Service Desk is controlled by the same role system as everything else in DevStride. A member's role decides what they can do with the desk, organization-wide. Four permissions cover Service Desk, each gating a distinct slice of the module.
| Permission | Grants the ability to | Typical for |
|---|---|---|
| Access Service Desk | Open the Service Desk module and its Inbox — the entry ticket to working support at all. | Anyone who handles tickets. |
| Send Public Replies | Send Reply to customer messages (which email the requester). Without it, a member can still add Internal notes but cannot message customers. | Front-line agents who talk to customers. |
| Manage Requesters | Create, edit, block, merge, and anonymize requesters and companies — and review the Suspended queue. | Support leads and admins. |
| Manage Service Desk Settings | Enable or disable Service Desk, and manage channel addresses and request forms. | Administrators. |
To make setup quick, DevStride includes a built-in Service Desk Agent role template that bundles all four Service Desk permissions (plus the underlying comment and item capabilities they rely on, and access to settings). Apply it when you create a role for your support team, then adjust from there.
You can, of course, build a custom role instead and pick exactly the Service Desk permissions you want — see Roles & Permissions for how to create and assign roles.
Service Desk is hidden by two independent gates. Both must be satisfied for the module to appear in your left-hand navigation — if either one is missing, the Service Desk entry is not shown at all:
DevStride hides actions you don't have permission for, rather than showing them greyed-out. This keeps the interface clean, but it means a button you used yesterday can be gone today if your role changed. A missing button is not a bug — it reflects a permission you no longer hold.
Here's what controls the buttons people most often notice going missing:
| If this button/area is missing… | You're missing this permission |
|---|---|
| Reply to customer (you can still add Internal notes) | Send Public Replies |
| Suspended queue, and block / merge / anonymize actions on requesters | Manage Requesters |
| Enable / Disable Service Desk, and channel-address & request-form settings | Manage Service Desk Settings |
| The whole Service Desk navigation entry | Access Service Desk (or the module is disabled org-wide — see above) |
Requesters are not governed by these permissions — they're external customers, not members of your organization. They hold no role and can't sign in to your workspace. These four permissions are entirely about what your team can do. See Requesters & Companies.
Finding & Filtering Tickets
Because tickets are work items, you can find and report on support work anywhere in DevStride — filter by requester, company, or channel, and save the views you return to.
My Work
My Work is your personal, cross-project view of the items that are yours — choose what to show, work items in place, and shape and save the view to fit how you work.