Creator Studio roles and personas
Summarize
Summary of Creator Studio roles and personas
Creator Studio roles control user permissions for creating, configuring, and collaborating on apps within ServiceNow's Creator Studio. Administrators assign these roles to ensure controlled access, preventing unplanned or redundant app creation in your instance. This helps maintain an organized app environment and supports effective app governance.
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Personas interacting with Creator Studio include low-code/citizen developers, App Engine admins, security admins, and system administrators. Each persona has distinct responsibilities and role assignments that align with their level of involvement and authority in app development and management.
Roles and Their Capabilities
- Creator Studio User (sncreatorstudio.user): Can create new apps and becomes the delegated app owner. This role grants delegated development permissions on the created apps.
- Creator Studio Restricted User (sncreatorstudio.restricteduser): Cannot create apps but can request app creation and work on apps where they are designated as developers. They gain delegated developer access only on assigned apps.
- App Engine Admin (appengineadmin): Manages app development lifecycle including approving app creation requests and collaboration requests. Requires membership in the appengineadmin group and holds roles enabling app approval and administration.
- Security Admin: Manages platform-level roles and access control lists, crucial for updating Creator Studio roles and maintaining security compliance.
- System Administrator: Has unrestricted access to all system features and data; should be assigned carefully, especially when sensitive data is involved.
Additional roles such as admin and delegateddeveloper also provide access to Creator Studio functionalities.
User Groups and Access Management
User groups simplify access control by bundling users with similar permissions:
- Creator Studio Users group: Members can create apps and have the sncreatorstudio.user role.
- Creator Studio Restricted Users group: Members need to request app creation and have the sncreatorstudio.restricteduser role.
Testing and Collaboration Considerations
- Users with sncreatorstudio.user or sncreatorstudio.restricteduser roles cannot test apps on non-production Request App Workspace but can use app previews for testing.
- Testing in production as a fulfiller requires additional roles beyond Creator Studio roles, which administrators must assign.
- Collaboration roles are managed per app, requiring explicit invitations or requests to join app development efforts.
- When Creator Studio is installed on non-production while production runs an older platform version, collaboration workflows may be affected. Assigning the catalogbuildereditor role to Creator Studio user groups ensures collaboration approval workflows work across different versions.
Practical Implications for ServiceNow Customers
By understanding and applying these roles and groups, administrators can:
- Control who can create and manage apps to avoid app sprawl and ensure governance.
- Enable low-code developers to contribute while maintaining oversight through app approvals.
- Manage collaboration efficiently, ensuring appropriate access at the app level.
- Navigate version mismatches between production and non-production instances to maintain collaboration workflows.
- Assign necessary roles for testing and fulfilling app requests, ensuring smooth app lifecycle management.
Roles control what everyone you work with can do in Creator Studio. Administrators assign roles to give team members permission to configure or use Creator Studio.
The two roles for Creator Studio are used to restrict access from creating new apps, which helps make sure your instance isn't overfilled with redundant, unplanned, or unused apps.
Personas that use Creator Studio
Personas aren’t explicitly part of Creator Studio, but administrators assign roles to give team members permission to configure or use Creator Studio.
- Low-code/citizen developer
- Low-code/citizen developers are tech savvy and interested in creating apps. Though they might not have formal coding or app development training, citizen developers can submit ideas for new apps and, if approved, build them
using Creator Studio.
Low-code/citizen developers have either the sn_creatorstudio.user or sn_creatorstudio.restricted_user role.
- App Engine admin
- App Engine admins manage all processes related to app development in Creator Studio. They review new app ideas, handle app deployment, and manage collaborators, usually in the App Engine Management Center.
App Engine admins have the app_engine_admin role and must be in the app_engine_admin group.
- Security admin
- The security admin creates and modifies roles and access control lists for apps. This role is set on the platform level, and it is required for making updates to roles in Creator Studio.
- System administrator
- The system administrator has access to all system features, functions, and data, regardless of security constraints. Grant this privilege carefully. If you have sensitive information, such as HR records, that you must protect, create a custom admin role for that area and train a person who is authorized to see those records to act as the administrator.
Roles and what they can do in Creator Studio
In addition to the roles in the following table, users with the admin and delegated_developer roles can also access Creator Studio.
For complete details on which roles each role contains, see Components installed with Creator Studio.
| Role | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Creator Studio User | sn_creatorstudio.user |
Note:
This role gets assigned the delegated_developer role when they create or get access to an app. |
| Creator Studio Restricted User | sn_creatorstudio.restricted_user |
|
| App Engine Admin | app_engine_admin |
|
To ensure that users can use the Collaboration Approval Workflow regardless of instance versions, admins must assign the catalog _builder_editor role to Creator Studio user groups.
User groups and what they can do in Creator Studio
Groups are a standard functionality that help you quickly control people's access to Creator Studio by adding them to a group.
| Group | Description |
|---|---|
| Creator Studio Users |
|
| Creator Studio Restricted Users |
|
Developer roles and testing apps on instances
If you have a Creator Studio role of sn_creatorstudio.user or sn_creatorstudio.restricted_user, you won't be able to test the apps you build on the non-production instance's Request App Workspace. You should be able to test the app on the non-production instance using Creator Studio's app previews. You will be able to test the apps as a fulfiller in the workspace on the app that's been deployed to production.
Let's say that a user is in the Creator Studio Users group, so when that user builds an app, that user gets delegated development permissions for that app. That user can then publish a request form, and if there are no roles required for the form, that user can submit requests with the form.
However, that user won't be able to fulfill requests or access the Request App Workspace because that user won't have the x_acme_user_app.agent role, and that user can't give that role to themself. Administrators must assign additional roles as necessary.
Collaboration roles and instances on different versions
As admins implement Creator Studio, they may have it installed on a non-production instance while their production instance is on a previous version of the ServiceNow AI Platform that doesn't have Creator Studio. This mis-match of instance versions affects the Collaboration Approval Workflow, which specifies the non-production instance as the source and the production instance as the controller. If the controller doesn't have the version of the collaboration plugin that supports Creator Studio, collaboration is unsupported.
To ensure that users can use the Collaboration Approval Workflow regardless of instance versions, admins must assign the catalog _builder_editor role to Creator Studio user groups.
Roles and app development collaboration
Roles define user access to Creator Studio. Permission to work on individual apps is controlled on an app-by-app basis. That is, you must manage the collaborators for each app by inviting other citizen developers to work on the app with you, or request to join someone else's app. For more information, see Collaboration in Creator Studio.