- Getting started
- Best practices
- Tenant
- About the Tenant Context
- Searching for Resources in a Tenant
- Managing Robots
- Connecting Robots to Orchestrator
- Storing Robot Credentials in CyberArk
- Storing Unattended Robot Passwords in Azure Key Vault (read only)
- Storing Unattended Robot Credentials in HashiCorp Vault (read only)
- Storing Unattended Robot Credentials in AWS Secrets Manager (read only)
- Deleting Disconnected and Unresponsive Unattended Sessions
- Robot Authentication
- Robot Authentication With Client Credentials
- SmartCard Authentication
- Audit
- Configuring Alerts
- Alert Emails
- Setting up Alert Emails
- Settings - Tenant Level
- Resource Catalog Service
- Folders Context
- Automations
- Processes
- Jobs
- Triggers
- Logs
- Monitoring
- Queues
- Assets
- Storage Buckets
- Test Suite - Orchestrator
- Other Configurations
- Integrations
- Classic Robots
- Host administration
- About the host level
- Managing system administrators
- Managing tenants
- Managing your host license
- Configuring system email notifications
- Audit logs for the host portal
- Maintenance Mode
- Organization administration
- Troubleshooting
Configuring Alerts
As an administrator, you can control which alerts your users receive. Once set, your users start receiving alert notifications about the events you have selected for them. Your selection overwrites the alert preferences of your users, however your users can change their preferences anytime.
As an administrator, you can set different alert rules for directory groups, at tenant level. Members of local groups continue to receive alerts based on their own subscription profiles.
Group members need View permissions on Alerts at group level to be able to receive the alerts configured for the group.
To edit the alert subscriptions of a group, you need Edit permissions on Users.
Known issue: All necessary permissions must be either inherited from the same group or directly assigned to the user. This option will not work if permissions are inherited from different groups.
Local groups are natively available in your organization. If a group was created from the Admin > Accounts and Groups > Groups tab in your organization, then it is a local group.
Orchestrator checks users membership in the local group. If valid, users start receiving their alerts according to their subscription profile. Alert emails are sent to the user email address.
Directory groups are Orchestrator-external groups (such as AD or Outlook groups) that can hold a predefined group email, which you cannot change from Orchestrator. All the alert emails are sent to the directory group enabled email. A directory group can be created by Active Directory admins. The membership of directory groups is imported from AD, provided the users sign in to Orchestrator.
Alert subscriptions set at the user level (that is, group member) take precedence over those set at the group level. For example:
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If a group has the Job faulted alert enabled, but a member of that group has the Job faulted alert disabled, that member does not receive alerts about faulted jobs.
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If a group has alerts disabled for a specific folder, but a member of that group has them enabled, that member continues to receive alerts in that folder.
To allow a group member to receive the same alerts as the group, you must enable or disable those alerts at the user level.
Known issues:
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Alert emails sent to groups may be written in English, regardless of the language preference of individual group members.
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Local users part of local and mail-enabled AD/AAD groups may receive duplicate emails for alerts that have been generated for both groups.
- Navigate to the Tenant > Manage Access page.
- For the desired directory group, click the More Actions button.
- Select Open Alert Preferences. The Alert preferences page of that specific group opens.
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Select the events the group should receive alerts about.
When you enable the email alerting feature, take into account the following scenarios:
- Email alerts sent to an email-enabled AD or AAD group use the language you set at the Orchestrator organization level. This type of email alert disregards the recipient group's email language settings.
- Email alerts sent to an individual user use the
language based on the following order:
- The individual user’s language.
- The tenant's language.
- The application-level's default language.
As a folder administrator, you can control which users should receive alerts from your folder.
- Navigate to the Tenant > Folders page.
- Select the folder you want to administrate alerts for.
- To the right-hand side, on the Users tab, identify the user for which you want to activate or deactivate alerts.
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Click the More Actions button for the corresponding user and select Disable/Enable alerts.
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To apply the same setting to multiple users:
5.1. Select the users.
5.2. Click the Enable/Disable alerts button at the top of the list.
If you select Disable alerts, the selected users stop receiving the alerts generated in the folder selected in step 2.
If you select Enable alerts, the selected user start receiving the alerts generated in the folder selected in step 2. The alert preferences choices are persisted in this folder.
The Alerts column in the Folders > Users grid shows the alerting status of each user.