Operation Manual

70 Developing Sites and Pages
site.
Anchor
View and edit anchors, jump to anchors, find and
replace anchor links.
File
Display the Web site structure with page file names
rather than page names.
Site checker
Display common layout problems discovered in your
Web site.
Access control
Access control lets you apply security across your Web site or, more typically,
to specific pages which may host confidential information. How you apply
access control to pages is dependent on the complexity and nature of your
Web site—simple Web sites can usually adopt a
basic level of access control,
whereas larger multi-purpose Web sites might use more
advanced access
control. Each method can be further described as follows:
Basic access control: log in to a password-protected page from a user
login dialog. The login details are stored in a user list associated with the
page. These lists are simply lists of username/password combinations.
Advanced access control: Either:
login to a password-protected page from a user login dialog. The
login details are stored in a user group associated with the page
which contains a static list of users; the list is controlled by the Web
manager of the Web site. The use of groups lets you assign a
selection of users the same access control rights to pages.
OR
login to the Web site from an on-the-page sign in box—this allows
access to any user group set to "add new users on sign up" and
therefore any pages associated with those user groups. No manual
user management is normally required.