How to: Set Profiling Permissions
This topic describes how an Administrator of a computer grants the security permissions required for profiling to a user or group that does not have Administrator permissions on that computer.
A basic security principle states that applications should run with no more than the permissions they need. This principle also applies to users. If users can be fully effective when they are logged on as members of the Users group instead of the Administrators group, they should not be granted Administrator permissions. The first procedure, "To create a user account that has User permissions," describes how to create a user account for a member of the Users group.
Members of the Users group will need access to the folders and files on disk that are shared with other members of the team. The second procedure, "To grant access to shared project files," describes how to grant that access.
Members of the Users group can run the profiling tools of Visual Studio Team Edition for Developers if an administrator grants them access to the software driver for the profiling tools. The last procedure, "To grant access to the profiling driver," describes how to grant access to that driver.
Note
You need administrator permissions to follow the steps in these procedures.
To create a user account that has User permissions
Right-click My Computer and then click Manage.
The Computer Management window opens.
Expand Local Users and Groups.
Right-click the Users folder and then click New User.
The New User dialog box appears.
Complete the fields in this dialog box with the information for the user account you are creating. Specify a password. Optionally, select the check box that requires that the user change the password at the next logon.
Click Create and then click Close.
The new user appears in the Users group, a group of users who do not have Administrator permissions.
To grant access to shared project files
In Windows Explorer, locate the root of the folder tree for project files used by this user and shared by the project team.
The path of this folder might resemble the following:
D:\ourProject
Right-click the folder and then click Properties.
The <folder name> Properties dialog box appears.
Click the Security tab.
Click the name of the user's account in the Group or user names box.
In the Permissions for <user name> box, select the check box for Full Control.
Click OK.
This grants permissions to the user for the shared folder tree that begins with the folder selected in step 5.
To grant access to the profiling driver
Open a command prompt as an administrator.
Change the directory to:
<drive>:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio 9\Team Tools\Performance Tools
Run the following command:
vsperfcmd /admin:driver,start /admin:service,start
This command installs and starts the driver for the Visual Studio Team Edition for Developers Profiling tools.
This command starts the profiling driver and service so that non-admin users may use profiling features that are available in their User process space. Only an Administrator may run the command; and it will fail for non-administrative Users.
Notice that the effects of this step are undone after the computer restarts, unless you also perform the final step in this procedure.
Run the command to allow access to profiling driver functionality by a user or group that does not have administrator access to the computer:
vsperfcmd /admin:security,allow,<right[,right],<user name|group name>
This command grants the <user name> or <group name> account access to the Profiling tools. The <right> option determines the profiling functionality the user can access. The <right> option can be one or more of the following values:
FullAccess - allows access to all profiling methods including collecting performance data from services, sampling, and cross session profiling.
SampleProfiling - allows access to sample profiling methods
CrossSession - allows access to cross session profiling which is required for profiling services.
(Optional) To preserve the results of any of the previous steps after computer restarts, run the following command:
vsperfcmd /admin:driver,autostart,on
The specified users, after logging on, will now be able to use the Team System profiling tools without Administrator permissions.
See Also
Reference
Profiling and Windows Vista Security