This feature is available on Beefree SDK Superpowers plan and above. If you're on the Core or Essentials plan, upgrade a development application for free to try this and other Superpowers-level features.
Overview
With Advanced permissions, you can tailor permissions for users of your Beefree application by hiding or locking UI elements related to:
content tiles
content settings
layout settings
row & content actions (clone, delete, drag, save)
basically anything in the editor!
These advanced permissions grant total customization of the experience you want to present. Since you set them in the configuration parameters passed to your Beefree app after you’ve initialized it, they could be different each time the editor starts, and have different setups for different users.
Use cases
The absolute flexibility of these permissions makes it easy to address specific needs, not achievable with the Roles and Permissions feature that is available in the Beefree SDK Console.
Create skill-based roles
You can create roles that can act only on a content type. For example, you may want a “copywriter” role for people in an organization that only need to touch copy for editing or translation purposes. To do so, you can:
hide any action that doesn’t involve working on the copy of an email or page.
limit style options for the text itself, by
locking/hiding the side tab;
hiding specific settings in the text toolbar.
Customize image & file management workflows
You can limit how users upload and manage images and files inside the plugin; for example, you want some users – e.g., external collaborators – to select pre-approved images and files uploaded by “admin” users. You can do so by:
disabling drag-and-drop of images onto the stage;
limit actions in the file manager (either the built-in one or your custom file picker) by disabling actions like upload, import, and create a folder.
Another interesting case for using advanced permissions is the possibility to set a maximum sizefor uploads, per user. The maximum size set per user must not exceed the custom limitation size set on the Activate Custom Limitation on File Manager. The default limit is 20 Mb unless otherwise stated.
When this permission is configured, the system will check if a file exceeds the set size before uploading it; if so, the plugin will return an error message, which you may customize using Custom languages.
Create custom, secondary roles
When customers of your applications are structured businesses, typically with a headquarter and a locally-deployed organization (e.g., Real Estate, Travel, Retail), their administrators can create custom, secondary roles to match any internal policy they might have. In this scenario, admins typically want to reduce disruptions of centrally-deployed templates for external communication, while allowing a specific degree of freedom.
Initialize different versions of the editor
By combining multiple permissions, you can load the plugin with radically different experiences, based on the user that starts it. For example:
a “stripped-down” version of the content builder for lower-level subscribers;
a “simplified” version of the builder for new users of an account.
How it works
To set up the advanced permissions, you will need to add the advancedPermissions object to beeConfig:
You can add all the permissions, some of them, or just one. It is up to your application to create them for all users or a segment, as there are no related server-side settings. You may have a different setup each time the editor starts.
All the permissions use a similar pattern, but the object must match the content schema for the type of content (described in the following section).
Defaults
Each content type below contains a parameter for “behaviors” and “properties”. The behaviors control what someone can, or can’t, do. The properties parameter is an array of sidebar property widgets (e.g., the width slider), and each widget has its default permissions.
Sidebar property widget permissions
All sidebar property widgets (e.g. width slider, alignment, color, etc.) accept the following basic permissions:
Name
Type
Value
locked
boolean
true or false
show
boolean
true or false
Let’s look at an example of these permissions applied to an image module. The following example will hide the image width property widget and lock the text alignment widget. We’ll cover more of the available settings below.
All contents and rows (e.g. image module, video module, stage row, etc.) accept the following basic behaviors:
Name
Type
Value
Description
canSelect
boolean
true or false
Can select a row or module to edit its properties
canAdd
boolean
true or false
Can drag and drop the content tile or row onto the stage
canViewSidebar
boolean
true or false
Can view the content in the sidebar
canClone
boolean
true or false
Can clone a content or row on the stage
canMove
boolean
true or false
Can drag content to another location on the stage
canDelete
boolean
true or false
Can remove the content or row from the stage
canResetMobile
boolean
true or false
Can reset mobile style for content properties that make use of it
Let’s look at an example of these behaviors applied to an image module. The following example will hide the image content tile on the sidebar. We’ll cover more of the available settings below.
To assign permissions, you can make use of the addon’s ID. Based on the type of addon, you can assign relevant permissions. For instance, if your addon is an image type, you can assign permissions specific to the image content block. The advanced permissions structure will be as follows:
To hide the buttons, set the CanEditDisplayConditions and CanSelectDisplayConditions properties to false.
Role templates
We’ve put together a few JSON templates of custom roles created with Advanced permissions, so you can get started experimenting with this powerful feature.