Last modified by Agnease on 2026/06/08 18:37

From version 1.2
edited by Agnease
on 2026/06/08 18:00
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To version 2.12
edited by Agnease
on 2026/06/08 18:37
Change comment: There is no comment for this version

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1 +{{velocity}}
2 +#set ($discard = $xwiki.ssx.use('PublicWebSite.WebHome'))
3 +{{html clean="false"}}
4 +
5 + <section class="resource-header" aria-labelledby="hero-title">
6 + <div class="container">
7 + <div class="text-center">
8 + <div class="hero-kicker">
9 + <i class="fa fa-search" aria-hidden="true"></i>
10 + XWiki access-rights review
11 + </div>
12 + </div>
13 +
14 + <h1 id="hero-title">A first-pass XWiki access-rights audit before changing permissions</h1>
15 +
16 + <p class="resource-summary">
17 + A practical way to identify local rights, old groups, sensitive permissions and unclear access exceptions
18 + before they become a security or maintenance problem.
19 + </p>
20 + </div>
21 + </section>
22 +
23 + <section class="resource-page">
24 + <div class="container">
25 + <div class="resource-layout">
26 +
27 + <aside class="resource-sidebar" aria-label="Page summary">
28 + <h4>In this guide</h4>
29 + <ul>
30 + <li><a href="#starting-point">Where to start</a></li>
31 + <li><a href="#first-pass-audit">First-pass audit</a></li>
32 + <li><a href="#access-model">Access areas</a></li>
33 + <li><a href="#review-groups">Groups and users</a></li>
34 + <li><a href="#find-local-rights">Local rights snippet</a></li>
35 + <li><a href="#interpret-results">How to interpret results</a></li>
36 + <li><a href="#common-findings">Common findings</a></li>
37 + <li><a href="#document-findings">Review register</a></li>
38 + <li><a href="#review-checklist">Checklist</a></li>
39 + <li><a href="#access-review-faq">FAQ</a></li>
40 + </ul>
41 + </aside>
42 +
43 + <article class="resource-content">
44 +
45 + <p>
46 + When I review an existing XWiki instance, I do not start by changing permissions. I first try to understand
47 + where access rules have accumulated over time.
48 + </p>
49 +
50 + <p>
51 + Many XWiki permission issues are not visible from the homepage. Users can log in, pages can be edited,
52 + search can work correctly, and the wiki may still contain access rules that nobody fully understands anymore.
53 + </p>
54 +
55 + <p>
56 + This usually happens slowly. A team needs access, a page is restricted, a group is created, an exception is
57 + added, an external user is invited, and after a few years the access model becomes difficult to explain.
58 + </p>
59 +
60 + <div class="resource-note">
61 + <p>
62 + <strong>In practice:</strong> the first review should not try to rebuild the whole permission model.
63 + It should identify risky areas, unclear exceptions, old groups and sensitive rights that need a closer look.
64 + </p>
65 + </div>
66 +
67 + <h2 id="starting-point">Where to start in a real XWiki instance</h2>
68 +
69 + <p>
70 + The first signs of a messy access model are usually simple: many groups with unclear names, rights assigned
71 + directly to users, restricted pages without an owner, old project spaces and powerful rights granted to people
72 + who no longer administer the platform.
73 + </p>
74 +
75 + <p>
76 + At this stage, the goal is not to decide whether every permission is correct. The goal is to build a map:
77 + which areas are sensitive, where local rights exist, which groups matter, and which findings should be reviewed
78 + before the next upgrade, migration or authentication change.
79 + </p>
80 +
81 + <div class="resource-note">
82 + <p>
83 + <strong>The main point:</strong> a useful access-rights review should answer more than “can this user access
84 + this page?” It should also answer “why do they have access, which group grants it, who owns the area and when
85 + should this be reviewed again?”
86 + </p>
87 + </div>
88 +
89 + <p>
90 + For a broader view of security-related checks, see
91 + <a href="$xwiki.getURL('resources.xwiki-security-review')">what an XWiki security review should actually include</a>.
92 + </p>
93 +
94 + <h2 id="first-pass-audit">A practical first-pass audit</h2>
95 +
96 + <p>
97 + A first-pass audit should be safe and observational. Before changing anything in production, collect enough
98 + information to understand the current model and the areas that need attention.
