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Security Filter Modes

Query objects and Record objects, including both explicit record variables and implicit records on pages, reports, or XMLports, have a property named SecurityFiltering, which describes how security filters are applied. The possible values of the SecurityFiltering property are:

  • Filtered

  • Validated

  • Ignored

  • Disallowed

Filtered

If a record is set to Filtered, then any security filters that have been set are respected for this instance of the record. To the user, it is as if records outside the security filters that do not exist.

An example scenario in which you use the Filtered value is that one salesperson is not allowed to view customers, sales quotes, or sales orders that belong to another salesperson. When the salesperson opens a list of customers or sales documents, or runs reports such as the Customer – Top 10 List report, he sees his filtered view of customers, sales quotes, and sales orders.

Validated

If a record is set to Validated, then any security filters that have been set are respected for this instance of the record, and an error occurs if the code attempts to access a record that is outside the range of the security filters.

An example scenario in which you use the Validated value is that one parts purchaser in a warehouse is responsible for only one location and can view and create purchase orders for only that location. However, some purchase orders have lines for multiple locations. Only a parts purchaser who has access to all locations should be allowed to post these purchase orders that have lines for multiple locations. All other purchasers receive an error.

If security filters have been set, then the Validated value decreases performance. For more information, see Performance Impact of Security Filtering Mode.

The Validated value is used mainly for compatibility with the security model in earlier versions of Microsoft Dynamics NAV. We recommend that you use the other modes when you implement your security model.

Ignored

If a record is set to Ignored, then any security filters that have been set are ignored for this instance of the record.

An example scenario in which you use the Ignored value is that one salesperson is not allowed to view customers, sales quotes, or sales orders that belong to another salesperson. However, to post her sales orders, the salesperson must have access to all entries in the Customer Ledger Entry table so that the posting algorithm can find the last sales order entry number and generate the correct number for the next entry. In the code that posts sales orders, you set the SecurityFiltering property of the record variable to Ignored, but for record variables in other parts of the code, you set the SecurityFiltering property to either Filtered or Validated.

When you set the SecurityFiltering property on a record to Ignored, the administrator who sets a security filter is not informed that the security filter will be ignored. You must be careful when you set the SecurityFiltering property that it does not cause unintended information disclosure.

Disallowed

If a record is set to Disallowed, then setting any security filter on the record causes an error.

An example scenario in which you use the Disallowed value is that you have batch jobs that must be run only by users who have access to all records in the related tables, otherwise the batch jobs can cause incorrect and potentially harmful results. The partner developer sets record variables on these batch jobs to Disallowed so that a user who does not have access to all records in the related tables receives an error.

Default Values

The following table shows the default values of the SecurityFiltering property.

Explicit record variables Explicit query variables Implicit records on pages, reports, and XMLports

Upgraded from Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2009

Validated

N/A

Filtered

New

Validated

Filtered

Filtered

Important

It is not supported to change the default Filtered value of the SecurityFiltering property on implicit records on pages.

If you keep the default values after you upgrade from Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2009 to Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2016, then the behavior is the same in all cases except the following:

  • In earlier versions, the COUNT Function (Record) ignored security filters and always returned the total number of records unless you called the SETPERMISSIONFILTER function to get a filtered count. In Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2016, the COUNT function adheres to the SecurityFiltering property.

  • In earlier versions, on a page, you could modify or insert a record outside of the range of your security filters but in Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2016, you cannot.

Note

For Query variables, the Validated value of the SecurityFiltering property is not allowed.

Security Filters and FlowFields

If you set a security filter on a table that is used in a FlowField calculation, then the calculated value of the FlowField is filtered, based on the security filter and the security filter mode of the record variable for the record in the table. For example, if you set a security filter so that a user can only view sales with a specific salesperson code, and if the security filter mode is Filtered, then when the user views a FlowField that calculates total sales, the user can see the total of only those sales that have the specific salesperson code. In earlier versions of Microsoft Dynamics NAV, the security filter mode value was Validated and in this example, the user received an error.

Programming Examples

For these examples, you have a table that has 100 records. Each record has an ID field that is the primary key of the table. The values of the ID field that are currently in the database range from 1 to 100. In this example, you set a security filter on the table data for ID=1..50. Then, in a codeunit you create a record variable for the table.

Security filter mode Example

Filtered

If you set the SecurityFiltering property on the record variable to Filtered, then the code behaves as if records with ID values from 1 to 50 are the only records that exist. If you call the FIND, FINDFIRST, FINDLAST, or FINDSET function on the record variable without any additional filters besides the security filter, then the function only finds records with ID values from 1 to 50. If you call the DELETEALL function, then it successfully deletes records with ID values from 1 to 50. It does not delete records with ID values greater than 50, and it does not return an error. If you modify a record, for example, by calling the MODIFY function on a record with an ID value less than 50, then the function succeeds. If you call the MODIFY function on a record with an ID value greater than 50, then it fails because you do not have access to the record. If you insert a record with an ID less than 50 and the record does not already exist, the INSERT function succeeds. If you insert a record with an ID greater than 50 and the record does not already exist, it fails because you do not have access to the record. If you call the GET function on a record with an ID value less than 50, then the function succeeds. If you call the GET function on a record with an ID value greater than 50, then it fails.

Validated

If you set the SecurityFiltering property on the record variable to Validated, then the code behaves as if records with ID values from 1 to 100 exist, but you only have access to the records that are specified by the security filter. If you call the FIND, FINDFIRST, FINDLAST, or FINDSET function on the record variable without additional filters, it finds all 100 records, but a NEXT function call to the record with ID value 51 fails because you do not have access to it. If you call the DELETEALL function, it fails because it finds all 100 records but you do not have access to all of them. If you modify a record with an ID value less than 50, it succeeds. If you modify a record with an ID value greater than 50, it fails. If you insert a record with an ID less than 50 and the record does not already exist, it succeeds. If you insert a record with an ID greater than 50 and the record does not already exist, it fails.

Ignored

If you set the SecurityFiltering property on the record variable to Ignored, then the code behaves as if all security filters that are set do not exist for that instance of the record. Any of the FIND functions find all 100 records. The DELETEALL function deletes all 100 records. You can insert and modify records in any range, regardless of security filters.

Disallowed

If you set the SecurityFiltering property on the record variable to Disallowed, then as long as a security filter is set on the record, any code that uses the record variable causes an error.

Performance Impact of Security Filtering Mode

If security filters are set on a table, then setting the SecurityFiltering property to Validated on a record instance of that table causes a decrease in performance. The Microsoft Dynamics NAV Server must go through every record in the table to validate the record instead of adding the filters to the query that is sent to SQL Server.

If security filters are not set, then setting the SecurityFiltering property to Validated has no performance impact.

Note

We recommend that you change commonly used record variables from the default value of Validated to either Filtered or Ignored to improve performance.

See Also

Tasks

How to: Set Security Filters

Reference

SecurityFiltering Property

Concepts

Record-Level Security