In Oracle Content Server, the administrator user can assign multiple roles to a user. If a user has
more than one role, the permission becomes ______and ____.
A.
Additive
B.
Least restrictive
C.
Most restrictive
D.
Subtractive
In Oracle Content Server, the administrator user can assign multiple roles to a user. If a user has
more than one role, the permission becomes ______and ____.
In Oracle Content Server, the administrator user can assign multiple roles to a user. If a user has
more than one role, the permission becomes ______and ____.
A.
Additive
B.
Least restrictive
C.
Most restrictive
D.
Subtractive
A,C
Role permissions are additive, just as in Content Server.
If your organization uses accounts, the accounts are a hierarchical overlay to your current security model.
http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E10316_01/urm/urm_doc_10/documentation/addon/setup_recordsmanager_10gR3en.pdf (pag.58)
A,B
the access rights you get are an accumulation of all of the rights across all of your roles (additive). And where multiple roles give you different levels of access, you’re given the one with the most access (ie least restrictive).
http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E14571_01/doc.1111/e10792/c03_security003.htm#autoId10
[QUOTE]
Each role allows the following permissions for each security group: Read (R), Write (W), Delete (D), or Admin (A). The permission that a user has to access the files in a security group is the highest permission defined by any of the user’s roles. If a user has the guest and contributor roles, where guest is given Read permission and contributor is given Write permission to the Public security group, the user will have Write permission to content in the Public security group.
[/QUOTE]
A and B