Enable or disable Single Sign On

With Single Sign On enabled, the user does not need to provide credentials to start the Control Panel. This feature is available if you use Windows domain authentication. Once the Single Sign On feature is allowed for the system, users can disable and enable Single Sign On for each local computer.

To enable Single Sign On for your computer:

  1. From the computer where you want to enable Single Sign On, select Administration > Local Configuration.
  2. Enable Enable single sign on for this computer. If this option is not visible, see To enable Single Sign On for your system below.

To disable Single Sign On for your computer:

  1. From the computer where you want to disable Single Sign On, select Administration > Local Configuration.
  2. Disable Enable single sign on for this computer. To enable Single Sign On again, see To enable Single Sign On for your computer above.

To enable Single Sign On for your system:

  1. From any computer in your system, select Administration > Security Policy.
  2. Click Edit Security Policy.
  3. Enable Enable Single Sign-On. The Single Sign On option is now available and can be enabled in Administration > Local Configuration. If Single Sign On is enabled from a new versioned server or client, it will be enabled on that versioned system only. Older versioned clients will be unaffected.

To disable Single Sign On for your system:

  1. From any computer in your system, select Administration > Security Policy.
  2. Click Edit Security Policy.
  3. Disable Enable Single Sign-On. The Single Sign On option is no longer available. If Single Sign On is disabled from a new versioned server or client, it will be disabled on that versioned system only. Older versioned clients will be unaffected.