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Five papers on Recommended SAS 9.4 Security Model Design (part 2 of 2)

Started ‎05-25-2017 by
Modified ‎07-26-2023 by
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About these papers: This is a series of five papers which together present a set of recommended practices for security model design in SAS 9.4.

 

In part 1 of 2, you can find the overview and the main core principles and practices paper.

In this part 2 of 2, you will find papers on core artefacts, and artefacts for deployments which include SAS Data Integration Studio or SAS Visual Analytics.

 

About the author: David Stern is a Principal Technical Architect in SAS’s Global Enablement and Learning (GEL) team. He focuses on platform administration, especially security model design, and promotion and migration between SAS deployments.

 

About the GEL Recommended SAS 9.4 Security Model Design series of papers: This and the other papers in the series are a collection of principles and practical design recommendations which were developed over several years. Considerable portions of content were developed by SAS consultants in Denmark and the wider Nordic region, with contributions from the UK, Australia, the US and Germany. These papers have been widely reviewed and distributed within SAS, and we are delighted to share them with our community of users.

 

Note added on 26 July 2023: In several places, these papers refer to the GEL Turbo (or to give its full name, the 'SAS Global Enablement and Learning metadata security turbo-charge scripts'). For example in the 'Core Principles and Practices' paper, the Turbo is discussed in section '3.5 Consider using the GEL Turbo'. The URL for the Turbo points to an internal-only SAS URL, and one or two readers outside SAS have asked where they can get the Turbo scripts and assets. We have not released the GEL Turbo to the general public, and have no plans to do so. I should have made that clearer wherever we refer to the Turbo tools, and especially in section '1.4 Intended Audience' of the 'Core Principles and Practices' paper, where I wrote 'Some of the documents and pages referenced within this series of papers are held on SAS internal systems (such as ToolPool), and will not be accessible to readers outside SAS.' The GEL Turbo is one such 'document' but in hindsight I should have called out the GEL Turbo in that paragraph specifically as something not accessible to readers outside SAS, as it is referenced and advocated in several places throughout the rest of the series of papers. If you are working with a SAS consultant (one who works for SAS) on your SAS 9 environment, you could discuss it with them and see what they think.

Comments

Awesome work David! Great to get it published here!

regards

Jan

Greate post!

I'm not a sas employee, but is that possible that I can get the GEL Turbo tool mentioned in the paper?

 

QC

Thank you @ShenQicheng! With regret, we cannot share the GEL Turbo tool outside SAS, for two reasons. The main reason is that neither SAS technical support, nor any other part of SAS is in a position to support you in using the tool, or in fixing any problems that might occur in your SAS deployment as a result of using it. A smaller but also important reason is that a few parts of the tool include code which I found on various public websites where the author gave their permission in a GNU-style or creative commons license, or equivalent, and always with proper attribution referencing the source. I'm sure you can imagine that publishing something like this externally takes a fair amount of commercial and legal due diligence, to make sure we're doing it fairly and properly, and we haven't put the GEL Turbo through that process.

 

My apologies, were it not for those two things, I'd be more than willing to share it outside SAS.

Thank you @DavidStern. I can understand the reasons.

It seems that I should try harder to do it by myself, using SAS Open Metadata Interface server interfaces. Any advice will be very helpful.

 

Anyway, thanks for sharing the paper.

 

QC

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‎07-26-2023 11:13 AM
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