This discussion has been locked.
You can no longer post new replies to this discussion. If you have a question you can start a new discussion

Access template permissions after group add/removal

We're working on implementing ARS 7.0 (clean install) after having 6.9 for quite awhile. We've kind of hit a snag with our elevated permissions.

 

We have workstation support that uses temporal membership to "elevate" themselves into a group that gives them permissions to read LAPS/Bitlocker Keys, etc. I can either elevate or put myself into that elevated group that has an access template assigned to it to allow the users to perform these tasks but the permissions never get applied.

The only way for the permissions to be applied are to restart the ARS Administration Service, after doing that, I am able to read the LAPS/Bitlocker Keys, etc.

This worked flawlessly in 6.9, maybe sometimes it took a minute or two for the permissions to apply but that's it.

 

Any ideas?

Parents
  • Correct. ARS uses user token logged in to ARS ADmin Service.
     (a) ARS is "resourceA" accessed by Window user (windows token).
     (b) ARS “proxy” grants accessed user to access another “resourceB” Managed AD domain.
     All rules how ARS can see group membership (cross-domain, resource domain, caller domain groups) inside the binded token (a) and “on behalf” to “resource2” (b) follows standard Windows / AD group membership resolution rules.
    (it is the factor to design cross-domain management at ARS deployment)

Reply
  • Correct. ARS uses user token logged in to ARS ADmin Service.
     (a) ARS is "resourceA" accessed by Window user (windows token).
     (b) ARS “proxy” grants accessed user to access another “resourceB” Managed AD domain.
     All rules how ARS can see group membership (cross-domain, resource domain, caller domain groups) inside the binded token (a) and “on behalf” to “resource2” (b) follows standard Windows / AD group membership resolution rules.
    (it is the factor to design cross-domain management at ARS deployment)

Children
No Data