99 + </p>
100 +
101 + <ul class="resource-checklist">
102 + <li>Do not change permissions before understanding why they exist.</li>
103 + <li>Identify the main areas of the wiki: open, internal, restricted, confidential and administrative.</li>
104 + <li>List the groups that seem to control access to these areas.</li>
105 + <li>Look for direct user rights and local page-level exceptions.</li>
106 + <li>Review admin, script and programming rights separately from normal edit rights.</li>
107 + <li>Document what is unclear instead of guessing.</li>
108 + </ul>
109 +
110 + <h2 id="access-model">1. Start with access areas, not individual pages</h2>
111 +
112 + <p>
113 + Before reviewing individual permissions, clarify what the wiki should look like from an access perspective.
114 + Otherwise, the review becomes a list of isolated technical checks without a clear target.
115 + </p>
116 +
117 + <p>
118 + A simple access map is often enough. Separate the wiki into clear areas such as open internal knowledge,
119 + team spaces, restricted projects, confidential documents, technical administration pages and external
120 + collaboration areas.
121 + </p>
122 +
123 + <table class="table table-bordered table-striped">
124 + <thead>
125 + <tr>
126 + <th>Area type</th>
127 + <th>Typical access</th>
128 + <th>First review question</th>
129 + </tr>
130 + </thead>
131 + <tbody>
132 + <tr>
133 + <td>Open internal knowledge</td>
134 + <td>Most authenticated users can view, selected users can edit</td>
135 + <td>Is this content really safe for broad internal access?</td>
136 + </tr>
137 + <tr>
138 + <td>Team or project spaces</td>
139 + <td>Team members can edit, others may only view</td>
140 + <td>Are the groups still aligned with the current team?</td>
141 + </tr>
142 + <tr>
143 + <td>Restricted projects</td>
144 + <td>Only selected groups can view or edit</td>
145 + <td>Is access granted through groups or individual users?</td>
146 + </tr>
147 + <tr>
148 + <td>Confidential documents</td>
149 + <td>Small controlled group</td>
150 + <td>Who owns the restriction and when was it last reviewed?</td>
151 + </tr>
152 + <tr>
153 + <td>Technical administration pages</td>
154 + <td>Trusted administrators only</td>
155 + <td>Are admin, script and programming rights limited?</td>
156 + </tr>
157 + </tbody>
158 + </table>
159 +
160 + <h2 id="review-groups">2. Review groups before reviewing pages</h2>
161 +
162 + <p>
163 + In most XWiki instances, groups should be the foundation of the permission model. Rights assigned directly to
164 + individual users are harder to maintain because people change roles, leave the organization or move between teams.
165 + </p>
166 +
167 + <p>
168 + Start by reviewing which groups exist, what they are used for and whether their members still match the intended
169 + access model. Group names often tell part of the story: old project names, temporary access groups and unclear
170 + role names are good signals that the access model needs cleanup.
171 + </p>
172 +
173 + <table class="table table-bordered table-striped">
174 + <thead>
175 + <tr>
176 + <th>Group signal</th>
177 + <th>What it may indicate</th>
178 + <th>First action</th>
179 + </tr>
180 + </thead>
181 + <tbody>
182 + <tr>
183 + <td>Old project groups</td>
184 + <td>A project ended but access may still be active</td>
185 + <td>Confirm whether the group is still needed</td>
186 + </tr>
187 + <tr>
188 + <td>Inactive users</td>
189 + <td>Former employees or old accounts may still have access</td>
190 + <td>Remove from groups or deactivate according to policy</td>
191 + </tr>
192 + <tr>
193 + <td>Unclear group names</td>
194 + <td>Nobody can easily explain what the group controls</td>
195 + <td>Document, rename or consolidate</td>
196 + </tr>
197 + <tr>
198 + <td>Overloaded groups</td>
199 + <td>One group controls too many unrelated areas</td>
200 + <td>Split into clearer role-based or area-based groups</td>
201 + </tr>
202 + <tr>
203 + <td>Admin groups</td>
204 + <td>Powerful rights may be granted too broadly</td>
205 + <td>Review membership separately</td>
206 + </tr>
207 + </tbody>
208 + </table>
209 +
210 + <h2 id="find-local-rights">3. Identify pages with local access rights</h2>
211 +
212 + <p>
213 + Local page-level rights are often where surprises appear. They are useful when a page or page hierarchy needs
214 + special access rules, but they can become difficult to manage when they are added repeatedly without documentation.
