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Using User Group Provisioning Profiles Using User Group Provisioning Profiles
Polycom, Inc. 245
User Group Provisioning Profile Order and Priority
User group provisioning profiles are associated with groups, but what about
those users who belong to more than one group—what determines their
experience? When you add new profiles, you assign a Profile Order. The
Profile Order determines which provisioning profile takes priority.
Consider the following example:
Jason Smith is part of the Support group and also part of the Executive
group.
The Support group is assigned an user group provisioning profile named
Low-Bandwidth, which allows a maximum speed for receiving calls of
128kbps.
The Executive group is assigned an user group provisioning profile called
High-Bandwidth, which allows a maximum speed for receiving calls of
1920kbps
The Low-Bandwidth profile is assigned a profile order of 1, while the
High-Bandwidth profile is assigned a profile order of 2.
In this example, Jason’s endpoint is provisioned with the Low-Bandwidth
provisioning profile, because it has the higher priority.
So when you add user group provisioning profiles, you may want to assign
provisioning profiles with more robust privileges a higher priority than those
providing less privileges.
Using User Group Provisioning Profiles
This topic describes the user group provisioning operations a user assigned
the Administrator role can perform. These are:
“Add an User Group Provisioning Profile” on page 245
“Edit an User Group Provisioning Profile” on page 247
“Edit the Profile Order for an User Group Provisioning Profile” on
page 247
“Clone an User Group Provisioning Profile” on page 247
“Delete an User Group Provisioning Profile” on page 248
Associate profile with group, see “Edit a Group” on page 357
Add an User Group Provisioning Profile
This topic describes how to add User Group provisioning profiles.