Which of the following is NOT a SmartEvent Permission Profile type?
A. No Access
B. Events Database
C. View
D. Read/Write
9 Comments on “Which of the following is NOT a SmartEvent Permission Profile type?”
bergermnsays:
Questionable. If you see this question, “What access level cannot be assigned to an Administrator in SmartEvent?”, this answer must be correct as View.
Documentation reads None, Read Only and Read/Write.
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Bradsays:
I must say, I agree with bergermn.
If you navigate yourself to the Smart Dashboard -> users -> administrator -> custom permissions; you can see the options read/write, read and no access (if you tick out the option)
The Permission Profile types for the SmartEvent Events tab are set in the SmartDashboard or SmartDomain Manager (SmartDashboard > Manage > Permissions Profiles > New / Edit).
The following are the three types of Permission Profiles:
* No Access indicates that the administrator cannot view the SmartEvent Events and Reports tabs.
* Read Only enables the administrator to view SmartEvent Events and Reports tabs.
* Read/Write enables the administrator to modify the SmartEvent Events and Reports tabs using the Change State option.
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florentjustinsays:
These permissions are available for Events and Reports:
* SmartReporter Policy – Configure Global Properties for SmartReporter.
* SmartReporter – Configure SmartReporter.
* SmartEvent Events Database – View and manage the Events tab of SmartEvent.
* SmartEvent Policy – View and manage the events correlation on the Policy tab of SmartEvent.
* SmartEvent Reports – Users only see the Reports tab.
** All Blades – This setting applies to all blades.
** Application and URL Filtering Blades – Applies only to the Application Control and URL Filtering blades.
Answer C
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Catalinsays:
I agree
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Rezsays:
Ok, then it means that the answer should be B (events database) which is NOT among what you all mentioned!!
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Estebansays:
C. View
I agree with florentjustin one more time, as he shows, the only option does not appear is view so C is the answer.
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Pinchilosays:
One thing is a profile type, and another is a permission that can be assigned.
Questionable. If you see this question, “What access level cannot be assigned to an Administrator in SmartEvent?”, this answer must be correct as View.
Documentation reads None, Read Only and Read/Write.
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I must say, I agree with bergermn.
If you navigate yourself to the Smart Dashboard -> users -> administrator -> custom permissions; you can see the options read/write, read and no access (if you tick out the option)
Love, Brad
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https://sc1.checkpoint.com/documents/R76/CP_R76_SmartEventIntro_AdminGuide/46575.htm
The Permission Profile types for the SmartEvent Events tab are set in the SmartDashboard or SmartDomain Manager (SmartDashboard > Manage > Permissions Profiles > New / Edit).
The following are the three types of Permission Profiles:
* No Access indicates that the administrator cannot view the SmartEvent Events and Reports tabs.
* Read Only enables the administrator to view SmartEvent Events and Reports tabs.
* Read/Write enables the administrator to modify the SmartEvent Events and Reports tabs using the Change State option.
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These permissions are available for Events and Reports:
* SmartReporter Policy – Configure Global Properties for SmartReporter.
* SmartReporter – Configure SmartReporter.
* SmartEvent Events Database – View and manage the Events tab of SmartEvent.
* SmartEvent Policy – View and manage the events correlation on the Policy tab of SmartEvent.
* SmartEvent Reports – Users only see the Reports tab.
** All Blades – This setting applies to all blades.
** Application and URL Filtering Blades – Applies only to the Application Control and URL Filtering blades.
Answer C
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I agree
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Ok, then it means that the answer should be B (events database) which is NOT among what you all mentioned!!
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C. View
I agree with florentjustin one more time, as he shows, the only option does not appear is view so C is the answer.
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One thing is a profile type, and another is a permission that can be assigned.
B is the answer here.
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https://sc1.checkpoint.com/documents/R76/CP_R76_SmartEventIntro_AdminGuide/48701.htm
see chapter Administrator Permissions Profile – Policy
Should be answer B > event database
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