6.0.3

Table Of Contents
Prerequisites
You must be a member of the vCenter Single Sign-On Administrators group to disable and enable vCenter
Single Sign-On users.
Procedure
1 Log in to the vSphere Web Client as administrator@vsphere.local or as another user with vCenter Single
Sign-On administrator privileges.
Users with vCenter Single Sign-On administrator privileges are in the Administrators group in the
vsphere.local domain.
2 Click Home, and browse to Administration > Single Sign-On > Users and Groups.
3 Select a user, click the Disable icon, and click Yes when prompted.
4 To enable the user again, right-click the user, select Enable, and click Yes when prompted.
Delete a vCenter Single Sign-On User
You can delete users that are in the vsphere.local domain from the vCenter Single Sign-On. You cannot
delete local operating system users or users in another domain from the vSphere Web Client.
C If you delete the administrator user in the vsphere.local domain, you can no longer log in to
vCenter Single Sign-On. Reinstall vCenter Server and its components.
Procedure
1 Log in to the vSphere Web Client as administrator@vsphere.local or as another user with vCenter Single
Sign-On administrator privileges.
Users with vCenter Single Sign-On administrator privileges are in the Administrators group in the
vsphere.local domain.
2 Click Home, and browse to Administration > Single Sign-On > Users and Groups.
3 Select the Users tab, and select the vsphere.local domain.
4 In the list of users, select the user that you want to delete and click the Delete icon.
Proceed with caution. You cannot undo this action.
Edit a vCenter Single Sign-On User
You can change the password or other details of a vCenter Single Sign-On user from the
vSphere Web Client. You cannot rename users in the vsphere.local domain. That means you cannot rename
administrator@vsphere.local.
You can create additional users with the same privileges as administrator@vsphere.local.
vCenter Single Sign-On users are stored in the vCenter Single Sign-On vsphere.local domain.
You can review the vCenter Single Sign-On password policies from the vSphere Web Client. Log in as
administrator@vsphere.local and select  > Policies > Password Policies.
Procedure
1 Log in to the vSphere Web Client as administrator@vsphere.local or as another user with vCenter Single
Sign-On administrator privileges.
Users with vCenter Single Sign-On administrator privileges are in the Administrators group in the
vsphere.local domain.
2 Click Home, and browse to Administration > Single Sign-On > Users and Groups.
vSphere Security
56 VMware, Inc.