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Group (computing)

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Grouping of users as part of an access control system on a computer

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In computing, the termgroup generally refers to a grouping ofusers. In principle, users may belong to none, one, or many groups (although in practice some systems place limits on this). The primary purpose of user groups is to simplifyaccess control tocomputer systems.

For instance, a computer science department has anetwork which is shared bystudents andacademics. The department has made a list ofdirectories which the students are permitted to access and another list ofdirectories which the staff are permitted to access. Without groups,administrators would give each student permission to every student directory, and each staff member permission to every staff directory. In practice, that would be very impractical – every time a student or staff member arrived, administrators would have to allocate permissions on every directory.

With groups, the task is much simpler:[1] create a student group and a staff group, placing each user in the proper group. The entire group can be granted access to the appropriatedirectory.[1] To add or remove anaccount, one must only need to do it in one place (in the definition of the group), rather than on everydirectory. This workflow provides clear separation of concerns: to change access policies, alter the directory permissions; to change the individuals which fall under the policy, alter the group definitions.

Uses of groups

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The primary uses of groups are:

  • Access control
  • Accounting - allocating shared resources like disk space andnetwork bandwidth
  • Default per-user configuration profiles - e.g., by default, every staff account could have a specific directory in theirPATH
  • Content selection - only display content relevant to group members - e.g. this portal channel is intended for students, thismailing list is for thechess club

Delegable group administration

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Many systems provide facilities for delegation of group administration. In these systems, when a group is created, one or more users may be named as group administrators. These group administrators are then capable of adding and removing other users from the group, without relying on a system administrator.

Some systems also provide joinable groups, which are groups to which users may elect to add themselves. Joinable groups are not intended to be used for access control, but rather for such purposes aselectronic mailing lists.

Static vs. dynamic groups

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Many systems (especiallyLDAP systems) offer the facility of dynamic groups. Traditionally groups are static: one defines a group by individually selecting its members. In dynamic groups, however, an administrator can specify search criteria. All users which match the search criteria will be considered a member of this dynamic group.

For example, one might build an LDAP directory using source data from a student administration system. The student system could provide an attributedegreeCode, which might be a numeric code identifying thedegree program in which the student is enrolled. Suppose then that degreeCode 55 isBachelor of Computer Science. We could then define a group "BCS-Students" as "(degreeCode=55)" – having defined the group, we do not need to manually modify its membership – its membership will change automatically as updates flow through the system. One can construct even more complex definitions: "BCS-Students-1" could be "(&(degreeCode=55)(enrollmentYear=1))" (meaning: a user is a member of the 'BCS-Students-1' group if it's true they're enrolled in the BSC Computer Science degree program and they're in their first year – i.e., Computer Sciencefreshmen).

Roles

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Some systems (e.g.Sun/Netscape/iPlanet LDAP servers) distinguish between groups and roles. These concepts are mostly equivalent: the main difference is that with a group, its membership is stored as an attribute of the group; whereas with roles, the membership is stored within the users, as a list of roles they belong to. The difference is essentially one of performance trade-offs, in terms of which type of access will be faster: the process of enumerating the membership of a given collection (faster for groups), or the process of enumerating which collections this user belongs to (faster for roles).

See also

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References

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  1. ^abGarn, Damon (October 14, 2021)."How to manage users and groups in Linux".Red Hat. RetrievedJanuary 29, 2024.
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