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Jul 12, 2017 at 7:38 history edited Gatogordo CC BY-SA 3.0
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Jul 11, 2017 at 21:14 comment added Gatogordo Give your editors multiple browsers. Or learn them anonymous browser windows.. ;)
Jul 11, 2017 at 21:08 comment added Gatogordo Indeed. If you want different rights, you'll need different users.
Jul 11, 2017 at 21:03 comment added Teeknow When I did that the user was granted read access in both the shell and front end. By 2 users do you mean the user cannot be logged into the shell as the user who has had their read access to the items in question revoked/inheritance denied when visiting the front end? That is what I am specifically trying to avoid. The front end of this site is available to an anonymous user so they could technically log out of the shell and see the page but I want to avoid that extra step.
Jul 11, 2017 at 20:39 comment added Gatogordo Denial will always overrule - you should break inheritance to revoke rights. But as mentioned, I'm not sure even that will work as required. You are mixing the roles and it's an interesting thought (so do try), but I do expect Sitecore to look at the user and take all the roles assigned... which means you will end up with 2 users - one in each domain.
Jul 11, 2017 at 20:16 comment added Teeknow Can you give an example of how I would go about using this? I tried making 2 roles both with the same name. I set it so the domain of 1 was extranet while the other was Sitecore. I allowed read access for the extranet role while denying read access for the Sitecore role on one of the items in question and assigned these roles to my test user. The read denial overrode the read access as it normally would if they were in the same domain both in the shell and on the front end. Let me know if I'm using them as expected.
Jul 11, 2017 at 20:02 history answered Gatogordo CC BY-SA 3.0