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Mitel Forums => Mitel MiVoice Business/MCD/3300 => Topic started by: Helios on February 17, 2017, 11:17:49 AM

Title: Managing Admin users on 3300 MCD/ICP
Post by: Helios on February 17, 2017, 11:17:49 AM
Hello everyone,

I have two Mitel systems, an MCD v 4.0 SP4/10.0.4.1 and an ICP about same software level as the MCD

My question is how to manage the admin user account used to login on the management web interface, we do have just a single user account shared by all the team and we would like now to personalize the logins

Where to reset the password of an existing login and how to create a new login, also is there different levels of admin privileges (superadmin, admin, readonly, etc...) ?

Thanks
Title: Re: Managing Admin users on 3300 MCD/ICP
Post by: lundah on February 17, 2017, 12:21:45 PM
Unless the ICP is an SX-200, MCD and ICP are pretty much interchangeable terms.

On the 3300/MCD, you can use the System Administrator Policies and User Authorization Profiles forms to do exactly what you're asking about. System Administrator Policies will let you create/modify specific system administration profiles, and fine tune the access each profile has to each form in ESM. You can then apply those policies to individual admin users in User Authorization Profiles. Good practice would be to have a standard "root" account with complete access, then assign only what's needed to specific user accounts that should be the only logins used for each administrator.
Title: Re: Managing Admin users on 3300 MCD/ICP
Post by: Helios on February 28, 2017, 12:09:52 PM
Unless the ICP is an SX-200, MCD and ICP are pretty much interchangeable terms.

On the 3300/MCD, you can use the System Administrator Policies and User Authorization Profiles forms to do exactly what you're asking about. System Administrator Policies will let you create/modify specific system administration profiles, and fine tune the access each profile has to each form in ESM. You can then apply those policies to individual admin users in User Authorization Profiles. Good practice would be to have a standard "root" account with complete access, then assign only what's needed to specific user accounts that should be the only logins used for each administrator.

Hi Lundah,

Sorry for the late response, I just went through your instructions and it worked liek a charm, thanks for your help :)