RSS Feed
Knowledgebase : Visual Guard > Installation/configuration
Where is Visual Guard .Net installed? Administration console: The Administration console is installed on developers and administrators desktops. For the application: You need to add the Visual Guard .Net assemblies to the dotnet application, plus two configuration files and deploy them along with the application. For the repository Visual Guard .Net creates the repository in a Database (Oracle 9i and higher or SQLServer 2000 or higher). This Database must be accessible from the dotnet application. ...
What modules are added to the final application, when this one is managed by Visual Guard .Net?Visual Guard .Net assemblies are deployed along with the application assemblies. Visual Guard .Net repository depends on the type of storage you choose : most users create Visual Guard .Net repository tables in their application database. So they just keep deploying their database, which is enough for Visual Guard .Net repository to be accessible.
If we are hosting multiple web sites on a single machine,on behalf of multiple customers, we'd need to have the ability to have completely separate user and role sets for each site. Of course it would be nice if all of this were done with a single install of the product and its database. Would that be possible?You can secure as many dotnet applications as you want in Visual Guard .Net. You can secure them each in one different repository, with separate list of users and separate list of roles. This is done...
We are a softwarehouse and the product we want to secure is a locked application. we do not have access to the source code. How can we give the end user the right to create users and give them roles?You can use either the console with the role "Restricted User administrator". This role allows to manage users and roles of the applications for which the user is a member of "membership manager" role. Or you can use the API to create your own administration form and manage users and roles. ...
In Visual Guard, are there DLL's that we would compile against containing the functions that would be called which in turn access the database? Visual Guard has his assemblies(DLL) which you need to refer in your application, which in turn will access to VG database to perform action. This assembly also contains API which has tons of methods to communicate with Visual Guard features like CreateUser, UpdateUser, GetRoles, AssignRoleToUser, etc. Through API, you can explicitly perform action in your app...
1 - Visual Guard is a modular and flexible solution that can be: * Implemented as a ready-to-use system * Used as a security Framework to build a custom access control system. It has been designed to comply with most technical and functional requirements. 2 - By default, we go through a standard process to assist projects in the evaluation and validation of Visual Guard. We can follow this process for your application, unless you prefer to proceed otherwise. * You can consider this discuss...
* For basic architecture (Winform apps or simple asp.net [1] website for instance), development team can implement VG as a ready-to-use solution. In this case, they follow the developer's guide and use some default settings. They may ask questions by email about Visual Guard's features and configuration, but in most cases they need little assistance. * For other architectures and/or complex access rights definition and assignment, we usually stay close to the development team until the application g...
Help Desk by Novalys