Compartir a través de


Access Control Overview

Applies To: Windows Server 2008

Access control is the process of authorizing users, groups, and computers to access objects on the network or computer. Key concepts that make up access control are permissions, ownership of objects, inheritance of permissions, user rights, and object auditing.

Permissions

Permissions define the type of access granted to a user or group for an object or object property. For example, the Finance group can be granted Read and Write permissions for a file named Payroll.dat.

Using the access control user interface, you can set NTFS permissions for objects such as files, Active Directory® objects, registry objects, or system objects such as processes. Permissions can be granted to any user, group, or computer. It is a good practice to assign permissions to groups because it improves system performance when verifying access to an object.

For any object, you can grant permissions to:

  • Groups, users, and other objects with security identifiers in the domain.

  • Groups and users in that domain and any trusted domains.

  • Local groups and users on the computer where the object resides.

The permissions attached to an object depend on the type of object. For example, the permissions that can be attached to a file are different from those that can be attached to a registry key. Some permissions, however, are common to most types of objects. These common permissions are:

  • Read

  • Modify

  • Change owner

  • Delete

When you set permissions, you specify the level of access for groups and users. For example, you can let one user read the contents of a file, let another user make changes to the file, and prevent all other users from accessing the file. You can set similar permissions on printers so that certain users can configure the printer and other users can only print.

When you need to change the permissions on a file, you can run Windows Explorer, right-click the file name, and click Properties. On the Security tab, you can change permissions on the file. For more information, see Manage Permissions.

Note

Another kind of permissions, called share permissions, is set on the Sharing tab of a folder's Properties page or by using the Shared Folder wizard. For more information see Share and NTFS Permissions on a File Server.

Ownership of objects

An owner is assigned to an object when that object is created. By default, the owner is the creator of the object. No matter what permissions are set on an object, the owner of the object can always change the permissions on an object. For more information, see Manage Object Ownership.

Inheritance of permissions

Inheritance allows administrators to easily assign and manage permissions. This feature automatically causes objects within a container to inherit all the inheritable permissions of that container. For example, the files within a folder, when created, inherit the permissions of the folder. Only permissions marked to be inherited will be inherited.

User rights

User rights grant specific privileges and logon rights to users and groups in your computing environment. Administrators can assign specific rights to group accounts or to individual user accounts. These rights authorize users to perform specific actions, such as logging on to a system interactively or backing up files and directories.

User rights are different from permissions because user rights apply to user accounts, and permissions are attached to objects. Although user rights can apply to individual user accounts, user rights are best administered on a group account basis. There is no support in the access control user interface to grant user rights; however, user rights assignment can be administered through the Local Security Settings snap-in.

Object auditing

With administrator's rights, you can audit users' successful or failed access to objects. You can select which object access to audit by using the access control user interface, but first you must enable the Audit Policy by selecting Audit object access under Local Policies in the Local Security Settings snap-in. You can then view these security-related events in the Security log in Event Viewer.

For more information about authorization and access control, see Windows Security Collection on Microsoft Web site (https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=4565). For information about authorization strategy, see Designing a Resource Authorization Strategy on the Microsoft Web site (https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=4734).