HOPEX Administration (Web) : MEGA Administration-Supervisor : About HOPEX Administration
   
About HOPEX Administration
 
This guide is for the person responsible for administrating users and objects from the HOPEX Administration desktop (Web Front-End).
*To perform HOPEX administration tasks from the HOPEX Administration application (Windows Front-End), see "About HOPEX Administration", page 1.
Some actions, like user management, can be performed by functional Administrators from a restricted Administration desktop accessible from other HOPEX desktops (Web Front-End).
Most of the functions described here can be used by the User management administrator, whatever the products enabled through his/her security key. However, certain functionalities, like object management are only available with specific technical modules (HOPEX Power Studio, HOPEX Power Supervisor, or HOPEX Collaboration Manager). These are indicated by a note.
 
See:
"Web Administration Desktop", page 5: access to and description of the HOPEX Administration desktop.
"Managing Users", page 15: creation of users, user groups and their profiles.
"Managing workspaces", page 117: principle of private workspaces, dispatch and refresh private workspaces, and lock management.
"Managing objects", page 147: Advanced administration functions available with:
the HOPEX Power Studio technical module to extract objects
the HOPEX Power Supervisor technical module for access management to the UI.
"Command File Syntax", page 307: description of the syntax used in command files.
"Managing Options", page 169: access to options, user level options and language management.
"Glossary", page 181: definition of the main terms used in this guide.
HOPEX structure:
Some basic knowledge is required to understand the architecture and operation of HOPEX.
HOPEX (Web Front-End) is organized on the following levels:
site
A site groups together everything that is shared by all HOPEX users on the same local network: the programs, standard configuration files, online help files, standard shapes, workstation installation programs, and version upgrade programs.
environment
An environment groups a set of users, the repositories on which they can work, and the system repository. It is where user private workspaces, users, system data, etc. are managed.
user
A user is a person (or person group) with a login. A user:
has a specific workspace in each repository.
has a specific configuration and is authorized to access specific product functions and repositories in the environment.