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Adding Content to the Portal

Understanding Pages and Page Templates


About Pages

When SAS Information Delivery Portal samples are loaded during portal configuration, the following templates and links are created by default:

In addition to the home page template and the default portal links, the Portal Application tree is created when either of the following is true:

The SAS Information Delivery Portal uses pages to present and organize information. Here is an example of a portal that contains several pages, which are represented by links in the navigation bar:

[untitled graphic]

In this example, the page named Home is the active Web page. Notice that the name of the page is highlighted in the navigation bar. To display one of the other pages, you click the page's name in the navigation bar.

Each page contains one or more portlets. Portlets are the rectangular display components that contain the links, graphs, reports, and other information that is available in the portal. A page can contain any number of portlets.

A banner spans the top of the portal, and the top right corner of the banner contains several links. The Options link in the banner displays a menu from which you can perform common management tasks. For example, you can create, edit, remove, and share pages by using this menu.

Every page inherits the theme that is applied to the portal. A theme defines the portal's colors, fonts, banner, and graphical elements. (You deploy themes separately from pages. For more information, see Administering SAS Web Application Themes.)

Each page in the portal has an associated rank number that determines the order in which pages are listed in the navigation bar. The pages are ordered by rank from lowest to highest. Pages with equal rank are listed in the order in which they were created. The default value is 100. In the portal, you can choose to override page ranks by explicitly defining the order of pages.

You determine how rank values are used for your organization. You might use rank to group different categories of pages. For example, you might reserve a range of 1-24 for the most important types of pages in your organization. The next range of 25-49 could be used for pages that are slightly less important. When you rank pages by using a range of values, you provide the flexibility to order pages for a wide range of portal users.


Who Can Administer Pages

In addition to creating, editing, and deleting your own personal pages, you can perform the following tasks depending on your permissions:

Page Administrators
User Type What the User Can Administer
SAS Trusted User Can share, unshare, edit, and delete any page in the SAS Information Delivery Portal, including a page that someone else has created. Although the SAS Trusted User (known as the portal administrator) can administer the pages, it is highly recommended that the group content administrator perform these tasks. By default, the SAS Trusted User is a portal administrator. A portal administrator is granted WriteMetadata permission in the Portal ACT and has full access to the portal content.
Group content administrator Can share any page that has been created by the group content administrator.

Can unshare, edit, and delete any page that has been shared with the respective group, including a page that someone else has created.

The SAS administrator must manually configure permissions for a group content administrator. A group content administrator can be configured for the PUBLIC group.

All portal users Can create, edit, and delete only personal pages.

For more information about the permissions that are granted to these users in SAS metadata, see Who Can Administer the Portal.


Understanding Customized Page Deployment

The SAS Information Delivery portal gives each user a personalized virtual workplace within a Web browser. This workplace is referred to as a portal view. When you deploy the portal, you can customize views of the portal for different groups of people by deploying different pages to those groups. This enables you to ensure that users have access only to the information that is appropriate.

Users who are deploying a page can complete the following tasks:

  1. create the page

  2. add portlets to the page

  3. add content to the portlets

In addition to the tasks performed by users, content administrators can perform the following tasks:

For example, suppose that you want to provide different types of information to engineers, to sales people, and to managers. First, make sure that a group identity has been defined in SAS metadata for each type of user, and that the group contains the applicable user definitions. Next, you create pages and share them with the appropriate group. The portal users who belong to the group see only the pages that are shared with their group.

After users log on to the portal, they can edit pages, add new pages, and personalize their views. For example, users can subscribe to content channels that are of interest to them, create links to Internet sites that are visited frequently, and change the navigation scheme.

To facilitate the process of deploying views, you can designate a group content administrator for each group that is defined in SAS metadata. This person can assume responsibility for creating and sharing pages with the respective group.


Page Attributes: AVAILABLE, DEFAULT, and PERSISTENT

Pages have attributes that define how a page is associated with a portal view. These attributes determine the following:

The following table shows the three attributes that associate pages with portal views:

Page Attributes
Attribute Description
AVAILABLE The page is added manually to portal views. Users typically search for the page and then add it to their portal views. After adding the page, users can later remove the page from their portal views if they no longer need the page.
DEFAULT The page is added automatically to portal views. Users see the page when they log on to the SAS Information Delivery Portal. Users can later remove the page if they do not want it in their views.
PERSISTENT The page is added automatically to portal views. Users cannot remove the page from their portal views.

