Configuring the internal directory
Configuring user directories
- Configuring the internal directory
- Connecting to an LDAP directory
- Connecting to an internal directory with LDAP authentication
- Configuring the JNDI LDAP connection pool
- Connecting to Crowd or another Jira application for user management
- Managing multiple directories
- Migrating users between user directories
- Synchronizing data from external directories
On this page
Related content
- No related content found
The internal directory stores user and group information in the Jira database.
The internal directory is enabled by default at installation. When you create the first administrator during the setup procedure, that administrator's username and other details are stored in the internal directory.
If needed, you can configure one or more additional user directories. This is useful if you want to grant access to users and groups that are stored in a corporate directory or other directory server.
For details on how to update the internal cache with changes from the external directory, see Synchronizing data from external directories.
On this page:
Find out how easy, scalable and effective it can be with Crowd!
See centralized user management.
Settings
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
Enable Nested Groups |
Enable or disable support for nested groups. When nested groups are enabled, you can define a group as a member of another group. If you are using groups to manage permissions, you can create nested groups to allow inheritance of permissions from one group to its sub-groups. |
Diagram of possible configuration
Diagram above: JIRA using its internal directory for user management.
Related content
- No related content found