Book Image

Extending Microsoft Dynamics 365 for Operations Cookbook

By : Simon Buxton
Book Image

Extending Microsoft Dynamics 365 for Operations Cookbook

By: Simon Buxton

Overview of this book

Dynamics 365 for Operations is the ERP element of Microsoft’s new Dynamics 365 Enterprise Edition. Operations delivers the infrastructure to allow businesses to achieve growth and make better decisions using scalable and contemporary ERP system tools. This book provides a collection of “recipes” to instruct you on how to create—and extend—a real-world solution using Operations. All key aspects of the new release are covered, and insights into the development language, structure, and tools are discussed in detail. New concepts and patterns that are pivotal to elegant solution designs are introduced and explained, and readers will learn how to extend various aspects of the system to enhance both the usability and capabilities of Operations. Together, this gives the reader important context regarding the new concepts and the confidence to reuse in their own solution designs. This “cookbook” provides the ingredients and methods needed to maximize the efficiency of your business management using the latest in ERP software—Dynamics 365 for Operations.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)

Creating security roles

A role is a collection of duties and privileges. The role is what we associate with a user, which can be done automatically based on the employee's information, such as their position in the company. The security roles should be thought of in terms of the personas that first appeared with Dynamics AX 2012. The change is intended to move the thinking away from creating groups of functionality to design the roles based on how the organization is structured. For example, a Sales manager would be in a Sales manager role, which will have duties assigned. The duties have privileges, which in turn give access to the sales manager in order to perform that role.

In our case, we could consider that they have three roles: vehicle management supervisor, vehicle service supervisor, and vehicle service entry clerk. When defining the roles, we do so by defining the duties that each role will have....