Development:Roles: Difference between revisions
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By roles, we mean an identifier of the user's status, for example, 'Teacher', 'Student', and 'Forum Moderator' are examples of Roles. | By roles, we mean an identifier of the user's status, for example, 'Teacher', 'Student', and 'Forum Moderator' are examples of Roles. | ||
A capability is a permission to access some particular Moodle feature. Capabilities are associated with roles. For example, can_read_forum_post is a capability. | A capability is a permission to access some particular Moodle feature. Capabilities are associated with roles. For example, can_read_forum_post is a capability. |
Revision as of 05:57, 15 May 2006
Roles and Capabilities
Roles and Capabilities are planned to be included in Moodle 1.7. For now, we have some basic ideas of how to implement such a structure in Moodle.
By roles, we mean an identifier of the user's status, for example, 'Teacher', 'Student', and 'Forum Moderator' are examples of Roles.
A capability is a permission to access some particular Moodle feature. Capabilities are associated with roles. For example, can_read_forum_post is a capability.
The Existing Roles and Permission System
Currently in Moodle, we have a fixed set of Roles. For example, we have the primarty admin, admins, course creators, editting teachers, non-editting teachers, students, and guests. For each role, the capability or actions that they can performed are fixed. For example, the role student will allow the user to submit an assignment, but not allowing the user to browse/edit some other user's work. However, by using this setup, we limit ourselves to a rather rigid set of capabilities for each role. If we want, say a particular student or group to be able to mark assignments in a particular course, we can't do that without giving these users all teacher privilages.
See also
- Using Moodle Roles and Permissions architecture forum discussion