This page was last edited on October 2, 2020, at 12:32.
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Welcome to the Platform Administration Help. This document introduces you to the GUI of Platform Administration and describes concepts and procedures relevant to using Platform Administration in your contact center.
Platform Administration introduces the next-generation user interface for Genesys that reduces both the overall operating costs and the time to deployment, by providing user-friendly interfaces that perform complex operations while at the same time preventing user error.
Within Platform Administration, Configuration Manager enables you to create and manage system-level configuration objects.
The Configuration Manager page is a central location for viewing and managing the configuration objects used by your system.
Configuration objects, also known as Configuration Database objects, contain the data that Genesys applications and solutions require to operate in a particular environment. These objects are all contained in the Configuration Database.
Configuration Manager lists these objects by type. For example, configuration objects related to users and their accounts are listed under the Accounts heading.
Hover over a configuration object type to view a list of the related configuration objects on your system.
[+] Naming ConventionsBecause most objects in the Configuration Database mirror physical objects in your contact center (for example, switches, agents, and installed applications), this document uses an initial capital letter for Configuration Database objects. For example, the word switch appears in lowercase when it refers to a physical switch in your contact center, but it is capitalized when it refers to the configuration object that mirrors your physical switch. Similarly, the word application appears in lowercase when it refers to a physical installation in your contact center, but it is capitalized when it refers to the configuration object that mirrors the installed program.
All objects have the following configuration properties and elements:
The way you name objects in your environment is important. Consistent and sensible naming conventions make your configuration environment easier to understand and faster to browse, leading to a more maintainable and usable configuration.
The names you set for some types of objects must match the names of the entities that those objects represent elsewhere in an environment. For example, the names of Hosts must match the names given to the computers they represent in the data network environment.
Disabling a folder or an object that is a parent to other objects also disables all objects within the folder or all child objects of that parent object.
For example: