Single sign-on (SSO) lets you manage access to your Layerlog account from a single user and identity management tool.

What is SSO?

SSO is a way to authenticate and sign in to different services with the same credentials. With SSO, users don’t need to remember different usernames and passwords for each service, and you can manage access to all your services from one source. Enabling SSO on your account is more convenient for your users and more secure for your company.

How is access managed with SSO?

To use the ‘Sign in with SSO’ button on Layerlog’s login page, your initial login should be done via the SSO identity service provider.

When you enable SSO on your account, you’re configuring Layerlog to hand off authentication to your identity provider. You’ll be able to expand or restrict a user’s access to Layerlog, but not add or remove users from within Layerlog.

All authenticated users will have access to your account, and existing users will retain the permission levels they had before SSO was enabled, unless you configure groups.

How SSO groups work

SSO groups help you map, monitor, and edit access levels across multiple users in your organization. You can apply User, Admin, or Read only level permissions to all users in the group with a single set up, and change permission levels quickly and easily. (Read more on permission levels here).

  • Create a group in your SSO provider and add the users to the groups.
  • Add the group in your Layerlog account from Settings > Manage users > Groups tab.
  • Set the permission level for the group to Read only, User, or Admin.
If you don’t have any groups

If you don’t configure any groups, all users who authenticate with your identity provider will be able to access your Layerlog account.

The first time a new user logs in, they get User access. Existing admins can edit each user and change their access type to Admin or Read only access.

Existing users will retain their current level of access.

If you have groups

As soon as you configure your first group, only users who are part of that SSO group will be able to log in to this account.

Each group can have Admin, User, Read only, or Configured per user permissions.

Permissions are set at the group level unless a group setting is Configured per user. If users are a part of multiple groups, they will get the highest permissions set.

For example: If someone is a member of both a User group and an Admin group, they’ll receive Admin permissions.

Multiple accounts can use the same group, and the group needs to be added to each account separately. The group members will have access to all of the accounts connected to the group.

Available identity providers

Layerlog can integrate with a number of SSO providers. To get started, follow the instructions for your provider:

Layerlog can integrate with other SSO providers. If you don’t see your provider on the list, send an email to destek@layerlog.com. Write that you want to set up SSO for Layerlog, and include your Layerlog account ID in the message.