Account information

From Peyton Hall Documentation

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* Faculty/Research/Staff adviser
* Faculty/Research/Staff adviser
*: This is someone who can be responsible for your account.  They will ideally be allowed to charge to the above grant number, and will be the person to be notified when your account is near expiration - it's up to them if it should be extended or not.  If you're actively collaborating with someone, that is who you want to put here.
*: This is someone who can be responsible for your account.  They will ideally be allowed to charge to the above grant number, and will be the person to be notified when your account is near expiration - it's up to them if it should be extended or not.  If you're actively collaborating with someone, that is who you want to put here.
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* [Internal use only] [[Tier]]
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* [Internal use only] [[User Tiers|Tier]]
*: Different tiers of accounts are charged differently, and have different access privileges.  Primary users get support from the administration staff and more storage space for home directories; secondary users are those who are not in the building and collaborate remotely; tertiary users get no support and minimal storage space.
*: Different tiers of accounts are charged differently, and have different access privileges.  Primary users get support from the administration staff and more storage space for home directories; secondary users are those who are not in the building and collaborate remotely; tertiary users get no support and minimal storage space.

Revision as of 17:34, 3 November 2009

Every person who wishes to use computing facilities in Peyton Hall will require an account to login. Some accounts are generated "automatically", while others require someone set the account up for you. Here you will find information about requesting an account, as well as what happens when you're done with it.


Contents

Who gets an account?

By default, if you're an undergraduate we'll setup an account for you. Usually the undergraduate adviser will send around a list of students in advance of the start of the semester, and we'll have accounts made up for those students in time for the first class. The user name chosen is based on whatever user name OIT gives you. Also, if you're a summer undergraduate, we usually get the list of names from the summer undergraduate coordinator and have those accounts created shortly after receiving the list. Same rules for user names apply - whatever OIT gave you, is what you'll get here.

For graduate students, postdocs, staff and faculty, we let you choose your user name when you arrive. The process to create an account - if all the information is received and we don't have to hunt for it - only takes a few minutes. And usually when one first arrives, there's so many other things to do that accessing a computer right away isn't nearly as high on the list of priorities, so if it takes a few hours (or even a day, especially if we don't get all the required information) you're not likely to notice.


What information is needed?

There is a "New User Application" which contains the list of information we need to generate an account. If you're here in person, you can fill out that sheet and drop it off in the '/usr/bin' on the door to room 126 and someone will create the account for you when they can. In some cases we'll leave the information sheet (see below) in the same folder, with your name on the edge; in other cases, we may hand the sheet to someone else or leave it in your mail box.

For those who may be requesting an account remotely, or those requesting an account for someone else (collaborator, etc), the information we need to know is:

  • Full name
  • Desired user name
    You can either list a few choices, or check with the 'finger' command to see if the user name is already taken
  • Status
    One of Undergrad, Grad, Postdoc/Researcher, Visitor, Other (please explain)
  • University account number to charge
    All accounts have some sort of charges associated with them. Someone who is allowed to post charges to a grant may, if the grant allows it, use that grant for setting up accounts. When in doubt, contact your faculty adviser or the department manager and ask.
  • Expiration date
    This should be approximately one year beyond your expected date of departure (for students, graduation). It can be extended beyond this date in the future if necessary (see below).
  • Faculty/Research/Staff adviser
    This is someone who can be responsible for your account. They will ideally be allowed to charge to the above grant number, and will be the person to be notified when your account is near expiration - it's up to them if it should be extended or not. If you're actively collaborating with someone, that is who you want to put here.
  • [Internal use only] Tier
    Different tiers of accounts are charged differently, and have different access privileges. Primary users get support from the administration staff and more storage space for home directories; secondary users are those who are not in the building and collaborate remotely; tertiary users get no support and minimal storage space.

NOTE:

ANY omissions in the above required pieces of information will result in a delay processing your account. If you don't give us all the information needed, we cannot create the account and just "fill in the blanks" later. We must have all the required information first.


Account creation

Once we have all the information above, someone will create your account and generate a "New User Information Sheet". This contains your user name, password, and information on logging in. There is also information on where to find help, including these pages here. This sheet will either be left in the '/usr/bin' on the door of room 126, handed to the faculty/staff adviser on record for the account, handed to some other staff member who will be giving you information anyway (visitor packets, etc) or left in your mail box.


Expirations

So what happens when you leave? We will set the expiration date of your account to one year from the day you left. During that time, nothing changes. At 11 months after you left, the person responsible for your account will get an email notifying them that your account is due to expire next month, and they can at that time request that it be extended. Reasons for extending an account range from active collaboration to more time needed to clean off your home directory and scratch disks (though it's at the discretion of whomever is paying for your account if you get a lot of time or a little). At 12 months from departure, your account is expired and you cannot login - though at that time, if you realize you need an extension, you can have someone contact us and ask that it be reopened. Usually around six months after an account has been expired is when they're actually deleted. We do not keep copies of your home directory forever; after that six month period (which is now 18 months since you departed), when the account is deleted, so are the files left there.

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