215 + </p>
216 +
217 + <p>
218 + The following Velocity snippet can help you start the review by listing pages that contain local
219 + <code>XWiki.XWikiRights</code> objects. It is not a complete audit. It gives you a practical first list of
220 + pages where local rights may exist.
221 + </p>
222 +{{/html}}
223 +{{/velocity}}
224 +
225 +{{code language="velocity"}}
226 +#set ($query = "from doc.object(XWiki.XWikiRights) rights order by doc.fullName asc")
227 +#set ($pages = $services.query.xwql($query).execute())
228 +
229 +#if ($pages.isEmpty())
230 + No pages with local XWiki rights were found.
231 +#else
232 + |= Page |= Review note
233 + #foreach ($page in $pages)
234 + | [[$page]] | Local rights configured
235 + #end
236 +#end
237 +{{/code}}
238 +
239 +{{velocity}}
240 +{{html clean="false"}}
241 + <h2 id="interpret-results">4. How to interpret the result</h2>
242 +
243 + <p>
244 + The result should be treated as a review queue, not as a final answer. Each page should be checked in context:
245 + why local rights were added, who is affected, whether the rights apply only to one page or to a hierarchy, and
246 + whether the exception is still needed.
247 + </p>
248 +
249 + <div class="resource-note">
250 + <p>
251 + <strong>What this snippet helps you find:</strong> pages where local rights may override the expected inherited
252 + model, old restricted areas, project spaces with special access rules and confidential pages that should have
253 + a clear owner.
254 + </p>
255 + </div>
256 +
257 + <div class="resource-note">
258 + <p>
259 + <strong>What this snippet does not tell you:</strong> whether the rights are correct, whether the groups are
260 + still valid, whether the users inside those groups still need access, or whether inherited permissions already
261 + grant access from a parent page.
262 + </p>
263 + </div>
264 +
265 + <p>
266 + A page appearing in this list is not automatically a problem. It simply means that the page deserves a closer
267 + look during the first-pass review.
268 + </p>
269 +
270 + <div class="resource-inline-cta">
271 + <p>
272 + <strong>Not sure where local rights are hidden?</strong>
273 + A focused access-rights review can help identify local exceptions, inherited permissions, old groups and
274 + sensitive rights that should be cleaned up or documented.
275 + </p>
276 + <a class="btn btn-default" href="$xwiki.getURL('contact.WebHome')">Request an access review</a>
277 + </div>
278 +
279 + <h2 id="sensitive-rights">5. Review sensitive rights separately</h2>
280 +
281 + <p>
282 + Not all rights have the same impact. View, comment and edit rights affect content collaboration. Administration,
283 + script and programming rights can have a broader technical and security impact and should be reviewed separately.
284 + </p>
285 +
286 + <p>
287 + A user with powerful rights may be able to change configuration, execute advanced scripts, affect other users or
288 + influence how content is rendered. These rights should be granted intentionally, limited to trusted users and
289 + documented as part of the administration model.
290 + </p>
291 +
292 + <table class="table table-bordered table-striped">
293 + <thead>
294 + <tr>
295 + <th>Right type</th>
296 + <th>Why it matters</th>
297 + <th>Review approach</th>
298 + </tr>
299 + </thead>
300 + <tbody>
301 + <tr>
302 + <td>Admin</td>
303 + <td>Can control important wiki configuration and rights</td>
304 + <td>Keep limited and review membership regularly</td>
305 + </tr>
306 + <tr>
307 + <td>Script</td>
308 + <td>Can allow advanced scripting behavior depending on context</td>
309 + <td>Grant only to users who understand the technical impact</td>
310 + </tr>
311 + <tr>
312 + <td>Programming</td>
313 + <td>Can be highly sensitive and should be reserved for trusted technical administrators</td>
314 + <td>Review separately from normal editing permissions</td>
315 + </tr>
316 + <tr>
317 + <td>Edit</td>
318 + <td>Allows content changes and may affect business processes</td>
319 + <td>Assign through groups and validate restricted areas</td>
320 + </tr>
321 + <tr>
322 + <td>View</td>
323 + <td>Controls access to content and confidential information</td>
324 + <td>Review public, internal and restricted areas carefully</td>
325 + </tr>
326 + </tbody>
327 + </table>
328 +
329 + <h2 id="common-findings">Common findings during a first review</h2>
330 +
331 + <p>
332 + A first-pass review often reveals patterns that are not obvious from normal daily use. These findings do not
333 + always mean that the instance is unsafe, but they usually deserve clarification.
