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Change Auditor - For Advanced Users 7.4 - Technical Insight Guide

Change Auditor Services Change Auditor licensing processes Component Start-up Considerations Change Auditor network communications Coordinator internal tasks Registry Settings Change Auditor built-in fault tolerance Change Auditor protection Database Considerations Account exclusions best practices

Change Auditor protection

This section explains how access permissions are evaluated when multiple protection templates are assigned to an object which may contain conflicting rules. The evaluation process used is for all types of protection templates (Active Directory, ADAM (AD LDS), Group Policy, File System, and Exchange Mailbox). However, there are some special considerations to keep in mind when using the Exchange Mailbox Protection feature, see How access rules are evaluated.

Protection templates can be one of two types:

Using multiple protection templates

This section explains how access permissions are evaluated when multiple protection templates are assigned to an object which may contain conflicting rules. The evaluation process used is for all types of protection templates (Active Directory, ADAM (AD LDS), Group Policy, File System, and Exchange Mailbox). However, there are some special considerations to keep in mind when using the Exchange Mailbox Protection feature, see How access rules are evaluated.

Protection templates can be one of two types:

How access rules are evaluated

When a user attempts to access a protected object, each template is evaluated separately, and the ‘deny’ access rule takes precedence over any ‘allow’ access rule. This means, that if at least one protection template evaluates to ‘deny’, attempts to access the protected object is denied. The following table illustrates the overall results of conflicting access rules:

User is allowed access

User is allowed access

User is allowed to access protected objects

User is allowed access

User is denied access

User is denied access to protected objects

User is denied access

User is allowed access

User is denied access to protected objects

User is denied access

User is denied access

User is denied access to protected objects

For Exchange Mailbox Protection templates, you can set the Mailbox owner can bypass protection option to allow the object’s owner to access their own mailbox, even if the protection template would normally deny access.

This override flag only affects the evaluation on a template where it is defined. It does not affect the evaluation of other protection templates.

How scheduling and location works with denied access

You can select to have the protection to always run or have it run only during specific times and control when the protection is enabled based on the location.

This section explains how the scheduling and location options affect the user and group accounts that have been denied access to protected objects.

If you have denied specific users or groups the ability to change the protected objects and you have enabled a protection schedule, those users or groups are denied access only during this time. Anytime outside of when the schedule is set to enabled, these denied accounts will be able to access the protected object.

When the schedule is turned off, all options are turned off with it, including any denied access to the specified users.

The scheduling options override all other protection settings.

If you have denied specific users or groups access to protected objects, but you have specified locations that can access the protected object, the denied user or group can access the protected objects from these locations.

The location options override all other protection settings.

 

 

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