diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/user/group/subgroups/index.md')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/user/group/subgroups/index.md | 23 |
1 files changed, 14 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/doc/user/group/subgroups/index.md b/doc/user/group/subgroups/index.md index df0d297a82a..4532a391eef 100644 --- a/doc/user/group/subgroups/index.md +++ b/doc/user/group/subgroups/index.md @@ -67,8 +67,6 @@ Another example of GitLab as a company would be the following: - (project) Chef cookbooks - Category Subgroup - Executive team ---- - When performing actions such as transferring or importing a project between subgroups, the behavior is the same as when performing these actions at the `group/project` level. @@ -85,13 +83,20 @@ By default, groups created in: The setting can be changed for any group by: -- A group owner. Select the group, and navigate to **Settings > General > Permissions, LFS, 2FA**. -- An administrator. Navigate to **Admin Area > Overview > Groups**, select the group, and choose **Edit**. +- A group owner: + 1. Select the group. + 1. On the left sidebar, select **Settings > General**. + 1. Expand the **Permissions, LFS, 2FA** section. +- An administrator: + 1. On the top bar, select **Menu >** **{admin}** **Admin**. + 1. On the left sidebar, select **Overview > Groups**. + 1. Select the group, and select **Edit**. + +For: -For more information check the -[permissions table](../../permissions.md#group-members-permissions). For a list -of words that are not allowed to be used as group names see the -[reserved names](../../reserved_names.md). +- More information, check the [permissions table](../../permissions.md#group-members-permissions). +- A list of words that are not allowed to be used as group names, see the + [reserved names](../../reserved_names.md). Users can always create subgroups if they are explicitly added as an Owner (or Maintainer, if that setting is enabled) to an immediate parent group, even if group @@ -163,7 +168,7 @@ added to), add the user to the new subgroup again with a higher set of permissio For example, if User 1 was first added to group `one/two` with Developer permissions, then they inherit those permissions in every other subgroup -of `one/two`. To give them Maintainer access to group `one/two/three/four`, +of `one/two`. To give them the [Maintainer role](../../permissions.md) for group `one/two/three/four`, you would add them again in that group as Maintainer. Removing them from that group, the permissions fall back to those of the ancestor group. |