Note
Access to this page requires authorization. You can try signing in or changing directories.
Access to this page requires authorization. You can try changing directories.
Permissions in TFS are namespace based. The namespace doesn't have to exist to set a permission on. I can think of some scenarios when this is actually a requirement:
- You may like to set permissions on future items so that the permissions are effective whether the items exist or not:
- The users may add the items without waiting for an admin to be there to set the permissions right after the add
- You may want to restrict users from creating an item in a certain namespace, let's say there's a website folder and all the pages are .aspx, however index.html takes precedence over Default.aspx as a homepage, so now you may deny check-in permission for all users on index.html which doesn't exist and shall not ever exist
- You may reserve a folder name for a potential feature name and you don't want users to branch/rename to that name
To read more about the deny option, please take a look at this previous post.