Reports only display elements assigned to the user's organization, including child organizations. For example, if you attempt to view a Host Summary report and you do not have permission to access hosts through your organization, you are not given information about the hosts in the report. This is also true for e-mailing reports. Let's assume again you do not have permission to access hosts. The reports you e-mail will not contain information about hosts, including the host specific reports. If the users receiving your reports want to be able to view information about hosts, one of the following must happen:

The hosts in question must be added to your organization.

Someone else, who has the hosts in question already in their organization, must send the reports.

IMPORTANT: When adding a child to an organization, do not add the organization's parent as a child. For example, assume you created an organization named Child1 that has a parent organization named Parent1. When you are adding child organizations to Child1, do not select Parent1, as this creates a loop.

Planning Your Hierarchy

Before you begin creating organizations, plan your hierarchy. Do you want the hierarchy to be based on location, departments, hardware, software or tasks? Perhaps you want a combination of these options.

To help you with your task, create a table of users who manage elements on the network and the elements they must access to do their job. You might start seeing groups of users who oversee the same or similar elements. This table may help you in assigning users to the appropriate organizations.

Once you are done with planning your hierarchy, draw the hierarchy in an graphics illustration program, so you can keep track of which organizations are parents and children.

Create the child organizations first, then their parents. See the topic, Adding an Organization” on page 139 for more information.

Naming Organizations

When you create an organization, give it a name that reflects its members. For example, you might want to use one or more of the following as a guideline:

Type of elements that are members of the organization, such as switches, Sun Solaris hosts

Location of the elements, such as San Jose

Task, such as backup machines

You may find that it is easy to forget which containers are parents and children. When you name an organization, you might want to include a portion of the name of the dominant parent organization. For example, assume you have two types of Web hosts in Boston: Microsoft Windows and Sun Solaris. You might name the two children organizations BostonWebHost_Windows and BostonWebHost_Solaris and their parent, BostonWebHosts.

Storage Essentials 5.00.01 User Guide 131