Manage roles and permissions in VMM

Important

This version of Virtual Machine Manager (VMM) has reached the end of support. We recommend you to upgrade to VMM 2022.

System Center - Virtual Machine Manager (VMM) allows you to manage roles and permissions. VMM provides:

  • Role-based security: Roles specify what users can do in the VMM environment. Roles consist of a profile that defines a set of available operations for the role, scope which define the set of objects on which the role can operate, and a membership list that defines the Active Directory user accounts and security groups that are assigned to the role.
  • Run As accounts: Run As accounts act as containers for stored credentials that you use to run VMM tasks and processes.

Role based security

The following table summarizes VMM user roles.

VMM user role Permissions Details
Administrator role Members of this role can perform all administrative actions on all objects that VMM manages. Only administrators can add a WSUS server to VMM to enable updates of the VMM fabric through VMM.
Virtual machine administrator Administrators can create the role (applicable for VMM 2019 and later). Delegated administrator can create VM administrator role that includes entire scope or a subset of their scope, library servers, and Run-As accounts.
Fabric administrator (delegated administrator) Members of this role can perform all administrative tasks within their assigned host groups, clouds, and library servers. Delegated administrators can't modify VMM settings, add or remove members of the administrators user role, or add WSUS servers.
Read-Only administrator Members of this role can view properties, status, and job status of objects within their assigned host groups, clouds, and library servers, but they can't modify the objects. The read-only administrator can also view Run As accounts that administrators or delegated administrators have specified for that read-only administrator user role.
Tenant administrator Members of this role can manage self-service users and VM networks. Tenant administrators can create, deploy, and manage their own virtual machines and services by using the VMM console or a web portal.

Tenant administrators can also specify which tasks the self-service users can perform on their virtual machines and services.

Tenant administrators can place quotas on computing resources and virtual machines.
Application administrator (Self-Service User) Members of this role can create, deploy, and manage their own virtual machines and services. They can manage VMM using the VMM console.

Run As accounts

There are different types of Run As accounts:

  • Host computer accounts are used to interact with virtualization servers.
  • BMC accounts are used to communicate with the BMC on hosts for out-of-band management or power optimization.
  • External account are used to communicate with external apps such as Operations Manager.
  • Network device accounts are used to connect with network load balancers.
  • Profile accounts are used in Run As profiles when you're deploying a VMM service or creating profiles.

Note

  • VMM uses the Windows Data Protection API (DPAPI) to provide operating system level data protection services during storage and retrieval of the Run As account credentials. DPAPI is a password-based data protection service that uses cryptographic routines (the strong Triple-DES algorithm, with strong keys) to offset the risk posed by password-based data protection. Learn more.
  • When you install VMM, you can configure VMM to use Distributed Key Management to store encryption keys in Active Directory.
  • You can set up Run As accounts before you start managing VMM or you can set up Run As accounts if you need them for specific actions.

Next steps