334 + </p>
335 +
336 + <ul class="resource-checklist">
337 + <li>Pages restricted years ago for a project that no longer exists.</li>
338 + <li>Groups created for temporary access that still grant view or edit rights.</li>
339 + <li>Direct user rights added because creating a proper group felt too heavy at the time.</li>
340 + <li>Admin or script rights granted to users who no longer maintain the platform.</li>
341 + <li>Restricted spaces without a clear business owner.</li>
342 + <li>External users still present in groups after the collaboration ended.</li>
343 + <li>Local page rights added to solve an urgent issue, but never reviewed again.</li>
344 + <li>Group synchronization from LDAP, SSO, OIDC or SAML that no longer matches the expected wiki access model.</li>
345 + </ul>
346 +
347 + <h2 id="document-findings">6. Document findings before changing permissions</h2>
348 +
349 + <p>
350 + An access-rights review should not end with a few manual changes. The result should be documented so that the
351 + next administrator understands what was found, what was changed and what still needs attention.
352 + </p>
353 +
354 + <p>
355 + A simple review register is enough for a first pass. The goal is to record the affected area, the current access
356 + model, the concern, the owner and the recommended action.
357 + </p>
358 +
359 + <table class="table table-bordered table-striped">
360 + <thead>
361 + <tr>
362 + <th>Area or page</th>
363 + <th>Current access</th>
364 + <th>Risk or concern</th>
365 + <th>Recommended action</th>
366 + <th>Owner</th>
367 + <th>Review date</th>
368 + </tr>
369 + </thead>
370 + <tbody>
371 + <tr>
372 + <td>Example.ProjectSpace</td>
373 + <td>Old project group can still view</td>
374 + <td>Project ended, access may no longer be needed</td>
375 + <td>Confirm owner and remove group if obsolete</td>
376 + <td>Project owner</td>
377 + <td>YYYY-MM-DD</td>
378 + </tr>
379 + <tr>
380 + <td>Example.ConfidentialDocs</td>
381 + <td>Individual users have direct rights</td>
382 + <td>Difficult to maintain when roles change</td>
383 + <td>Move access to a dedicated group</td>
384 + <td>Content owner</td>
385 + <td>YYYY-MM-DD</td>
386 + </tr>
387 + </tbody>
388 + </table>
389 +
390 + <h2 id="review-checklist">XWiki access-rights first-pass checklist</h2>
391 +
392 + <p>
393 + A practical review should combine technical checks with governance questions. The following checklist can be
394 + used before changing permissions in production.
395 + </p>
396 +
397 + <ul class="resource-checklist">
398 + <li>Identify public, internal, restricted and administrative areas.</li>
399 + <li>List active groups and clarify what each group is used for.</li>
400 + <li>Review old groups, inactive users and temporary access.</li>
401 + <li>Identify pages with local XWiki rights objects.</li>
402 + <li>Review page-level exceptions and inherited permissions.</li>
403 + <li>Check whether rights are assigned to groups rather than individual users.</li>
404 + <li>Review admin, script and programming rights separately.</li>
405 + <li>Check authentication and group synchronization if LDAP, SSO, OIDC or SAML is used.</li>
406 + <li>Document findings, owners, risks and recommended actions.</li>
407 + <li>Only then decide what should be cleaned up, simplified or reviewed with the business owner.</li>
408 + </ul>
409 +
410 + <h2 id="access-review-faq">XWiki access-rights review FAQ</h2>
411 +
412 + <details class="resource-faq-item" open>
413 + <summary>Is listing pages with local rights enough for an access audit?</summary>
414 + <p>
415 + No. It is only a starting point. A complete review should also consider inherited permissions, group
416 + membership, wiki-level rights, explicit allow or deny rules, sensitive rights and the business reason behind
417 + each restricted area.
418 + </p>
419 + </details>
420 +
421 + <details class="resource-faq-item">
422 + <summary>Should XWiki rights be assigned directly to users?</summary>
423 + <p>
424 + In most cases, rights should be assigned through groups. Direct user rights can be useful in rare situations,
425 + but they are harder to maintain and should be reviewed carefully.
