GitSwarm 2016.3-2 Documentation


Share Projects with other Groups

In GitSwarm Enterprise Edition you can share projects with other groups. This makes it possible to add a group of users to a project with a single action.

Groups as collections of users

In GitSwarm Community Edition groups are used primarily to create collections of projects. In GitSwarm Enterprise Edition you can also take advantage of the fact that groups define collections of users, namely the group members.

Sharing a project with a group of users

The primary mechanism to give a group of users, say 'Engineering', access to a project, say 'Project Acme', in GitSwarm is to make the 'Engineering' group the owner of 'Project Acme'. But what if 'Project Acme' already belongs to another group, say 'Open Source'? This is where the (Enterprise Edition only) group sharing feature can be of use.

To share 'Project Acme' with the 'Engineering' group, go to the project settings page for 'Project Acme' and use the left navigation menu to go to the 'Groups' section.

The 'Groups' section in the project settings screen (Enterprise Edition only)

Now you can add the 'Engineering' group with the maximum access level of your choice. After sharing 'Project Acme' with 'Engineering', the project is listed on the group dashboard.

'Project Acme' is listed as a shared project for 'Engineering'

Maximum access level

'Project Acme' is shared with 'Engineering' with a maximum access level of 'Developer'

In the screenshot above, the maximum access level of 'Developer' for members from 'Engineering' means that users with higher access levels in 'Engineering' ('Master' or 'Owner') will only have 'Developer' access to 'Project Acme'.