- User Sync:
- What is it? The user sync brings user details from your analytic platforms to Curator. This includes full display name, email address, user roles, etc. This does not include group membership.
- When does it happen? The user sync always happens on login. You can also manually sync a specific user’s details from the Curator backend > Settings > Users > Frontend Users > select a specific user and use the buttons in the “Platform Users” section to sync the details. Note: If the user doesn’t exist on Curator the user sync will create it. This results in having a lean user base of only the true Curator users. Note: You cannot disable the on-login user sync.
- Group Membership Sync:
- What is it? The group membership sync builds Curator Frontend Group membership from a user’s platform group membership. For instance, you can create an “Admins” Frontend Group in Curator and, instead of manually selecting numerous users, you can select the “Admins” group from one of your platform connections and Curator will automatically put those users in the Curator Frontend Group. This does not include user details. Note: This is only relevant if you use Curator Frontend Groups for restricting access in the navigation or for Frontend Group Overrides. If you don’t use these features then group membership is irrelevant to Curator.
- When does it happen? The group membership sync will happen on login by default. Some platforms can have slow response times when Curator requests the relevant membership, so you can disable the on-login membership sync to speed up the login. If you disable the on-login membership sync you can enable a sync to occur on a scheduled cadence to ensure users are in their groups by the time they login. Note: If you disable the on-login membership sync, the scheduled membership sync will create users if they don’t already exist on Curator. This is to preemptively ensure the user has their groups before logging in, which requires a Curator user. This is the only scenario where the group membership sync also syncs user details.
- Restrict Access You can deny permission to see content in Curator by restricting access in the navigation based on group membership. This is especially helpful for content created in Curator that doesn’t have permissions to pull from an analytic platform (i.e. Pages, Files, external URL’s, etc.). This can also be useful if your navigation has many items and the permission checks add copious load time by restricting access to a high-level menu item, which automatically denies access to all of the item’s children.
- Frontend Group Overrides Overrides are useful if you have groups of users who require a different look-and-feel in the Curator frontend. This is common if you have groups/departments or multiple tenants who use different logos, colors, etc. You can also present entirely different navigation structures and homepages to your various groups.