Setting Studio Project folder permissions

Applies to:

  • Revu for Mac 2
Revu for Mac is no longer supported. Learn more.

This article provides an overview of the folder permissions functionality for Studio Projects. You can find more information in the Revu for Mac Help Guide under Defining Access and Permissions in Studio Projects.

Before you can set Studio permissions, each attendee must register for their own Bluebeam ID (BBID). Attendees who don’t have a BBID can easily create one.

Project permissions settings

If you’re new to hosting Studio Projects, this is an overview of the permission settings you’ll be able to access after you’ve started a Project, added your files and invited users. Once you’ve completed those tasks, open the Project you want to set permissions for. Then, click Preferences to open the Project Settings dialog box.

You’ll find the following tabs:

General

This tab displays general information about the Project, such as the Project Name (which you can edit), the Project ID, the number of files and folders, and overall Project Size. This is also where you can Manage Notifications and Alerts for various activities within the project, as well as the Shared Links for documents.

User access

The User Access tab is where you can add individual users and groups of users, which you can either allow or deny access to in the Studio Project.

If Restrict Attendees is checked, a user must be added to the list with their Access set to “Allow” in order to access the Project. On the other hand, if it’s not enabled, the Project will be open to all users, with the exception of those on the list whose Access is set to “Deny.”

Adding a user or group of users to the User Access tab is a separate process from inviting users to the Project.

Permissions tab

This is where you control which administrative tasks attendees are allowed to perform within the Project. By default, every new Project contains a Group called “Attendees” in the User/Groups list. This list controls the activities of all Studio users that are allowed into the Project, based on the settings in the User Access tab. You can also create additional Groups.

This is useful when, for example, a Host wants to have someone assist with managing the project. In this case the Host can add a user, highlight the user name and choose a Permission State (Allow or Deny) from the dropdown menu for each of the Permissions.

Allowing a user or Group to have Full Control grants administrative privileges within the project. This means complete control over the User Access, Permissions, and Folder Permissions tabs, along with the ability to delete the Project. However, because the Host owns the Project and created all Groups, Administrators cannot block or remove the Host from the Project, or edit their Groups.

Folder permissions

The newly implemented Folder Permissions tab is where you can define user and Group permissions for all folders and subfolders in a Studio Project.

Just like the Permissions tab, every new Project contains a Group called “Attendees” in the User/Groups list to control the folder permissions of all Studio users.

The steps for adding users and Groups, and defining their respective Permission Sets, works the same way as it does in the Permissions tab: you add each user and/or Group, select them, and then choose a Permission State from the dropdown menu for each folder in the Permissions that you want to change.

The available Folder Permission States are listed below, but you can also find more information about them here:

  • Read
  • Read / Write
  • Read / Write / Delete
These Permission States don’t apply to the Host or Project Administrators.

Permission hierarchies

When setting permissions, remember that Bluebeam Studio relies on Permissions Hierarchies that establish the relationship between Permission Sets and the Permission States assigned to users and Groups:

  • Permissions granted to the “Attendees” Group are the most restrictive, as they’re set to “Deny” for all Permissions.
  • Individual User permissions take precedence over Group permissions.
  • If a user is a member of two different Groups with conflicting Permission Sets, their access and rights will be governed by the more restrictive of the two.

How-To

Revu for Mac 2

Studio

Security

Learn about the different roles and permission-levels for collaborators in Bluebeam Studio and how to manage them in Revu for Mac 2.

Related Articles