User manual

Table Of Contents
Chapter 5
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Protecting databases with accounts and privilege sets 95
7. Open the file using different accounts and test each privilege set
that you created. Make sure the restrictions work the way you want,
and make any needed corrections to your privilege sets.
Password-protecting a file
If you have a non-shared database file on your computer and you want
to prevent others from opening it, you can password-protect the file.
After password-protecting a file, you will be prompted to enter an
account name and password every time you open the file. Anyone who
does not know this account information will not be able to open the
file.
To password-protect a file:
1. Make the following changes to the accounts in the file:
1 Edit the Admin account so that it has a different account name,
a password, and uses the Full Access privilege set.
1 Make sure the Guest account is inactive.
1 Delete any other accounts in the file or make them inactive.
2. If necessary, edit the Full Access privilege set to allow yourself any
extended privileges you may want for yourself.
Don’t enable extended privileges unless they’re needed.
Suggestions for creating secure passwords
1 Secure passwords are typically eight or more characters in length,
and include at least one numeric character.
1 If the file is shared via web publishing, account names and
passwords can only use characters included in the ISO Latin-1
character set (except colons). To avoid characters that may be
interpreted incorrectly over the web, you may want to limit account
names and passwords to alphabetic and numeric characters only.
For more information about protecting FileMaker Pro databases, see
Help.
Creating accounts and privilege sets
Accounts specify account names and (usually) passwords for a file.
When a user opens a file that contains accounts, a dialog box prompts
the user to enter account information. When a user opens a file with a
correct account name and password, the privilege set assigned to that
account determines what the user can do in that file.
Privilege sets specify levels of access to a database, such as which
layouts are viewable, which menus are available, and whether printing
is permitted.
To create and manage accounts and privilege sets for a file, you need
to open the file with an account that is assigned the Full Access
privilege set.
You can create and modify accounts and privilege sets in a shared file
while clients are using it. (In FileMaker Pro 6 and earlier, all clients
had to close the shared file before you could change passwords and
groups.) The account changes you make take effect immediately.
However, the changes do not disrupt any current clients. For example,
if you change the password for an account that is in use by one or more
clients, their FileMaker Pro usage is not interrupted. However, they
will need to enter the new password the next time they open the file.
You can create as many accounts as you need. You can create
individual accounts for each user, or a smaller number of accounts that
users can share.