (system, partition).
  • All - full control over a Process Lock on the level the privilege was granted (system, partition).

You always need View privileges on the partition of the Process Lock.

Process Locks can reference the following object, you need at least View privileges on this object as well as its partition when you want to create/edit/delete a Process Lock that references it:

Built-in Roles

  • The scheduler-administrator or redwood-administrator built-in role provides full access to Process Locks.
  • The scheduler-viewer built-in role provides read-only access to Process Locks.

Creating Process Locks

You need one of the following privilege ranks to be able to create Process Locks:

  • Create - allows you to create Process Locks on the level the privilege was granted (system, partition), you have no further privileges through this rank, you automatically get All privilege rank on Process Locks you create.
  • Edit - allows you to create, view, and edit all Process Locks on the level the privilege was granted (system, partition).
  • Delete - allows you to create, view, and delete all Process Locks on the level the privilege was granted (system, partition).
  • All - full control over all Process Locks on the level the privilege was granted (system, partition).

You also require View privileges on the partition of the Process Lock.

Editing Process Locks

To successfully edit a Process Lock, you must have one the following privileges:

  • Edit - privilege rank on the Process Lock, or on Process Lock in its partition or system-wide
  • Delete - privilege rank on the Process Lock, or on Process Lock in its partition or system-wide
  • All - privilege rank on the Process Lock, or on Process Lock in its partition or system-wide

You also require View privileges on the partition of the Process Lock.

Process Locks can reference the following object, you need at least View privileges on this object as well as its partition when you want to create/edit/delete a Process Lock that references it:

See Also