What counts as a user?

Sina_Kashanizadeh July 15, 2013

I am taking this from a previous thread that no one seems to be answered, perhaps because the thread is so old and I cannot take credit for this great question, it is from a Daniel Nicolas(Thanks Daniel!)

From the perspective of someone who does not know Jira at all and is purely trying to understand how the licensing works, we have 12 developers and 100's clients who can submit a ticket and want to know what is happening with their tickets etc. Do we nee licences for the clients or just the users (as in the developers)?

So to expand on that, do I need to pay for 100 users, 12 users of 112 users based on the licensing?

Regards,

2 answers

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Nic Brough -Adaptavist-
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July 15, 2013

Anyone who can log in counts as a user. They can log in if they have "use Jira" or "Admin Jira".

You can set up anonymous access, but this is really not a good idea for anything other than "browse", because it lets people do things without you being able to log who. That's a spectacularly bad idea in any issue tracker, and downright illegal in some places I've used Jira (not know which account did X can be a serious problem. Even though these trackers may have had anonymous READ, it was a legal requirement to know who changed stuff)

You can get some limited functionality around raising issues partly anonymously via email, and not have to get them used as actual "users", and some places do front-end stuff like having a small application that asks for information, validates a user against AD or demands that they fill in their company etc, and then posts it into Jira as a single dummy user over REST (and enters the AD/Company information for your developers to see)

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Ramiro Pointis
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July 15, 2013
Hi Sina, any user that you create and it takes part in the jira-users group will count in your license. So, if you have 100 users for your clients and 12 users for your developers a 100 users license won't be enough for you. The jira-users group allow you to use the jira UI, creating, following, commenting issues, and so on. Hope this helps.
Ramiro Pointis
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July 15, 2013
I think it's pretty clear in that question that you mentioned: https://answers.atlassian.com/questions/16662/what-consititues-a-user-under-the-license

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