426 + </p>
427 + </details>
428 +
429 + <details class="resource-faq-item">
430 + <summary>What is the most common access-rights problem in XWiki?</summary>
431 + <p>
432 + A common issue is the accumulation of undocumented exceptions: old groups, page-level rights, inherited
433 + permissions and direct user rights that were correct at the time but are no longer clearly understood.
434 + </p>
435 + </details>
436 +
437 + <details class="resource-faq-item">
438 + <summary>Should access rights be reviewed before an XWiki upgrade?</summary>
439 + <p>
440 + Yes. Upgrades are a good moment to review permissions, especially for business-critical instances. The review
441 + can reveal old groups, sensitive rights, custom scripts and restricted areas that should be validated during
442 + the upgrade process.
443 + </p>
444 + </details>
445 +
446 + <details class="resource-faq-item">
447 + <summary>Does SSO replace an access-rights review?</summary>
448 + <p>
449 + No. SSO helps authenticate users, but XWiki authorization still depends on groups, rights, inheritance and
450 + page-level exceptions. Authentication and access control should be reviewed together.
451 + </p>
452 + </details>
453 +
454 + <div class="resource-note related-resources">
455 + <p><strong>Related resources:</strong></p>
456 + <ul>
457 + <li>
458 + <a href="$xwiki.getURL('resources.xwiki-access-rights-governance')">Why XWiki access rights need a clear governance model</a>
459 + </li>
460 + <li>
461 + <a href="$xwiki.getURL('resources.xwiki-security-review')">What an XWiki security review should actually include</a>
462 + </li>
463 + <li>
464 + <a href="$xwiki.getURL('resources.why-upgrade-xwiki')">Why regular XWiki upgrades matter</a>
465 + </li>
466 + </ul>
467 + </div>
468 +
469 + <div class="resource-cta">
470 + <h3>Need help reviewing XWiki access rights?</h3>
471 + <p>
472 + If your XWiki instance has grown over time, uses many groups, contains restricted areas or depends on LDAP,
473 + SSO, OIDC or SAML, an access-rights review can help identify unclear permissions and define a safer model.
474 + </p>
475 + <a class="btn btn-primary" href="$xwiki.getURL('contact.WebHome')">Request an access-rights review</a>
476 + </div>
477 +
478 + </article>
479 + </div>
480 + </div>
481 + </section>
482 +
483 + <script type="application/ld+json">
484 + {
485 + "@context": "https://schema.org",
486 + "@type": "FAQPage",
487 + "mainEntity": [
488 + {
489 + "@type": "Question",
490 + "name": "Is listing pages with local rights enough for an access audit?",
491 + "acceptedAnswer": {
492 + "@type": "Answer",
493 + "text": "No. It is only a starting point. A complete review should also consider inherited permissions, group membership, wiki-level rights, explicit allow or deny rules, sensitive rights and the business reason behind each restricted area."
494 + }
495 + },
496 + {
497 + "@type": "Question",
498 + "name": "Should XWiki rights be assigned directly to users?",
499 + "acceptedAnswer": {
500 + "@type": "Answer",
501 + "text": "In most cases, rights should be assigned through groups. Direct user rights can be useful in rare situations, but they are harder to maintain and should be reviewed carefully."
502 + }
503 + },
504 + {
505 + "@type": "Question",
506 + "name": "What is the most common access-rights problem in XWiki?",
507 + "acceptedAnswer": {
508 + "@type": "Answer",
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510 + }
511 + },
512 + {
513 + "@type": "Question",
514 + "name": "Should access rights be reviewed before an XWiki upgrade?",
515 + "acceptedAnswer": {
516 + "@type": "Answer",
517 + "text": "Yes. Upgrades are a good moment to review permissions, especially for business-critical instances. The review can reveal old groups, sensitive rights, custom scripts and restricted areas that should be validated during the upgrade process."
518 + }
519 + },
520 + {
521 + "@type": "Question",
522 + "name": "Does SSO replace an access-rights review?",
523 + "acceptedAnswer": {
524 + "@type": "Answer",
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526 + }
527 + }
528 + ]
529 + }
530 + </script>
531 +
532 +{{/html}}
533 +{{/velocity}}
Agnease.Code.SEODetailsClass[0]
metaDescription
... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
1 +Learn how to start an XWiki access-rights review by checking groups, local page rights, inherited permissions, powerful rights, inactive users and documentation gaps.
metaTitle
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1 +How to Start an XWiki Access-Rights Review | Agnease