DEFAULT is the default value for every page that you create in the portal. After you create a page, if you share that page, then you can apply any one of the three attributes to the shared page. For more information, see the section Shared Pages.


Personal Pages

When you create a new page in the portal, that page by default is a personal page. A personal page is owned by the person who created it. All users who can log on to the portal can create personal pages in their portal views.

Here are the characteristics of a personal page:


Shared Pages

If you have administrative permissions, you can share a page with a user group that is defined in SAS metadata. You can share pages with either of the following groups:

When you share a page with a group, you do not create multiple instances of the page. There is only one instance of the page, but that page is owned by a group rather than by an individual.

If you share a page that contains portlets, you can specify whether you also want to share the portlets and their contents.

Note:   When you share a page that contains a Stored Process Alerts portlet, a Bookmarks portlet, or a Publication Channel Subscriptions portlet, these portlets cannot be shared. If you want to provide these portlets to users, consider creating a page template instead. See Page Templates.   [cautionend]

After you share a page with a group, when users who belong to the group log on to the portal, the shared page is available to them. The share type attribute (DEFAULT, AVAILABLE, or PERSISTENT) that you apply to the page determines how portal users access the page:

Only users who are authorized as an administrator for the group can edit a shared page. You can edit both the content and the properties of a shared page. For example, you can add or remove portlets, and you can unshare the page. Any changes that you make to a shared page are seen by all users who can access the page.

You can also permanently delete a shared page from the portal. When you permanently delete a page, that page is removed from all portal views.

Portal users who can access the shared page can remove the page from their individual portal views if the shared page has an attribute of DEFAULT or AVAILABLE. If the shared page has an attribute of PERSISTENT, the portal administrator or group content administrator can remove the page from a portal view. However, it is strongly advised that the group content administrator perform this task.

For general information about sharing portal content, see Sharing Content in the Portal.


Types of Edits That Can Be Made to a Page

If you have the appropriate permissions, you can edit a page in several ways:

You edit pages by using the portal Customize menu. For more information, see the online Help that is provided with the portal.


Page Templates


Overview of Page Templates

A page template is a page definition that is stored in SAS metadata and that is associated with a group (either PUBLIC or a group that is defined explicitly). The page template must have an attribute of either DEFAULT or PERSISTENT. You can create a page template from an existing page in the SAS Information Delivery Portal, or you can create a page template by running a SAS program.

When you define a page template and add it to SAS metadata, the following occurs:

  1. The portal's metadata associates the page template with the group that you specified when you created the page template.

  2. When a user logs on to the portal, the portal checks to see whether the user belongs to the specified group. If the user belongs to the group and does not yet have a page associated with this template, the portal creates a page from the template and adds that page to the user's portal view.

  3. The portal checks for new templates every time the user logs on, and adds new pages as appropriate.

Note:   Page templates are not related to portlet templates or themes. These are different entities that use the name "template." For information about portlet templates, see Understanding Portlets. For information about SAS Web Application Themes, see Administering SAS Web Application Themes.   [cautionend]


Main Features of Page Templates

Page templates offer an alternative to shared pages, and there are several reasons why you might want to implement page templates. Page templates provide the following features:

The following limitations apply to the creation of page templates:

After you have created a page template, you cannot edit it. However, you can delete the page template and create it again. For more information, see Adding, Editing, and Removing Page Templates.


The Home Page Template

After you install and configure the SAS Information Delivery Portal, when you first log on to the portal, you see the Home page. The purpose of the Home page is to help users as they begin to add content to their portal views. Here are the characteristics of the Home page template:

Although the portal administrator can see every user's Home page, it is not a good practice to use the portal administrator's account to perform regular tasks such as viewing the Home page or adding a Home page because it is difficult to distinguish whether the Home page belongs to a particular user or to the portal administrator.

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