Annotation of loncom/html/adm/help/tex/Domain_Configuration_Quotas.tex, revision 1.4
1.1 raeburn 1: \label{Domain_Configuration_Quotas}
1.2 raeburn 2: By default, each user in your domain can create blogs, a personal
3: information page, and store files in an individual portfolio space.
4: Students can submit items from their portfolio to meet the requirements
5: of assignments in their courses.
1.1 raeburn 6:
1.2 raeburn 7: You can choose to disable personal information pages, blogs and/or portfolios
8: for different groups of users defined for your domain (e.g., Faculty, Adjunct,
9: Staff, Student). If the ``Modify User'' utility in User Management is
10: used to explicitly set availability of these tools for a particular user,
11: that will override the corresponding settings determined by the user's
12: affiliation.
13:
1.3 raeburn 14: If you choose to enable portfolios, default quotas (in MB)
1.2 raeburn 15: can similarly be set to vary by institutional affiliation.
1.1 raeburn 16: If a user is affiliated with more than one group, whichever default
17: quota is largest for the different groups is the one which applies.
1.3 raeburn 18: Institutional types are defined in the ``Institutional user types''
1.4 ! raeburn 19: section on the ``Default authentication, language, timezone, portal, types''
1.3 raeburn 20: screen. If no types have been defined, then a single default quota
21: will apply for all users from the domain.
1.2 raeburn 22:
23: Default portfolio quotas which can be set for users in your domain
24: will be overridden by any quota you set for an individual user via:
25: the ``Modify User'' utility.
1.3 raeburn 26:
27: Additional options for authoring spaces can be set for the various user
28: types: (a) whether webDAV is active, and (b) the default quota for Authoring Space.
29: These only come into effect for a particular user, when an author and/or one or
30: more co-author roles have been assigned to a user to provide access to one or more
31: Authoring Spaces.
32:
33: WebDAV allows a user to connect to an Authoring Space in the same way as removable
34: media, and to use their own laptop/desktop computer's file management tools and
35: applications to move, edit and delete files. In the case of MacOS, the user selects
36: the ``Go'' item in the Finder toolbar and selects ``Connect to Server''.
37: The user will then enter a URL for a library server where the authoring space is located:
1.4 ! raeburn 38: e.g., https:// $<$ hostname $>$ /webdav/ $<$dom$>$ / $<$ username $>$/ where dom is the domain
! 39: and username is the username of the Authoring Space owner.
! 40: Note: webDAV usage requires Apache with SSL to be running on the library server.
! 41: The user will be prompted to enter a username (this will be the LON-CAPA username
! 42: if the user is also the author, or username:domain of the user,
! 43: if the access is for a co-author), and the user's LON-CAPA password.
1.3 raeburn 44:
45: The requirement to obsolete published files before moving or deleting them, which applies to
46: the regular web browser-based management of Authoring Space, also applies in the webDAV
47: environment. Moving and deleting directories in the webDAV environment is prohibited if
48: the directory, or any (nested) subdirectory contains a non-obsolete published resource.
49:
50: Given the ability to easily delete unpublished content in webDAV (without the ability to
51: reverse the deletion), it is important that authors assigned webDAV access are especially
52: careful when working in the webDAV environment.
53:
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