Administrative domains (ADOMs)
Administrative domains (ADOMs) enable the admin
administrator to constrain other FortiWeb administrators’ access privileges to a subset of policies and protected host names. This can be useful for large enterprises and multi-tenant deployments such as web hosting.
ADOMs are not enabled by default. Enabling and configuring administrative domains can only be performed by the admin
administrator.
Enabling ADOMs alters the structure of and the available functions in the GUI and CLI, according to whether or not you are logging in as the admin
administrator, and, if you are not logging in as the admin
administrator, the administrator account’s assigned access profile.
admin administrator account |
Other administrators | |
---|---|---|
Access to config global
|
Yes | No |
Can create administrator accounts | Yes | No |
Can create & enter all ADOMs | Yes | No |
If ADOMs are enabled and you log in as admin
, a superset of the typical CLI commands appear, allowing unrestricted access and ADOM configuration.
config global
contains settings used by the FortiWeb itself and settings shared by ADOMs, such as RAID and administrator accounts. It does not include ADOM-specific settings or data, such as logs and reports. When configuring other administrator accounts, an additional option appears allowing you to restrict other administrators to an ADOM.
If ADOMs are enabled and you log in as any other administrator, you enter the ADOM assigned to your account. A subset of the typical menus or CLI commands appear, allowing access only to only logs, reports, policies, servers, and LDAP queries specific to your ADOM. You cannot access global configuration settings, or enter other ADOMs.
By default, administrator accounts other than the admin
account are assigned to the root
ADOM, which includes all policies and servers. By creating ADOMs that contain a subset of policies and servers, and assigning them to administrator accounts, you can restrict other administrator accounts to a subset of the FortiWeb’s total protected servers.
The admin
administrator account cannot be restricted to an ADOM. Other administrators are restricted to their ADOM, and cannot configure ADOMs or global settings.
To enable ADOMs
- Log in with the
admin
account. - Go to System > Status > Status. From the System Information widget, in the Administrative Domains row, click Enable.
- Log in again.
- Continue by defining ADOMs. For details, see Defining ADOMs.
Other administrators do not have permissions to configure ADOMs.
Back up your configuration. Enabling ADOMs changes the structure of your configuration, and moves non-global settings to the root ADOM. For details about how to back up the configuration, see Backup & restore. |
FortiWeb terminates the session.
When ADOMs are enabled, and if you log in as admin
, the navigation menu on the left changes: the top level lists two ADOM items: Global and root.
Global contains settings that only admin
or other accounts with the prof_admin access profile can change.
root is the default ADOM.
This menu and CLI structure change is not visible to non-global accounts; ADOM administrators’ navigation menus continue to appear similar to when ADOMs are disabled, except that global settings such as network interfaces, HA, and other global settings do not appear.
To disable ADOMs
- Delete all ADOM administrator accounts.
- Go to System > Status > Status, then in the System Information widget, in the Administrative Domains row, click Disable.
- Continue by reconfiguring the appliance. For details, see How to set up your FortiWeb.
Back up your configuration. Disabling ADOMs changes the structure of your configuration, and deletes most ADOM-related settings. It keeps settings from the root ADOM only. For details about how to back up the configuration, see Backup & restore. |
See also
- Permissions
- Defining ADOMs
- Assigning administrators to an ADOM
- Administrators
- Configuring access profiles
Defining ADOMs
Some settings can only be configured by the admin
account—they are global. Global settings apply to the appliance overall regardless of ADOM, such as:
- Operation mode
- Network interfaces
- System time
- Backups
- Administrator accounts
- Access profiles
- FortiGuard connectivity settings
- HA and configuration sync
- SNMP
- RAID
- Vulnerability scans
-
exec ping
and other global operations that exist only in the CLI
Only the admin
account can configure global settings.
In the current release, some settings, such as user accounts for HTTP authentication, anti-defacement, and logging destinations are read-only for ADOM administrators. Future releases will allow ADOM administrators to configure these settings separately for their ADOM. |
Other settings can be configured separately for each ADOM. They essentially define each ADOM. For example, the policies of adom-A are separate from adom-B.
Initially, only the root
ADOM exists, and it contains settings such as policies that were global before ADOMs were enabled. Typically, you will create additional ADOMs, and few if any administrators will be assigned to the root
ADOM.
After ADOMs are created, the admin
account usually assigns other administrator accounts to configure their ADOM-specific settings. However, as the root account, the admin
administrator does have permission to configure all settings, including those within ADOMs.
To create an ADOM
- Log in with the
admin
account. - Go to Global > System > Administrative Domain > Administrative Domain.
- Click Create New, enter the Name, then click OK.
- Do one of the following:
Other administrators do not have permissions to configure ADOMs.
The maximum number of ADOMs you can add varies by your FortiWeb model. The number of ADOMs is limited by available physical memory (RAM), and therefore also limits the maximum number of policies and sessions per ADOM. See Appendix B: Maximum configuration values. |
The new ADOM exists, but its settings are not yet configured. Alternatively, to configure the default root
ADOM, click root.
- assign another administrator account to configure the ADOM (continue with Assigning administrators to an ADOM), or
- configure the ADOM yourself: in the navigation menu on the left, click the ADOM list on the top level to display all the ADOMs, click the name of the new ADOM, then configure its policies and other settings as usual.
See also
- Assigning administrators to an ADOM
- Administrative domains (ADOMs)
- Administrators
- Configuring access profiles
- Permissions
Assigning administrators to an ADOM
The admin
administrator can create other administrators and assign their account to an ADOM, constraining them to that ADOM’s configurations and data.
To assign an administrator to an ADOM
- If you have not yet created any administrator access profiles, create at least one. For details, see Configuring access profiles.
- In the administrator account’s Access Profile, select the new access profile.
- In the administrator account’s Administrative Domain, select the account’s assigned ADOM. Currently, in this version of FortiWeb, administrators cannot be assigned to more than one ADOM.
(Administrators assigned to the prof_admin access profile will have global access. They cannot be restricted to an ADOM.)